TimesPeople
September 29, 2008
European Regulators Move Swiftly to Rescue Two Lenders
By LANDON THOMAS Jr. and MATTHEW SALTMARSH
LONDON — Just days after the United States government brokered the sale of the nation’s largest savings and loan, Washington Mutual, regulators in Britain and Belgium swooped to engineer emergency rescues of two leading banks with heavy exposure to soured mortgages.
In the latest sign of trouble to hit Europe from the global credit crisis, the Belgian, Dutch and Luxembourg governments announced a partial nationalization of the troubled Belgian-Dutch financial conglomerate Fortis, involving a combined injection of 12.2 billion euros from the three governments.
Prime Minister Yves Leterme of Belgium, who was joined Sunday by the European Central Bank president Jean-Claude Trichet in an unprecedented appearance, unveiled the accord after a weekend of emergency talks in which the governments had tried to broker a whole or partial sale of the bank to private bidders. These talks fell apart after BNP Paribas of France pulled out of the bidding, according to reports.
Less than 200 miles away, British regulators prepared to seize the mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley — the third British bank to tumble this year — after no private buyers emerged. The government held marathon meetings over the weekend to try to broker a deal to sell assets to various bidders or sell the bank to a rival, much as the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation did when it took over Washington Mutual and sold it to JPMorgan Chase on Thursday.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/29/bu...gewanted=print





deja vu all over again!)
Reply With Quote