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Monday, October 13, 2008

Paul Krugman Wins Nobel Economics Prize

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2008 09:09:00 AM

From Bloomberg: Princeton's Paul Krugman Wins Nobel Economics Prize

Congratulations!

Mitsubishi invests in Morgan Stanley

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2008 09:06:00 AM

From MarketWatch: Mitsubishi UFJ invests $9 billion in Morgan Stanley

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial closed on a $9 billion equity investment in New York-based Morgan Stanley, giving the Japanese bank a 21% ownership stake. The buyer acquired $7.8 billion of perpetual non-cumulative convertible preferred stock with a 10% dividend and a conversion price pegged at $25.25 a share.

U.K.: cash injections for RBS, HBOS, Lloyds TSB

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2008 02:42:00 AM

UPDATE: From the NY Times: Britain Props Up Banks as Fed Leads Funding Effort

The Royal Bank of Scotland — once viewed as among the most solid of Britain’s Main Street institutions — announced it would seek around $34 billion to boost its capital as part of a bail-out devised by Prime Minister Brown and Mr. Darling and offered as a global template to resolve the crisis. The bank said the British government would buy preference shares worth around $8.5 billion and underwrite the rest. The deal could mean that the British government will own almost 60 percent of Royal Bank of Scotland along with more than 40 percent of HBOS and Lloyds TSB, which are negotiating a merger.
From MarketWatch: U.K. agrees cash injections for RBS, HBOS, Lloyds TSB
The U.K. Treasury said Monday that it's agreed to make capital investments in Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and, upon a sucessful merger, HBOS and Lloyds TSB totalling 37 billion pounds ($63 billion).... It's also requiring banks to maintain the availability of competitively-priced lending to homeowners and has the right to appoint new independent non-executive directors.
£20 is being invested in RBS. £17 in HBOS and Lloyds (the merger is essentially being forced at this point). It sounds like the U.K. will own 43% of Lloyds-HBOS. I haven't heard the percentage in RBS. 

Federal Reserve and other central banks announce unlimited liquidity

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2008 02:16:00 AM

From the Fed: Federal Reserve and other central banks announce further measures to provide broad access to liquidity and funding to financial institutions

In order to provide broad access to liquidity and funding to financial institutions, the Bank of England (BoE), the European Central Bank (ECB), the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan, and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) are jointly announcing further measures to improve liquidity in short-term U.S. dollar funding markets.

The BoE, ECB, and SNB will conduct tenders of U.S. dollar funding at 7-day, 28-day, and 84-day maturities at fixed interest rates for full allotment. Funds will be provided at a fixed interest rate, set in advance of each operation. Counterparties in these operations will be able to borrow any amount they wish against the appropriate collateral in each jurisdiction. Accordingly, sizes of the reciprocal currency arrangements (swap lines) between the Federal Reserve and the BoE, the ECB, and the SNB will be increased to accommodate whatever quantity of U.S. dollar funding is demanded. The Bank of Japan will be considering the introduction of similar measures.

Central banks will continue to work together and are prepared to take whatever measures are necessary to provide sufficient liquidity in short-term funding markets.

Federal Reserve Actions
To assist in the expansion of these operations, the Federal Open Market Committee has authorized increases in the sizes of its temporary swap facilities with the BoE, the ECB, and the SNB, so that these central banks can provide U.S. dollar funding in quantities sufficient to meet demand.

These arrangements have been authorized through April 30, 2009.
The Fed never sleeps ...

Krugman: Has Gordon Brown Saved the World?

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2008 12:12:00 AM

Paul Krugman writes in the NY Times: Gordon Does Good. A few excerpts:

The natural thing to do ... is to deal with the problem of inadequate financial capital by having governments provide financial institutions with more capital in return for a share of ownership.

This sort of temporary part-nationalization ... is the crisis solution advocated by many economists — and sources told The Times that it was also the solution privately favored by Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman.

But when Henry Paulson, the U.S. Treasury secretary, announced his plan for a $700 billion financial bailout, he rejected this obvious path ...

Meanwhile, the British government went straight to the heart of the problem — and moved to address it with stunning speed. On Wednesday, Mr. Brown’s officials announced a plan for major equity injections into British banks, backed up by guarantees on bank debt that should get lending among banks, a crucial part of the financial mechanism, running again. And the first major commitment of funds will come on Monday — five days after the plan’s announcement.

At a special European summit meeting on Sunday, the major economies of continental Europe in effect declared themselves ready to follow Britain’s lead ... And whaddya know, Mr. Paulson — after arguably wasting several precious weeks — has also reversed course, and now plans to buy equity stakes rather than bad mortgage securities (although he still seems to be moving with painful slowness).
As Krugman notes, many economists - like Krugman, Roubini, DeLong, and many others - were urging something similar to the Gordon Brown approach.

BTW, the UK announcement is expected very soon - around 7 AM London Time (2 AM ET, 11 PM PT).

Sunday, October 12, 2008

UK Announcement Before 7 AM BST, Stock Exchange to Remain Open

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2008 07:58:00 PM

From the WSJ: RBS CEO's Exit Is Likely As Part of U.K. Purchase.

On Sunday night, bankers and officials expected to work through the night again to put in place details of the plan they hoped to announce before the market opens Monday.
...
On Sunday night, a spokesman for the London Stock Exchange said the market would be open for trading as usual.
The UK announcement is expected around 7 AM London Time (2 AM ET, 11 PM PT). We are still waiting for Morgan Stanley too.

Here is the current London Time:


Bloomberg Futures.

Index Futures from Barchart.com (active futures have a time not a date)

CBOT mini-sized Dow

Report: Morgan Stanley and Mitsubishi Renegotiating

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2008 05:44:00 PM

Andrew Sorkin reports in the NY Times: Mitsubishi and Morgan Stanley Renegotiating

Under the proposed new terms being discussed on Sunday, Mitsubishi would still buy roughly 21 percent of Morgan Stanley ... But all of the investment would be through preferred shares, with a 10 percent annual dividend. Many of those shares would be convertible into common stock, but the Japanese bank was trying to set a conversion price far lower than originally proposed.

Treasury, however, is not planning to have the United States government take a direct stake in Morgan Stanley ... Mitsubishi and the Japanese government have sought assurances from the Treasury Department that if the United States were to decide to inject money into Morgan Stanley at a later time ... that such a move would not wipe out preferred shareholders.
Sorkin writes that an announcement is expected before the market opens on Monday.

Note: The final details of the UK bank recapitalization plan is expected at 7 AM London time.

Europe Guarantees Bank Borrowing

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2008 03:56:00 PM

UPDATE: From Reuters: Final statement from euro zone summit in Paris

From Bloomberg: European Leaders Vow Bank Guarantees, Bid to Stop Financial Rot

European leaders agreed to guarantee bank borrowing and use government money to prevent big lenders from going under ...

The key measures announced today are: a pledge to guarantee new bank debt issuance until the end of 2009; permission for governments to shore up banks by buying preferred shares; and a commitment to recapitalize any ``systemically'' critical banks in distress.

France, Germany, Italy and other countries will announce national measures tomorrow, Sarkozy said.
This apparently applies to all countries using the euro. Update: A reader adds:
Just to avoid any misunderstandings: tonight's meeting of the Eurogroup has no rule-making powers. In essence, it is just a political coordination forum. It is up to each Eurozone country to act. The fact that they all agreed the statement does not necssarily mean they will all do this.

Report: EU to Guarantee Interbank Lending

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2008 12:27:00 PM

From Bloomberg: European Leaders Seek `One Voice' to Counter Crisis

The 15 euro countries may agree to guarantee interbank loans of as long as five years to break the credit-market freeze, according to a draft statement cited by Agence France- Presse.
From the NY Times: European Leaders Meet as More Measures Extended
Financial and political leaders were holding meetings across the globe Sunday, urgently seeking agreement on measures to restore confidence to the teetering financial system before markets open Monday in Asia.
...
Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, said after a meeting at the Élysée Palace with Prime Minister Gordon Brown of Britain that he expected European countries to present an “ambitious and coordinated plan” that goes beyond measures announced by the Group of 7 industrialized countries in Washington on Friday.
The UK will announce the details of the capitalization plan at 7 AM Monday London time. But it sounds like there will be an EU announcement even earlier - before the Asian markets open.

Australia and New Zealand to Guarantee All Bank Deposits

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2008 11:39:00 AM

From the WSJ: Australia to Guarantee All Bank Deposits

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Sunday the government will guarantee all bank deposits for a period of three years.

From Sunday, the government will also guarantee all term wholesale funding by Australian banks operating in international credit markets "to make sure they have the best possible access to global capital," Mr. Rudd said.

The New Zealand government followed Mr. Rudd's announcement by introducing a bank deposit guarantee program as both countries sought safeguards against turbulence in global credit markets.
Over in Europe, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown is in Paris today presenting the UK plan to other European leaders:
Gordon Brown arrived at the Elysee Palace in Paris today for the latest international leg of his campaign to promote a British bank bailout plan among world leaders.

Despite the UK not being part of the euro, the Prime Minister met President Nicolas Sarkozy of France ahead of a summit of the 15 eurozone members and will brief them on the plan in which the Government will inject billions of pounds into struggling banks in return for preferential shares.

The plan is being looked upon favourably by Western leaders – including the Bush Administration – as a way of injecting confidence and liquidity into the financial system whilst retaining a politically favourable stake for the taxpayer. Europe also looks set to follow suit.