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Bill Jamieson: 'In over 35 years, I cannot recall a day more miserable, its climax more chilling'



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Published Date: 30 September 2008
IN ONE stomach-churning second last night, the United States and the world were brought to a moment of truth on the deepening credit crisis: it's winning, we're not.
No sooner had the news broken that Congress had voted down the $700 billion bail-out plan than the Dow Jones index plunged 777.68 points – the biggest intraday points drop ever. In Canada, shares slumped 6 per cent. In Brazil, 10 per cent.

Like an
unfolding scene from a financial disaster movie, investors dumped bank shares and mutual funds and charged into short-dated Treasury bills.

No matter how low the yield or poor the return, here was a stampede to grab anything, hide anywhere, run where you could to get out of the breaking storm. In more than 35 years of financial journalism, I cannot recall a day more miserable, and its climax more chilling, than the events in the US last night.

The long bear market of 1972-75 was a drizzle, the crash of 1987 a flash in the pan, the dot.com bust a passing storm compared with events of yesterday.

The nationalisation of another UK lender; the nationalisation of Belgo-Dutch bank giant Fortis; ominous reports of other bank failures across Europe; the rescue intervention of Citigroup for Wachovia, a huge US retail savings bank; huge slides in bank shares here… then a maniacal coup de grâce that sent the world's biggest market into a tailspin.

The metaphors that journalists fall back on, "tottering on the precipice", "close to the brink", are not just turns of phrase this morning. Today they are real. They are absolutely true. And if fear ran cold last night, consider how much more chilling it will be today – when millions discover their retirement savings have been hit, the homes they live in are sliding more steeply in value, the companies they work for are desperately scrambling to save cash and their jobs are in jeopardy, amid the biggest credit seizure the modern world has known.

THE US banking crisis has been likened to a heart attack. Last night saw a convulsion that will be felt by everyone round the world. Recession is no longer a threat. It is a fact. And the drama in markets yesterday point to it being as deep, as painful and as prolonged as anyone can remember.

Look at what happened to the oil price on news of the Congress vote: it dropped $10 in an instant. We will not be needing "peak oil" for quite a time. Industrial metals plummeted, with three-month copper plunging $335 at $6,440 per tonne, falling even lower after hours. This vote by Congress is a stunning, reckless gamble with the world's biggest economy and the livelihoods of millions. But it reflects, too, the disgust even the most free-market-sympathetic democracy in the world has come to feel at the greed and incompetence of Wall Street's investment banks and the salaries and bonuses creamed off by those at the top.

NEVER mind for a moment that it is a stunning blow to the authority of the president, or that this was a vote of main-street America against toxic debt being dumped in the taxpayers' lap. It was a vote that treated the US economy as little more than a giant gambling chip.

Even if another package is put in place, what is left of US confidence in its financial system and economy has been dealt a terrible blow.

Stock markets in the Far East, Europe and the UK had been falling all day yesterday.

Any lingering hope that the nationalisation of Bradford & Bingley would mark a catharsis here was quickly dispelled as bank shares tumbled again.

RBS fell 18 per cent at one point, before rallying – if that is the word. And the 18 per cent plunge in HBOS speaks darkly to growing doubts as to whether the emergency rescue by Lloyds TSB will go through.

In Europe, banks look particularly vulnerable, as there is no readily available institutional mechanism to put a US-style rescue bail-out in place – even if there was a political will for it. Many of the separate member countries, such as Greece, Spain, Italy, Ireland and the UK, are already borrowed to the hilt. In the US, the Dow Jones Index closed down 777.68 points, or 6.98 per cent, at 10,474.56.

That will be carried into London this morning as markets brace themselves for a selling onslaught. Ben Bernanke, the US Federal Reserve chairman, must use every ounce of authority to pull the world out of financial nose-dive. The entire financial system is choking up. Everything critically depends on early, sustained action by central banks to pump in massive amounts of liquidity and to cut interest rates – quickly and decisively.

Interbank lending rates have soared to record levels. So official rates must come down. If there is no such early prospect, then yesterday's day from hell may be just be a warm-up.







The full article contains 855 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 30 September 2008 12:42 AM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Bill Jamieson
 
1

Scullion,

Canada 30/09/2008 01:25:43
We have nothing to fear but fear itself. Ok, I know it's been said by some guy a long while ago but he was railing against panic mongers back then too.
Being off the gold standard gives Federal systems a certain amount of room to move and this day's loss, percentage wise, was nowhere near the top 10 in Wall Street history. Keep tight, no use selling now (sell low?) and let the dust settle. Who knows, maybe there'll be bargains at the end of storm.
2

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

30/09/2008 01:36:55
Wrong prescription here. The banks can't access securitisation markets for money because they're dead and rotting. Banks need old-fashioned depositors to raise cash now. To get them it should be raising interest rates.

This cutting rates at every hiccup nonsense is what got us where we were. Greenspan and then Bernanke, as well as Browns minions at the Bank of England cut rates whenever a recession threatened. Recessions however are a necessary part of the business cycle. Put them off and bad debt and malinvestment grows and grows.

Put it off long enough and a depression will occur. The worry is that that's what Greenspan, bernanke and Brown have now wrought.

We need to get to an economy based on the thrifty and savings rather than spendthrifts and debts. To do that we should raise rates, not cut them.
3

Plodjfriss, Hammer of the Numpties,

Edinburgh 30/09/2008 01:52:16
It seems a little strange that none of the economics experts in the media saw this coming. Over the last few years we've seen bankers and other financiers lauded as god-like figures who have an astonishing ability to create money out of nothing, to the benefit of the whole world. All of a sudden it turns out that all of this was built on sand and much of this money never actually existed.

Suddenly all of the journalists and politicians are rushing to condemn the dubious practices that have led to the current situation, but I don't remember any of them sounding a note of caution during the good times.

Looks like we're all going to suffer the fallout though.
4

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

30/09/2008 02:18:49
#3: there were few, and all were called doomsters. The roll of honour of people who did warn of this should include, Doug Noland at Prudentbear; Steven Roach at Morgan Stanley; Nouriel Roubini; Satayit Das; Peter Schiff; Bob Beckman; Ian Angell; and, before he died, Prof Kindleberger who in 1999 announced this the largest credit bubble in history.

The so-called "experts" have throughout the bubble told us that housing bubbles are impossible; that derivatives were carefully balanced and "fully stress-tested" and of course that boom and bust had been superseded by the superior intellegences of those in charge.

Even now, many purport to represent this as the usual 18-year housing cycle rather than the three-generational credit cycle. Perhaps we'll at least have the schadenfreude of discovering that they did indeed put their money where their mouths were.
5

TomCayman,

George Town 30/09/2008 02:43:25
#3 Warren Buffett famously called derivatives "weapons of financial mass destruction"....and shares in his company are doing rather nicely, thank you.

Also, agree with #4 on Nouriel Roubini. Saw him speak incredibly bearishly at a conference last January, and the thing was... nobody could disagree with him. He's been very bearish for years, but even as recently as January it still took about 8 months for his predictions to come true.. they were inevitable, but you can't time these things.

6

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta CA for more WAR VOTE McCain 30/09/2008 05:45:47
Bill Jamieson: 'In over 35 years, I cannot recall a day more miserable, its climax more chilling.

This Jamieson is a definite idiot. 100% idiot.

Most people who can read English know that . When my
country the US farts, the rest of the world gets diarrhea.

Stop panicking . Uncle Sam has very deep pockets . Mountains of paper and very fast printing presses .

We will just print more dollar bills, and all will be calm and peaceful, and people will live happily ever after.

Calm down dudes and chill.
I just heard for my older sister, that my father lost millions in his stock portfolio in the past 24 hours. So what I say, its all paper money .

And what's the point of being the richest dude in the pine box as the maggots come through the wood to feast of ur eyeballs.. An energy transfer by nature.

Adios.

GC
7

Citylocal Fife,

Fife News 30/09/2008 06:41:14
'In over 35 years, I cannot recall a day more miserable, its climax more chilling'

Well, I can.. quite a few in fact

1/ The day that the New Blabber Party were elected
2/ The day that Tony Blair became PM
3/ The day that Gordon Brown became Chancellor
4/ The day that John Prescott became deputy PM
5/ The day that Gordon Brown became PM

etc

8

Miss H,

30/09/2008 10:59:21
6 Dream on. The American Empire is imploding, as all empires do. But this has been probably the shortest empire in history.
9

Buckpool Loon,

Cheshire 30/09/2008 12:33:57
This is getting boring, and trying to unravel it is as sensible as knitting a sweater from spagetti.

You want stability? Then nationalise every bank throughout the world. Pay nothing for the privilige until their position is scrutinised, audited and their value settled by the amount of public capital that needs to be invested in them.

The Joe Bloggs of this world dont want to subsidise banks; and who can blame them, they may feel different if their money is being used on an investment that can contribute to societies future.
10

SNP hypocrisy,

30/09/2008 17:19:07
When America sneezes... This was the ultimate sneaze, the UK will feel this one.
11

SNP hypocrisy,

30/09/2008 17:27:18
6. Simply printing more bills does not solve the problem! That would be more likely to instantly devalue the currency, unbalance the economy and plunge the US into a recession on a par with the famous Wall St. Crash. Bush has tried all kinds of mad things to make money. Including the Presidential Dollars, and State Quarters - which results in billions stored away in peoples collections - that will never be spent. How much are these things worth whenever every other American collects them? THEIR FACE VALUE ONLY! But the illusion is there. No doubt he'll come up with some more batty ideas like that. Fact is the Republicans came into power when the US was in credit! That's right Bill Clinton left the US economy in an excellent shape! Since then the cost of the war in Iraqistan alone is $3.5 Trillion (and still spiraling).
12

Mary Bell,

30/09/2008 20:25:17
There is an underlying 'cash flow' imbalance.

It underlies the morgage problem.

It is the INCOME DISPARITY.

In 1973 (pre-'Israeli/OPEC Recession') the single highest salary in the USA was $300,000.
It was taxed at +70%.
The federally-mandated minimum wage was $1.65 (and hard to 'live-on').

Forbes Mag. has announced that Bill Gates made $30,000,000,000. (Billion) in 2007, with relatively no taxation.
That's an increase of 5 zeros in only 35 years

Minimum wage has NOT ADDED A SINGLE ZERO.

In 1973 there were no computers so no costs related to that. Oil was $3/barrel. Auto Insurance was not manditory. There were no jail/bail/attorney/court costs, because there were no roadblocks, and it was not illegal to have a beer and drive home. Observe the inflation in food, clothing, housing, electricity, and on and on... A monthly water bill was $3(ish); now it is $45 if you are lucky.

The imbalance was carefully engineered by the Federal Reserve Banking Corporation, and their war-mongering private banking cousins in various European countries, including the City of London.

In the early 1980'a as we were emerging from +30% personal interest rates; the Fed Corp Chair would appear on TV and announce that 'wages were inflationary', and threatened that if employers raised wages, the fed would raise interest rates. (Meanwhie, they were adding zeros to top salaries, pretending that that was neither inflationary, nor de-stabelizing.)

Now many in the USA think Greenspan, Wolfowitz, Greenberg. Paulson and hundreds (perhaps thousands) of others should be treated to a nice loooong stay in one of the thousands of local jails that their 'New World Order' criminals have forced media-terrified, and coerced citizens to build.

We the voters, in the USA, will do everything we can to block further financial practices that encourage WAGE SLAVERY.

If Congress wants to vote to apply $700,000 Billion (or $38 trillion, or $450 trillion or whate
13

Mary Bell,

USA 30/09/2008 20:29:38
... WAGE SLAVERY.

If Congress wants to vote to apply $700,000 Billion (or $38 trillion, or $450 trillion or whatever it is...) into an immediate $55/hr minimum wage plan, and restoration of our jobs, them we will consider voting for the rehibilited bums again.
Show us the reform
14

Marky Bhoy,

Dunfermline 01/10/2008 00:09:19

On topic rather disapointed I expected a 300 point loss in London today then I would have made a shed load of money on Friday but London held it's nerve and for the first time I can remember never reacted to the American market

 

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