Here's news that would make Rob Schaap very happy....   Yoshie

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2000/dec2000/turk-d06.shtml

Turkish banking crisis: another indication of global turbulence

By Nick Beams 6 December 2000

Use this version to print

There are increasing signs that the global financial system is 
heading for another crisis, the consequences of which could be even 
more severe than the so-called Asian crisis of two years ago.

Last month Argentina announced emergency measures, based on savage 
cuts in government spending, in order to try to secure a bailout from 
the IMF and enable it to cover short-term foreign debts falling due 
next year.

Now Turkey is in emergency discussions with the IMF to secure 
assistance to counter a financial crisis which has seen overnight 
interest rates rocket to more than 1,700 percent over the past few 
days.

Both Argentina and Turkey had earlier won praise from the IMF for 
their fiscal policies and for "structural reform" of the financial 
system.  But now they are at the eye of a financial storm which could 
spread rapidly.

The immediate origins of the Turkish crisis lie in the banking 
system.  The government has already placed 10 banks in receivership 
and the IMF is believed to be pressing it to close more.  Many of the 
failed banks are involved in corruption allegations, including making 
unsound loans to businesses owned by bank officers and directors and 
to politically well-connected individuals.

The crisis began to spread to the entire financial system when the 
central bank last week injected about $6 billion into the economy 
rather than moving to step up bank closures.  The cash infusion was 
in violation of a disinflationary program that bans domestic credit 
creation and called into question the sustainability of the exchange 
rate regime.  Banks and other institutions began cutting back on 
credit, sending overnight interest rates skyrocketing.

The growing fear in financial circles is that the crisis could spread 
to healthy banks and financial institutions and rapidly impact on 
other countries.

In a December 3 editorial the Financial Times warned that while the 
country's largest banks were "solid", there were "growing worries 
that other institutions have weak balance sheets.  And in a vicious 
circle typical of such crises, the rise in interest rates over the 
last few days has intensified the problems of struggling banks."

According to Dani Rodrik, a Harvard professor of international 
economics, there is a "real possibility" that the crisis could spread 
to Russia and Eastern European countries.  "Where it could go from 
there, together with the uncertainties about Argentina, would be 
anybody's guess."...

...But it is not only the so-called "emerging markets" where problems 
lie.  In fact their difficulties are the expression of tightening 
credit conditions worldwide.

In a comment published on November 28, the Financial Times noted that 
the tightening in bank lending is a worrying symptom for the world 
economy.  "Is there an incipient global financial crisis?" it asked. 
"The risks are certainly rising.  Spreads in the high-yield corporate 
bond market [the difference with yields on government debt] are above 
their levels at the time of the near-collapse of Long-Term Capital 
Management in 1998.  US equities on the technology oriented Nasdaq 
exchange rate are down more than 40 percent from this year's peak. 
Argentina is struggling to avoid default.

"Emerging markets in Asia have been hit by political crises, a higher 
oil price and a waning US demand for their high-technology exports. 
Their debt problems have taken a turn for the worse.  Meanwhile 
telecommunications companies across the world are over-indebted 
thanks to acquisitions and costly bids for third-generation mobile 
telephone licences."

The comment concluded that while there was not yet a "credit crunch", 
there was a "worrying combination of contracting credit, declining 
asset quality and weakening equities."

Last October in a major article, the Economist magazine asked whether 
the big banks in America and Europe were heading for another crisis. 
The article was based on claims by David Gibbons, who is responsible 
for American banks' credit risk in the Office of the Comptroller of 
the Currency.  According to Gibbons, the banks have been 
underestimating their risks.

While the Federal Reserve Board and other regulators do not share 
this assessment, the Economist pointed out that the concerns of 
Gibbons and his counterparts were "understandable"....

...According to the Economist's assessment three problems now stand 
out: the increase in problem loans in the US, the impact of the 
turmoil in capital markets on commercial banks which have been 
expanding their investment-banking business in recent years and the 
banks' "huge lending exposures to telecom firms."...

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