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Benelux countries intervene to bail out Fortis
By Stefan Steinberg
1 October 2008

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Stock markets across Europe tumbled on Monday following the news that
leading banks across the continent were facing collapse.

The plunge in the stock markets took place prior to the announcement
of the rejection of the Wall Street bailout plan by the US House of
Representatives. It is an expression of growing panic by European
investors over the potential meltdown of financial institutions across
the continent.

On Sunday and Monday European governments and private banks bailed out
no less than three major banks—Germany’s Hypo Real Estate, Britain’s
Bradford & Bingley and the Dutch-Belgian Fortis group. Their action
was followed by intervention in Iceland on Monday when the government
in Reykjavik took over control of Glitnir, one of Iceland’s biggest
banks.

Of the four banks, Fortis is by far the biggest. It ranks among
Europe’s top 20 banks and has a global workforce of 85,000. It is
active in 50 different countries and its involvement in international
banks and financial institutions stretches from the heartland of
Europe to Eastern Europe (Poland), central Asia (Turkey) and China.
The affiliated Fortis insurance group is one of the 10 biggest
insurance companies in Europe.

Last Sunday, the Dutch, Belgian and Luxembourg governments raced to
rescue the Fortis group with a package costing almost €11.2 billion.
The intervention came following a 21 percent fall in the share price
of Fortis on Friday and rumours of a massive liquidity crisis. Belgian
Prime Minister Yves Leterme intervened on the same day to reassure
investors and promised customers they would not lose their money.
Belgium Finance Minister Didier Reynders said the bank had “absolutely
no solvency problems.”

Over the weekend, however, the heads of government became convinced
that the problems at Fortis were so serious that they had to intervene
immediately with a deal involving the Benelux governments taking a 49
percent share in Fortis operations in their respective countries and
thereby guaranteeing its liquidity with taxpayers’ money.

Negotiations over the partial nationalization were led by Jean-Claude
Trichet, the president of the European Central Bank. Trichet made
clear that his intervention was motivated by the concern that a
collapse of Fortis could destabilise the entire euro zone.

De Standard declared that rapid government intervention was the only
alternative to a “European financial and economic bloodbath.”

It asked, “Is it normal that the rules no longer apply for these
masters of the market? Certainly not, but there is no alternative....
The imperative need to prevent Fortis from becoming the first domino
to fall in a European financial and economic bloodbath makes this
rescue plan necessary.”

The paper goes on to state, “What we have witnessed with Fortis in the
past few days is just one episode of a brutal purge in the financial
sector. Only the joint efforts of policymakers and banks can prevent
this purge from turning into a bloodbath.”

As is the case with Paulsen’s proposal in the US, the Benelux partial
nationalisation package is aimed at “getting the bank back on its
feet,” i.e., awarding billions in taxpayers’ money to the speculators
responsible for the current crisis at Fortis and for whom “the rules
no longer apply.” The Benelux governments have declared their
intention to sell off their share of stock at a later date and once
again permit Fortis to function as a fully privatised entity.

The entire intervention process, involving billions of euros, was
carried out in a matter of hours and took place without any discussion
within European parliaments, not to speak of any consultation with the
citizens of European countries who will be forced to foot the bill.

Willem Buite, who supports the bailout, commented in the Financial
Times on Monday, “Especially remarkable is the fact that it took much
less time and effort to put together the multi-country fiscal rescue
effort of the three EU member states than it took to cobble together
the son-of-TARP [the Paulson plan] in the US. Incipient federalism
triumphs over disfunctional established federalism.”

Despite the unprecedented intervention on Sunday by European leaders,
the verdict of economic circles and shareholders on the Benelux deal
was overwhelmingly negative.

Less than 12 hours after the deal was brokered and minutes after a
press conference given by the company’s new CEO, Filip Dierckx, in
which he declared that Fortis will remain a strong private bank, its
share price nosedived to a 16-year low of just over €4.

The rise and fall of Fortis

The rapid rise and fall of Fortis is symptomatic of the development of
a broad spectrum of European financial institutions in recent years.
The banking house was first founded in 1990 and grew steadily through
a series of acquisitions of European banks and insurance companies. In
1999 Fortis extended its reach across the Atlantic and took over the
American Bankers and Northern Star Insurance Groups.

Fortis was still a relatively minor player in the banking world until
one year ago when it joined forces with the Royal Bank of Scotland and
the Spanish bank Santander to take over the Netherlands’ largest
financial institution, ABN Amro. The consortium of banks paid €70
billion for ABN Amro, the biggest sum ever paid to acquire a bank. The
Fortis share of this total was €24 billion. Since the purchase of ABN
Amro, however, the extent of Fortis’s lack of liquidity and
involvement in dubious investments has gradually come to light.

This July the company sought to raise a sum of €5 billion in
additional capital to maintain its solvency targets. In August, under
pressure from European regulators to raise additional funds, Fortis
sold off its 49 percent stake in a Chinese asset management business
to a British company, Old Mutual.

None of these moves were sufficient to stem the run on the Fortis
share price. Since taking over ABN Amro a year ago, Fortis shares have
lost more than three-quarters of their value. Last week alone the
company’s share price dropped by over a third following renewed
concerns over its liquidity.

The conclusion drawn by the Dutch business daily NRC Handelsblad is
that “In a little over a year, Fortis has changed from a prestigious
financial institution to a pariah in the banking world.”

The collapse of the Fortis group graphically reveals the extent of the
involvement of European banks and finance institutions in the “toxic
debt” mountain that has emerged since the onset of the sub-prime
mortgage crisis in the US. The crippling exposure by many European
banks to such debts, arising from the uncontrolled growth of what is
essentially fictitious capital worldwide, refutes the views of those
politicians and commentators who still maintain that the European
“welfare” model capitalism represents some sort of a viable
alternative to its US counterpart.

According to the Dutch daily Trouw in a recent commentary, “American
misconduct was the origin of the crisis. For years both the state and
the citizens ran up an absurd number of debts, giving the impression
that they would never have to be paid back.”

The alternative, according to Trouw, “is another form of capitalism,
known as Rhine capitalism.... This type of capitalism also creates
prosperity by allowing business to compete freely on markets. But it
has more securities built into it.... Luckily here we have maintained
our differences. Luckily here the state and the citizens have fewer
debts than in the US. And luckily we now know the direction in which
we must develop to create prosperity without winding up as a casino
economy.”

The crisis of Fortis and a growing number of banks across Europe is
testimony to the contrary—the inextricable involvement of European
finance houses in the finance crisis reveals their vulnerability to
precisely such a “casino economy.”

Across the border the Dutch business daily NRC Handelsblad struck a
much more sombre note in an editorial last week: “If for no other
reason, the current financial crisis is a historic event because no
one can maintain any longer that unlimited free trade automatically
leads to a better world. And the old liberal fairytale that the market
always corrects itself has also been discredited.... The late summer
of 2008 will go down in history as the moment when the last political
ideology of the 20th century experienced its demise. Almost 20 years
after what looked like the definitive defeat of communism, the victor
from those days is also down for the count. Both Cold War camps are
now washed up. It will take a couple of years before the bankruptcy
crystallises out. Then the 20th century will finally be over, just as
the 19th century only ended in 1914.”

The paper does not spell out the implications of its own analysis, but
the fact is that the bankruptcy of 19th century capitalism heralded an
era of wars of unprecedented brutality and the world’s first
successful social revolution in Russia.


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