European Crisis Deepens; Officials Vow to Save Banks (Update1)
By Sandrine Rastello

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- The global credit crunch deepened in Europe as
government leaders pledged to bail out troubled banks and protect
depositors.

BNP Paribas SA will take control of Fortis's units in Belgium and
Luxembourg after government efforts to ensure the company's stability
failed, while Germany's government and financial institutions agreed
on a 50 billion euro ($68 billion) rescue package for Hypo Real Estate
Holding AG. U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling said
Britain is ``ready to do whatever it takes'' to help its banks.

The developments yesterday came a day after a summit in Paris where
leaders of Europe's four biggest economies stopped short of a plan
mirroring the $700 billion rescue in the U.S. to counter the worst
financial crisis since World War II. Instead, they agreed to work
together to limit the economic fallout, ease accounting rules, and
seek tougher financial regulations.

``Until now the solutions have appeared to be uncoordinated, so
perhaps it's time for a more coordinated approach globally,'' said
Torsten Slok, an economist at Deutsche Bank AG in New York. ``It's not
just the U.S. and Europe, it's banks in every part of the world.''

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who convened the Oct. 4 summit,
called for a global summit ``as soon as possible'' to implement ``a
real and complete reform of the international financial system.'' He
said ``all actors'' must be supervised, including credit-rating firms
and hedge funds. Executive-pay systems must also be reviewed, he said.

`New World'

``We want a new world to come out of this,'' Sarkozy said. ``We want
to set up the basis for a capitalism of entrepreneurs, not
speculators.''

Finance ministers from the Group of Seven industrialized nations meet
in Washington later this week.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel's opposition to collective action
underscored the hurdles to a European front. ``Each country must take
its responsibilities at a national level,'' she told a joint press
conference after the summit.

Amid the race to shore up Europe's faltering financial institutions,
Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme said late yesterday BNP Paribas
will buy 75 percent of Fortis Bank Belgium for 8.25 billion euros in
stock and purchase the company's Belgian insurance operations.
France's biggest lender will also acquire 66 percent of Fortis's bank
in Luxembourg.

BNP Paribas

The Belgian government will have an 11.7 percent stake in BNP Paribas,
and Luxembourg a 1.1 percent holding, after the purchases are
completed, BNP Paribas Chief Executive Officer Baudouin Prot
estimated.

The sale of Fortis's units comes after a Sept. 28 bailout of the
company, formerly Belgium's biggest financial-services provider, went
awry. It received an 11.2 billion euro capital injection from Belgium,
the Netherlands and Luxembourg last week.

Meanwhile, Hypo won a reprieve after Germany's finance ministry said
the country's banks and insurers agreed to double a credit line for
Hypo Real Estate to 30 billion euros. The federal government's
guarantee for the credit line remains unchanged, , Torsten Albig, a
spokesman for Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck, said late yesterday
in an e-mailed statement.

Munich-based Hypo Real Estate had earlier announced that a government-
backed 35 billion euro bailout plan collapsed after commercial banks
withdrew their support.

Too Big to Fail

The government and the Bundesbank have said that Hypo Real Estate, the
nation's second-biggest property lender, is too big to fail. Along
with the bailout, Merkel said yesterday the government will guarantee
savings by private account holders.

Until now, savings accounts, including those of small, privately held
companies, have been guaranteed by 180 banks in Germany, the BDB
private banks group said on Oct. 2. The guarantees of the banks
covered 90 percent of an account's balance to a maximum of 20,000
euros, the group said.

In the U.K., Darling said the government, which took over Bradford &
Bingley Plc last week, is ready to offer further support to banks that
may get into financial difficulty, and he did not rule out a further
injection of capital for failing institutions.

``We are ready to do whatever it takes, and that is, we've put money
in to help banks generally,'' Darling told the British Broadcasting
Corp.'s Sunday AM program. ``There are other measures we will be
taking too, and I will announce them when we are ready to do that.''

Paris Summit

Darling's boss, Prime Minister Gordon Brown, was among the leaders
gathered in Paris, along with Italian Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker, European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Central Bank
President Jean-Claude Trichet.

``The good news out of the Paris meeting is that the European heads of
state now recognize the severity of this crisis,'' Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. economists Natacha Valla and Erik Nielsen said in a note to
investors. ``A pan-European approach would be much preferred, but
given the urgency and complexities of organizing such measures between
different fiscal regimes, national measures -- coordinated to the
extent possible -- might still be good enough.''

Policy Recommendations

The leaders agreed on policy recommendations touching on regulation
and accounting and said they'd press for looser enforcement of budget
and competition rules at the EU level.

They said they would seek to harmonize guarantees of deposit levels.
The U.K. bank regulator increased its insurance ceiling to 50,000
pounds ($88,300) per account from 35,000 pounds to stem a flow of
funds to Ireland after officials in Dublin guaranteed all debts and
deposits of its banks.

Anticipating increased spending, declining tax revenue, and government
bank takeovers, European leaders called for ``greater flexibility'' in
the application of the EU budget ceiling.

European finance ministers last month pledged to keep their budget
deficits below 3 percent of gross domestic product even as the
economic slowdown dents tax receipts and boosts welfare payments.

The leaders said they want to allow banks to keep some assets valued
as if they'd be held until maturity, instead of having to review their
value each quarter.

They also said they want to change accounting rules that require banks
to review their holdings each quarter and report losses when the
values decline, the so-called mark-to-market standard. Banks worldwide
have written down more than $580 billion since last year, according to
data compiled by Bloomberg.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sandrine Rastello in Paris at
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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