European stock markets in freefall following Paris financial summit

By Peter Schwarz
7 October 2008

The response of European stock markets to the crisis summit held in
Paris on Saturday could have not been clearer. On Monday, share prices
across Europe plummeted.

The Dax (Frankfurt) lost 7 percent, the TecDax 11 percent, the FTSE
100 (London) 8 percent and the CAC 40 (Paris) 9 percent. In Iceland,
share trading was halted altogether. Following the nationalisation of
the country’s third biggest bank, the government itself was threatened
with bankruptcy.

The government heads of the four European members of the G8—France,
Germany, Great Britain and Italy—met on Saturday in Paris to discuss
common action to combat the financial crisis. The results of the
summit were negligible.

The assembled leaders agreed—in the words of French President Nicolas
Sarkozy, who called the summit—that “every country would resort to its
own measures.” A proposal to set up a common fund to bail out ailing
banks along the lines of the American Paulson plan failed to appear on
the summit agenda following opposition from Germany.

Over the weekend, a series of events made clear the extent to which
Europe, and especially Germany, has been hit by the international
financial turbulence.

On Saturday, the plan drawn up a week ago by the German government and
a number of banks to rescue Hypo Real Estate (HRE), Germany’s second
biggest mortgage lender, collapsed. The German central bank
(Bundesbank) and private banks had planned to make €35 billion
available to prop up HRE, a DAX company with total assets of €400
billion. For its part, the German government issued a surety loan of
€26.5 billion in taxpayer money.

On Saturday, the private banks withdrew from the bailout plan after it
emerged that the financial problems at HRE were much greater than
originally presented. Losses by the bank are estimated at between €50
and €60 billion this year, and could climb to over €100 billion next
year.

The banks neither informed the German government of their new estimate
of HRE’s financial problems, nor of their intention to quit the rescue
package. Angry government leaders first learned of the situation from
a press statement issued by HRE.

HRE attempted to blame German Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück (Social
Democratic Party—SPD) for its new problems because Steinbrück had
spoken of a “liquidation” of the bank. Evidently, the banks are
attempting to pressure the government to make more funds available for
bailouts.

On Sunday, further crisis talks were held to draw up a new bailout
plan for HRE. The government took the situation so seriously that on
the same afternoon Chancellor Angela Merkel (Christian Democratic Union
—CDU) and Finance Minister Steinbrück held a joint press conference to
announce a government guarantee for all private savings in Germany.
“The deposits of savers are safe, the government gives its assurance”
Merkel declared.

The declaration of a guarantee had two aims: To appease public anger
over the government’s decision to make billions of euros available to
cover the banks’ speculative losses, under conditions where ordinary
savers faced the loss of their savings, and to avert a panic run on
the banks similar to that which took place in Germany in 1931.

The seriousness with which the situation is regarded by ruling circles
was reflected in comments made by Interior Minister Wolfgang Schäuble
(CDU). In the latest edition of Der Spiegel magazine, Schäuble drew
direct parallels to the economic crisis of the 1920s and 1930s and
warned: “Such an economic crisis can result in an incredible threat to
all of society. The consequences of that depression was Adolf Hitler
and, indirectly, World War II and Auschwitz

Instead of calming the situation, the government’s promise to
guarantee deposits has heightened fears by revealing the scale of the
crisis. The German government has committed itself to cover an almost
unlimited amount. According to government data, the guarantee will
include private bank assets worth some €568 billion—twice as much as
the entire annual federal budget. By some calculations, the various
forms of savings total €4.5 trillion.

Spiegel Online commented: “Merkel and Co. have nothing more to
increase their promises to savers. There are no reserves should the
German financial system collapse... if the state really does have to
compensate for lost deposits beyond the legal guarantee of €20,000 and
the private banks’ deposit guarantee fund the state debt will rise for
years, capital spending will fall, social welfare systems will be
additionally burdened.”

The guarantee issued by the German government met with harsh criticism
from other European capitals, particularly London. At the Paris
summit, the Irish government was criticised for giving similar
assurances for its six leading banks. Now the German government was
doing the same thing.

The Guardian described the “anger” in Downing Street over Merkel’s
moves. The newspaper said: “British officials were furious with
Merkel. They said she gave no indication of the move at a summit in
Paris on Saturday designed to coordinate a European response to the
economic crisis.” The newspaper cited a financial expert who declared,
“It’s every man for himself in a united Europe.”

The Daily Mail quoted an “angry British official” who declared:
“Merkel agreed that we should all work together, then got on a plane,
flew home and did her own thing.”

On Sunday evening, the German government and banks finally agreed on a
new rescue package for HRE. In addition to the already agreed €35
billion, the financial sector said it would provide further liquidity
of €15 billion, without increasing the federal guarantee of €26.5
billion.

The government justified the rescue package with reference to the
“unforeseen consequences” that would result from a collapse of HRE.
Merkel said it was necessary to use taxpayer money to rescue the bank
because otherwise the damage “would hit not only Germany, but would be
huge for many in financial services throughout Europe.”

Despite the new bailout plan, HRE shares plunged 37 percent on Monday.
The banks demanded more public money.

The Deutsche Sparkassen und Giroverband (Association of German Savings
Banks and Clearing Houses) demanded that the government “put up an
umbrella to cover the risks of the entire banking industry.” Spiegel
Online quoted one banker as saying piecemeal solutions would not solve
the problem. “We have never looked into such a deep abyss,” he said.

The near-collapse of HRE is only the tip of the iceberg. The mortgage
provider was plunged into crisis through its subsidiary Depfa, which
it had purchased only last year for €5.7 billion. The Depfa boss at
the time, Gerhard Bruckermann, was sent into retirement with a golden
handshake of €100 million, not an unusual figure for the sector.

Depfa, which emerged from the Deutschen Pfandbriefanstalt (German
Institute for Mortgage Bonds), has its headquarters in Dublin, where
it enjoys a far lower tax burden than in Germany. It specializes in
financing public bonds, which are usually considered to be without
risk. It was thrown into crisis because it made long-term loans and
financed them with short-term credit raised on the interbank market,
where banks lend one another money.

Since the collapse of Lehman Brothers, however, the interbank market
has virtually run dry, since banks are no longer willing to lend each
other money. Depfa could no longer find short-term credit at
favourable rates, and HRE now has to dig into its pockets to come up
with the missing billions.

HRE is one of the most important players in the €900 billion German
mortgage bond market, which provides financing to many other banks and
insurance companies. It is feared that bankruptcy for HRE will lead to
the collapse of the entire mortgage bond market and set off a chain
reaction that would hit pension funds and mutual associations, as well
as the länder (states) and municipalities.

Depfa is not an isolated case. According to an analysis by Der
Spiegel, other German banks have made even bigger long-term loans that
are financed with short-term credit. According to the magazine,
Landesbank Baden-Württemberg will have to “refinance some 100 billion
euros by December 2009,” more than twice as much as HRE. At Nord/LB,
the figure is €42 billion, at WestLB and Eurohypo the figure is
approximately €30 billion each, while the Landesbank Rhineland-Pfalz
must find €10 billion and Saxonia LB needs €3.5 billion.

The financial meltdown is far from reaching its nadir. What is taking
place is the bursting of an enormous bubble of fictitious capital that
was accumulated over recent decades at the expense of the working
class.
On Oct 8, 5:32 am, Cold Water <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I predict that 30  days from today:
>
> 1.  John McCain will be President-Elect
> of the United States.
>
> 2.  Regular gasoline will be widely avail-
> able at $2.49/gal or less.
>
> 3.  The economic 'crisis,' ie, credit crunch,
> will be largely over.
>
> Anyone care to bet against me?
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