End of the good times for the Banks as regulators look for re-capitalisation.
September 8th, 2009 by tom | Filed under Central banks, Daily News, Employment, Global Credit Crisis, Gold, Recession, Stocks and shares, The Markets, UK Banks, World Banks.
Regulators have agreed tough new regulations designed to put into action the proposals agreed by the G20 group of nations over the weekend. If they come into force, the regulations could force many of Europe’s top banks to raise tens of billions of Euros in capital in coming months.
The new rules are designed to force banks to improve the quality and extent of their capital buffers significantly in order to absorb shocks.
The new regulations will require banks to ensure that at least half of the capital held by banks must comprise of common equity and retained earnings. In addition the regulators have also decided to set specific limits on how much banks can borrow, expected to be around 25 times their assets.
Since the beginning of the financial downturn, investors in companies quoted on the FTSE, have become much more active and are turning up with increasing regularity at annual general meetings to make their feelings heard and their votes count. Evidence of their effectiveness has already been noted at meetings of firms such as Royal Dutch Shell and Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS), which resulted in proposed pay packages being rejected.
Cadbury are reported to be a little cheesed of with Kraft Foods, after having rejected a £10.2 billion takeover approach from them. The FTSE lived the idea and shares in the company rose by almost 40% after the announcement.
Spokespeople from Cadbury explained that the reason why they rejected the approach was that it basically undervalued the company, while analysts suspect that Kraft’s offer was just an opening salvo, and they will come in with an increased offer. Rumours have it that other "kings of confectionery" are waiting in the wings, among them Hershey and the Nestle Company.
All the news on the FTSE was not about Cadburys, with the Lloyds Banking Group adding 4.4 per cent to close on 106.31 pence. The rise in share value came on reports that the bank is interested in converting £7 billion of its existing e shares to equity at a premium. .
Sports Direct, after seeing their shares rise by 14 per cent on Friday, succeeded in adding a further 11.8 per cent to 114 pence in anticipation of a very positive update on the company’s position due to be released today.
The FTSE 100 index jumped again, driven by the news from Cadbury. It sweetened by 81.48 points to close of 4933.18.
Meanwhile the FTSE 250 continued to climb on Monday, up 2.18% or 190.61 141.05 points to close on 8,963.46.
The pound dipped against the major currencies on a weak days trading.
- Pound/US dollar 1.6351
- Pound/Euro 1.14
- Pound/Japanese Yen 152.096
- Pound/Swiss Franc 1.733
There was no trading on Wall Street on Monday for Labour Day. The Dow Jones Industrial Average stayed on 9441.27 while the NASDAQ Composite looked comfortable on 2018.78.
Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel Prize-winning economist is bucking the trend by stating his doubts on the robustness and staying power of any US economic recovery, warning that the current economic downturn may be what is known as a "double dipper".
According to Stiglitz, who acted as chief economist for the World Bank, "the prospects of a robust recovery are very, very weak" and there was a strong chance that the economy collapse after a period of growth.
Germany’s industrial rebound is still gathering momentum, with reports that when manufacturing orders chalked up another strong rise in July. Europe’s largest economy however is still far from returning to its pre-crisis levels of activity.
Industrial orders rose 3.5 per cent in July, extending a 3.8 per cent increase in June, adding further evidence that economic growth in the third quarter would prove much stronger than could be hoped until even a few months ago. Production was still down 20 per cent than in the same month in 2008.
Trading volumes across commodity markets were lighter than usual on Monday because of the Labor Day holiday in the US. Gold rose 0.2 per cent to $995 a troy ounce, consolidating just below the $1,000 mark.
Crude oil prices steadied, at around $67.00 a barrel.

- FT.com / Companies / Banks - Deutsche Bank expects full-year loss Deutsche Bank also announced that Deutsche Post, the part state-owned...
- Its Official: Hell Freezes Over Last week, hell froze. The Financial Times reports: In a...
- How the US Dollar Index shows the strength of the dollar A friend at work has mentioned the US Dollar Index...
Tags: Bank, Banking, British Economy, British Pound, Cadbury, Credit Crunch, Currency, Dow Jones, Economics, Economy, financial downturn, Financial News, FTSE, Hershey, Joseph Stiglitz, Kraft Foods, Lloyds, Money Markets, NASDAQ, Nestle, RBS, re-capitalisation, Recession, Royal Bank of Scotland, Royal Dutch Shell, Sports Direct, Stock Markets, Stocks and shares, UK Banks, UK Economy, UK Recession, US economy, Wall Street, World Bank
Subscribe Feed (RSS)





