Home | Good Ways to Invest Money | Bank ratings | eCommerce Associate Blog | Corporate Site    

Posts Tagged ‘Freddie Mac’

Mandelson argues that Labour should be allowed to stay in power despite losing the election.

May 7th, 2010 by tom | 0 Comments | Filed in Central banks, Daily News, Debt, Employment, Exchage Rate, Money Management, Recession, Retail, Stocks and shares, UK Bank Accounts, UK Banks, UK Small Business, UK employment

financial news

In the first statement coming out of Labour election headquarters, current U.K. Business Secretary Peter Mandelson has put up an argument stating that the sitting government has the constitutional right for the “first go” in trying to remain in power when no party wins a majority in the House of Commons.

“The rules are, if it’s a hung parliament, it’s not the party with the largest number of seats that has the first go, it’s the sitting government,” Mandelson said. “After three terms in office, of course many people have turned away from the Labour Party but they haven’t embraced the Conservatives.” He added

According to a recent survey, manufacturing output and exports in the UK expanded at their fastest rate in 15 years. These findings meant that whichever party eventually wins the right to govern in the UK, are liable to inherit an economy already showing signs of recovery with manufacturing output growing by as much as two percent in the past three months. A growth level that suggests the manufacturing sector will make a significant contribution to second-quarter gross domestic product growth in the UK.

Recent figures also show that the next government are set to inherit a jobs market that, while currently still looking a little weak, looks is poised for recovery but still fragile. Unemployment stands at 2.5 million, or eight percent of the work force, far below the three million-plus predicted last year.

Channel 4 announced the public service broadcaster would boost the budget of its film division by a fifth this year to 10 million pounds. The decision returns Film 4’s budget to its 2007 level before the recession, and partly reflects a cautious confidence at the group. Chief executive David Abraham said the Digital Economy Act had also influenced the decision to increase investment in Film 4. The Act formally stated that as part of its public service remit, Channel 4 should make "high quality films" for cinema release in the UK.

Alliance Boots has replaced Marks & Spencer at the top of an annual ranking of UK companies by the strength of their corporate reputation. Boots, which enters the Reputation Institute’s UK Pulse Report for the first time, ranks first in the survey that measures corporate reputation among the general public. Other companies in the top 10 include Cadbury, Morrisons and Rolls Royce, with John Lewis Partnership, Debenhams, Sainsbury’s and Tesco among the top 20 places. In broadcasting, the BBC came ahead of ITV and BSkyB, and HSBC has become the top-ranked bank. Companies are selected by the organization based on revenue and visibility among the general public, but can decide whether or not to be included. There is no fee for inclusion.

Followers of Google’s UK-based email will now be able to have @gmail.com addresses, rather than @googlemail.com. The news comes after the search engine marketing giant won an arduous trademark battle with a British research company that had applied for the "gmail" name prior to Google launching its email service. After finally reaching a settlement, Google are now able to offer users that registered after 2005, a change to the shorter address of @gmail.com Google went on to use the @googlemail.com address for those that had registered after this time.

A spokesman for Google stated that the company was satisfied with the conclusion of the proceedings, saying:”We know how important email accounts are to users and we wanted to provide the best user experience possible. We engineered the infrastructure to enable users to switch their accounts to @gmail.com accounts should they choose, as well as directing all new users to set up @gmail.com accounts in the UK.”

Power and oil firm Essar Energy were left wishing that they had timed their entry onto the FTSE a little better than this week, after suffering the worst debut of a big London flotation since the early noughties. The group’s shares plummeted 7.2 percent to 389.5 pence on its first day of trading. The fall from the UK’s largest stock market listing in more than two years is the worst seen since HMV, the music retailer, dropped 7.5 percent in May 2002. Essar’s listing came on a challenging day for the markets, with the FTSE 100 index closing down 2.5 percent on the day

The Euro remains under heavy pressure, falling to below 1.27 against the dollar. The pound strengthened took a late slump against the dollar to 1.463 and at 1.550 against the Euro.

International rating agencies continue to voice concerns over the crisis of confidence which is spreading across Europe, with countries such as Portugal, Italy, Spain, Ireland and Britain looking unstable, as the public and politicians in Athens attempt come to terms with the harsh economic conditions which have come with the EEC and IMF bail-out. The European Commission has said it expects the Greek economy to shrink by 3% this year, amid continued market jitters over the country’s debt crisis.

Banking systems still face "very real, common threats" if doubts were raised about their governments’ abilities to pay debts.

Fears of another round of instability meant another volatile session for the FTSE 100 index, which saw it shed 80.9 points to close in 5261 as the UK also went to the polls, with the prospects of a hung Parliament looking very much a reality.

US mortgage giant Freddie Mac announced a loss of $8 billion (£5.3 billion) for the first three months of 2010. Reports from the company hint that they are liable to ask for a further $10.6 billion in state aid. The firm has made a number of federal cash requests since it was taken over by regulators in September 2008, whilst stating that as the US housing market has not yet fully recovered they would continue to be in need of continued government funding. If the latest request is granted, it will bring the total cost of the Freddie Mac rescue to $61.3 billion.

Stock exchange bosses and regulators were last night scrambling to explain the cause of a plunge in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, which took the index down by the largest number of points in its history, setting off a short term panic in an already fragile financial market.

A little over an hour before the close of trading in New York. The result was a period of unprecedented chaos that also dragged in currency and credit markets. At 2.20 pm, EPT the Dow stood at 10,460, already down 400 points, when it suddenly tumbled 600 points with the space of just seven minutes to 9,869, a drop of 9.2 per cent, the largest points fall ever.

The Dow snapped back but continued to swing wildly until the close of trading, when it settled at 10,520.32, down 347.80 points on the day, a fall of 3.2 per cent. The NASDAQ also closed down 82.65 points to 2319.64.

US productivity grew at a better-than -expected annual rate of 3.6% in the first quarter of 2010, while a separate report showed that applications for jobless benefits dropped for a third week in a row.

The US economy has been growing since last summer, but firms have been reluctant to take workers back on, instead pushing smaller workforces to produce more, which has increased productivity – measured as the amount of output per hour of work.

Carmaker BMW has reported a return to profit compared with a year earlier and given an upbeat forecast for sales in the coming year.

The group reported a net profit of €324 million (£277 million) for the first quarter of 2010, compared to a loss of €150 million for the comparative period last year. Turnover was up 8% to €12.4 billion with the company reporting a 100% increase in sales in China as it did a year earlier

Bank accountsfinancial

Related Websites

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

What caused this current global credit crunch?

October 6th, 2008 by admin | 0 Comments | Filed in Daily News, Global Credit Crisis, Recession, UK Banks

Like many economic upheavals, the global credit crunch was caused by many factors. At the root of all of them is modern banking…yet it has scarcely been mentioned in the media. Its name is fractional reserve banking. This fractional reserve principle was first started by Goldsmiths centuries ago. Goldsmiths would keep gold safe for wealthy merchants and give them notes of ownerships to exchange at other Goldsmiths branches in distant countries…they were essentially the first banknotes.

Over time, these crafty goldsmiths noticed that the depositors usually only ever took about 10% of their gold out during any one year, so the goldsmiths decided to lend out the remaining gold at interest to profit from the merchants gold deposits. So for every ounce of gold deposited, the goldsmiths were able to lend 10 ounces of gold and charge interest on it, secured on property, creating money out of thin air. Modern banking was born.

Fast forward to the modern era. In the 1970s, the US left the gold standard and the discipline that gold forces onto central banks and governments was removed. Ever since then , we have seen a steady upward march in the money supply as the temptation to print more money has been too much for the Federal reserve and congress to resist. I don’t know about you, but if someone handed me a cheque book and told me I’d never have to pay back any checks I wrote, Id have writer’s cramp! Now we have a systems with creates money out of thin air and a blank cheque book….can you spell DISASTER!

Since 1977, this fractional reserve banking principle and the ability to print as much money as you wanted has been put on steroids. The community reinvestment act. the Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), the 1977 federal law that has facilitated the flow of more than $1.5 trillion in private capital to underserved communities in the United States, for pressuring Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, banks and other lenders to offer mortgages “to people who were borrowing over their heads.” It wasn’t the CRA that created the subprime mess but the proliferation of unregulated mortgage originators during the housing boom, financed in part by the government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

CRA lending by leading national banks involves loans that help people with low or moderate incomes buy homes of high quality and lasting value, homes that remain affordable.

By contrast, Fannie and Freddie didn’t have to be led to the water to drink; they ran. The two were determined to thwart the spirit, if not the letter, of a 1992 federal law that permitted them to take “less than the return earned on other activities” to assist “mortgages on housing for low- and moderate-income families.”

Instead of taking less of a return, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac decided to take more of a return on affordable housing by issuing more than $400 billion in debt to finance higher-cost, higher-yield subprime mortgages, helping to fuel the subprime feeding frenzy. It was the government stupid…through irresponsible laws which had (unintended?) consequences and reckless quasi government institutions.

Not only are the banknotes lent our, in some cases at 30/1 rations, but those notes and the assets they buy are also multiplied, by many more times, through derivatives. This all works well when the underlying asset (housing) is rising in price, but when house prices start falling, and the derivative you hold is leveraged 300/1, it doesn’t take much downward price movement for that derivative to become worthless. This is what we are seeing today. Fractional reserve banking, not monetary discipline and a law that was meant to deliver “OK” returns to a quasi government institution led to greedy executives, not happy with their returns. They may have dammed us all.


For More information on specific Banks use these links


 

 

For all the best deals on Current bank account, Business bank accounts, Savings and Mortgage deals visit the number one Independent Bank Compassion site

Bank—Accounts

Related Websites

Tags: , , , , ,