Pulling Back the Curtain

Posted 20 Jan 2009

HOUSEKEEPING

I will be attending IMN's Sixth Annual Winter Forum On Real Estate Opportunity & Private Fund Investing on 21-23 January 2009 at the Montage Resort & Spa in Laguna Beach, CA.

 Then I will be headed to Kansas City to conduct a funeral because of a death in the family earlier this week.  Finally, I will end up in Vancouver to present at the Cambridge House Investment Conference.  Hopefully I will get to meet some of you and like usual I will have a question and answer session so please bring good questions.

PODCAST

Due to popular demand I have launched a podcast at http://podcast.runtogold.com or you can subscribe via iTunes or search for 'runtogold' in the iTunes store.  I respect your time and attention and hope you find this new medium of content delivery helpful.  I intend to average around 3-8 minutes per episode but some may be longer depending on the subject matter. 

PULLING BACK  THE CURTAIN

Often I have referred to the fact that the Internet pulls back the curtain and reveals things as they are.  Recently, The Independent reported that British banks are 'technically insolvent'.  As Mish said, 'The link above as well as what follows is from Google cache. Not sure how long that cache will stay but here is the article that someone, for some reason, wanted to suppress.'

I would hate to see such useful information suppressed so I suppose I will do my part to pass it along.  Therefore, the post which is cached in Google, but who knows for how long, will appear at the end of this post.  

Between Mish and I this article should circulate to at least around 50,000 people and because of the viral nature of the Internet it may be picked up and forwarded to many others as the curtain is pulled back.  How fun!

As I wrote about in Bank of England and Quantitative Easing, the British banking system and British Pound are in terrible shape.  The bank wreck will get worse so get out of the way.  The increased secrecy and lack of transparency does not inspire confidence.  Nor should confidence be placed in them because all bankers are liars and frauds because fractional reserve banking is by definition fraud and theft.

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British banks are 'technically insolvent'

By Ben Russell and David Prosser
Saturday, 17 January 2009

Britains biggest banks are "technically insolvent", Royal Bank of Scotland said yesterday, as the global banking industry was rocked by another day of turmoil, including the announcement of $23bn (£16bn) of new losses from Merrill Lynch and Citigroup, the giant US institutions.

Analysts working for RBS, one of several British banks to have received emergency funding from the UK Government last year, told the City that "the domestic UK banks are technically insolvent on a fully marked-to-market basis".

The warning does not mean British banks are about to go bust, because the assessment is purely theoretical, and RBS said the position was "not unusual at this stage in the economic cycle".

However, it will add to pressure on the Government to provide more support for the country's banks. Treasury officials are now set to spend this weekend in talks about a fresh round of measures, which could be unveiled as early as next week, to free up lending to households and major corporations hit by the credit crunch.

The value of Barclays fell by a quarter in stock market trading yesterday, amid a series of wild rumours about its finances, although the bank said it saw no need to comment on the drop. Its board said in a statement last night that it knew "no justification for the fall".

The statement said next month the bank expected to report that profits before tax for 2008 were "well ahead" of the £5.3 billion forecast by analysts.

City analysts said the bank had been targeted by traders after regulators lifted a ban yesterday on the short selling of financial stocks. Barclays' share price, along with the value of other British banks, was also hit by dismal news from the international markets, including the announcement on Thursday night that the Irish government was nationalising Allied Irish Banks.

In the US, Bank of America announced yesterday that it was taking a $20bn injection of emergency funding from the US government, subsequently revealing that Merrill Lynch, the investment bank it rescued last year, had lost more than £15bn in the final three months of last year.

Citigroup, once the world's largest bank, announced more than $8bn of losses for the final quarter of last year, and revealed plans to split itself in two.

Treasury officials were still discussing plans to help British banks last night but the proposals are likely to include up to £100bn of new guarantees for the wholesale markets that underpin mortgage and other loans.

Other possible measures being considered include state support to help Britain's largest companies raise their own funds. Another option is to launch a "bad bank" to remove tainted assets from the banks' balance sheets, though while this policy is under consideration, it is thought to remain some way off.

Other proposals include ring-fencing the toxic assets within bank balance sheets. Lord Mandelson, the Business Secretary, has also talked of easing the terms of the Government's £37bn bank bailout in order to kickstart lending. Downing Street made it clear yesterday that the Government remained committed to doing "whatever is necessary to help British businesses and families get through this global financial recession".