British Government Pumps $63B Into Banks

Started by frawin, October 13, 2008, 10:16:09 AM

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frawin

The Financial crisis is worldwide and I still say the high cost of energy and the run away inflation that came with it is the main cause. You can set around blame the Republicans, Democrats and Obamacrats, but the high cost of energy is the main culprit. The high cost of energy is a result of all of the jobs transferred to India, China, Japan and other countries, in 10 years we went from a worldwide excess of crude oil to a worldwide shortage. We made China the number 2 consumer of oil in the world, ten years ago they were not even a factor.

British Government Pumps $63B Into Banks
  The British government injected an unprecedented 37 billion pounds ($63 billion) into the country's leading banks Monday to avoid a full-scale collapse of the sector.

In return for the rescue, the Royal Bank of Scotland Group PLC (RBS: 1.22, -0.23, -15.86%), Lloyds TSB Group PLC and HBOS PLC will cede majority control to the government and halt cash bonuses for bank board members this year. The banks will also be required to lend more money to small- and medium-sized businesses and homeowners in a bid to rescue the country's housing market.

"The action we are taking today is unprecedented but essential to all of us," said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown. "We must in an uncertain and unstable world be the rock of stability upon which people can depend."

The humiliation of holding out the beggar bowl to the government prompted the resignation of a handful of senior executives at the banks, where the government will now have the right to appoint board members and fix dividends.

The deal will leave taxpayers owning as much as 60% of RBS and 43.5% of the merged Lloyds HBOS bank -- the two are in the process of combining.

The government said its position as majority shareholder in each of the banks is strictly temporary, but the subsequent transformation of the sector is on the massive scale of the postwar bank nationalizations in the 1940s and the privatization of the industry in 1980s.

"The hope is that today will mark a watershed, with vast measures of government reassurance finally rekindling some confidence in the shattered banking sector," said Keith Bowman, equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown Stockbrokers.

The government said that it will buy 5 billion pounds ($8.6 billion) of preference shares directly and underwrite 15 billion pounds ($25.7 billion) of ordinary shares in RBS. The preference shares carry a fixed interest payment of 12%.

If no other investor comes forward to buy those shares, as many analysts anticipate, the government will invest the full 20 billion pounds ($34.5 billion) itself.

It is investing a further 17 billion pounds ($29.2 billion) in LLoyds TSB and HBOS.

The country's two other major banks, Barclays PLC and HSBC PLC are not receiving a government handout.

Barclays said it will try to raise more than 6.5 billion pounds ($11.3 billion) without the government's help, while HSBC, Britain's other major banking group, has already announced separate capital raising measures to bolster its balance sheet without government assistance.

The takeovers of the three banks mark the implementation of a 50 billion pound ($86.8 billion) rescue package announced by Brown last week to shore up British banks, which have been buffeted by the global credit squeeze.

Brown was quick to reassure taxpayers that they would get a fair deal from their new ownership of the banks, saying there would be "no rewards for failure."

No dividends will be paid until the government's preference shares have been fully redeemed and future executive salary will be based on performance "and long-term value creation," Brown said.

"This crisis has proved beyond doubt the virtures of the sound business practice of rewarding responsible risk-taking and not irresponsibility," he added.

Among the high level casualties resulting from the announcements are RBS chief executive Steve Goodwin, who will be replaced by Stephen Hester, currently chief executive of British Land. The bank said that Goodwin will not be receiving any severance payment.

Chairman Tom McKillop will be retiring at the group's annual meeting in April. Johnny Cameron, RBS's chairman of global markets, is leaving the board immediately.

HBOS chief executive Andy Hornby and chairman Dennis Stevenson will leave their posts when the merger with Lloyds is completed.

Brown stressed that Monday's action needed to be accompanied by reforms to the international banking system.

"We must now put in place new structures and new rules for the future," he said. "This cannot simply be a short term rescue to paper over the cracks. Only a surgical approach that gets to the root of the problem will now work to ensure the problems do not return."

Along with the bailout, Lloyds and HBOS said Monday that the terms of their merger would be altered so that Lloyds would be paying less than previously agreed for HBOS.

Lloyds had previously agreed to give HBOS shareholders 0.83 shares in Lloyds for every HBOS share held. It will now give just 0.605 shares for each HBOS share.


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