
Since the World’s credit markets seized up on September 8, 2009 many corporations are either cutting costs, waiting for government bailout money, or preparing for bankruptcy, as banks are reluctant to lend to all but the most credit worthy and then at unconventionally high interest rates.
In the center of the storm lies the US, UK and EU financial industry where it all started.
The US Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation said last week that the nation’s banks and thrifts lost US$32.1B in the Q-4 Y 2008, the first quarterly deficit in 18 yrs, compared with the US$575MM profit in Q-4 Y 2007. The industry’s net income for Y 2008 plunged from US$16.1B to US$10.2 B for the period.
In the US eighteen federally insured banks have failed so far this year. Last year the number was 25, more than the total number of the previous five years, and up from only three in 2007.
Shares of Citigroup Inc., once the most powerful U.S. bank, have fallen below 1 dollar this month. Pummeled by the financial crisis, the group has lost more than 98 % of its value from its peak in October 2007, and is down more than 95 % from a year ago.
The American International Group (AIG), covered almost daily in www.stockpreacher.com’s Stock Talk, reported this month that it lost US$ 61.7B in Q-4 Y 2009, the largest corporate loss in history. AIG has benefited since from more than US$170B in federal rescue funds with more likely needed and to come.
HSBC Holdings PLC, the largest bank in Europe, early this month reported a 70% drop in its Y 2008 profit and said it would cut 6,100 jobs as it closes its consumer loan business in the United States. It also announced that it would cut its dividend and not pay bonuses to top executives.
In the US, the DJIA sank below 6,800 on March 3, its lowest close since May 1997, losing more than 50% from its highest level in October 2007. Since then the S&P 500 has staged a 19.8% rally off of its lows in the same frame.
On March 23 when the markets were surprised by the US government’s latest plan on clearing bad bank assets and a larger-than-expected rise in existing home sales, the three main indexes all surged more than 6.5% on the day.
Some Economists suggest that financial crisis has yet to bottom out, and the real economy continues to slip as the global economic situation deteriorates.
Therefore, stimulus spending, market confidence, financial regulation and free trade will be key issues at the G20 summit of the World’s leading developing and developed economies next week in London.
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