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Iceland approves new Icesave deal

Iceland’s parliament has approved plans to repay 3.8bn euros (£3.4bn) to savers in the UK and the Netherlands.

 

Icesave website

Icesave collapsed last October

The money will go to the British and Dutch governments, who partially compensated savers when the Icesave online bank failed.

More than 320,000 savers lost out when the bank collapsed in 2008.

A bill on the measure, narrowly approved against strong opposition, was seen as crucial to Iceland’s bid to join the EU and rebuild its economy.

The bill was passed by 33 votes to 30. The Icelandic government had threatened to resign if the measure was rejected.

“Approving the bill is the better option and will avoid even more economic damage,” Finance Minister Steingrimur Sigfusson said during the debate.

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Filed under: banking sector, bbc, Iceland, recession, , , , , , , , , , , , ,

In White House meeting, Obama calls on banks to increase lending

 sourced from The Washington Post 

Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 15, 2009

President Obama exhorted the nation’s biggest banks on Monday to make “extraordinary” efforts to increase lending, even as some of those firms are racing to distance themselves from government control.

The nation’s most powerful bankers sat in the Roosevelt Room at the White House and nodded as the president spoke, but some executives and industry officials said afterward that increasing lending is largely beyond their ability.

Meanwhile, Citigroup and Wells Fargo announced plans Monday to spend billions of dollars — not on lending, but to repay federal aid. Citigroup chief executive Vikram Pandit missed the White House meeting to rally investor support.

Bank executives say they itch to make profitable loans, as many as possible, but are struggling to find qualified borrowers. They also say that the administration is asking for increased lending even as it pursues financial reforms that will limit the ability of banks to make loans.

Some note that a recession caused by an orgy of lending must be solved in part through greater restraint.

Obama has come under increasing pressure to demonstrate his concern for the plight of Americans caught in a rising tide of joblessness, even as the larger economy appears headed to recovery. The White House portrayed Monday’s meeting as a chance for the president to channel the anger of Americans who think federal programs intended to revive the broader economy have succeeded only in restoring Wall Street’s profitability.

“America’s banks received extraordinary assistance from American taxpayers to rebuild their industry,” the president said after the meeting. “And now that they’re back on their feet, we expect an extraordinary commitment from them to help rebuild our economy.”

Obama added that he expects not just effort but “results.”

Some administration officials privately conceded that borrowing always declines during recessions, and that they are struggling to find effective ways of spurring new lending. Furthermore, the administration’s options continued to be constrained by the belief of many officials that meddling in the details of banking is counterproductive.

The administration also is surrendering a measure of leverage over the industry as banks repay federal aid provided under the Troubled Assets Relief Program — although officials are eager to shed the political baggage of aiding big Wall Street firms. With the announcements Monday by Citigroup and Wells Fargo that they would repay federal aid, all of the nine major banks that got money late last year will be on track to pay it back.

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Filed under: banking sector, news, Newspapers, recession, Recession starts Friday 23rd January, The washington Post, USA, , , , , , , , , , , ,

London 'damaged' by bonus tax, Barclays chief says

London’s role as a leading financial hub may be “damaged” by the new bonus tax, Barclays chief John Varley has told the BBC.

Mr Varley is the first senior British banker to attack the one-off 50% tax on large bonuses for bankers recently announced by the government.

“I think that London could well be damaged by this,” he said.

The Barclays chief executive also criticised Labour for not ensuring a “predictable tax environment”.

The bonus levy applies to bonuses of more than £25,000, and lasts until April next year. France has announced similar plans.

The tax is payable by banks, with bankers still having to pay income tax on any bonus they receive as usual.

Mr Darling predicted in his pre-Budget report that the tax would raise £550m, though banks have claimed it would raise far more.

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Filed under: banking sector, bbc, recession, , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Recession2009 is an independent supplier of news

Hi if you care about what you have been reading and the future of English politics, please as a comment from Recession2009

VOTE LABOUR. thank you

Filed under: recession

is this the death of free news

Hi all

On the day Google say everyone will have to pay for news, here at recession2009 will try and still supply free news to all.

If you like what you see here we are starting a new website soon.

 recessionnow.co.uk

hopefully operating early next year

Happy blogging & free news to all

Filed under: recession

Will the recession end on Friday 23th October

Will the UK be out of recession from Friday 23rd October, or will the financial and  fiscal  results show we are still very much in recession.

Lets wait and see. (the answer is no) 22/10/09

Record recession for UK economy

The UK economy unexpectedly contracted by 0.4% between July and September, according to official figures, meaning the country is still in recession.

Shoppers in Bluewater Shopping Centre

Retail sales were flat in September, which did not help overall growth

It is the first time UK gross domestic product (GDP) has contracted for six consecutive quarters, since quarterly figures were first recorded in 1955.

But the figures could still be revised up or down at a later date, because this figure is only the first estimate.

GDP measures the total amount of goods and services produced by a country.

Quarterly growth of 0.2% had been expected in the figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), although expectations had been tempered by recent figures showing no growth in retail sales in September, and a 2.5% decline in industrial output in August.

ANALYSIS
Hugh Pym
Hugh Pym, BBC chief economics correspondent

There’s no disguising how grim these figures are. Almost every City analyst expected there to be positive growth in the third quarter. Instead it was negative.

That means the recession in the UK is the longest since modern records began in the 1950s.

Germany, France and Japan have all come out of recession technically and the UK hasn’t. The decline has continued.

And the markets didn’t really like the look of that. The foreign exchange markets have been selling the pound.

There’s every indication that it’s going to be a long hard slog for quite some time to come as the British economy tries to turn itself round.

The unexpected decline in the services sector was the key factor behind the drop, with the distribution, catering and hotels sector performing particularly badly.

The UK economy’s reliance on the service sector, and financial services in particular, may be the reason why it is still in recession when partners such as France and Germany exited earlier in the year.

The economy contracted 5.2% compared with the same period last year, which was marginally better than the record figure of 5.5% in the previous three months.

It has now contracted 5.9% from its peak before the recession began.

The worse-than-expected GDP figures are likely to make the Bank of England consider extending its policy of quantitative easing.

Quantitative easing is the central bank’s policy of printing money and using it to buy bonds from banks and other companies to help stimulate the economy.

“Back in August we had a worse-than-expected second-quarter GDP number and that is the reason that the Bank of England extended the quantitative easing programme,” Bronwyn Curtis from HSBC told the BBC.

Graph showing GDP growth

‘Awful’

The £175bn already announced for the quantitative easing programme will have been spent by next month, so the strength of the third quarter GDP number will be important in deciding whether to extend it.

Indeed, at the Bank’s current rate of spending, it is expected to have spent the whole £175bn in the next week.

Struggling to find work in the recession

As the next Monetary Policy Committee meeting, at which quantitative easing decisions are taken, is not until 4 November, that would leave it with a week with no extra cash to pump into the economy.

The figures were “awful with no positive news” according to James Knightley at ING.

“This clearly suggests that the likelihood of an expansion in quantitative easing by £50bn or so over the next quarter is rising, although [it] is not a foregone conclusion.”

‘Help for business’

The pound fell more than a cent against the US dollar following the release of the figures, with traders particularly concerned that the UK may turn out to be the only major economy still in recession.

It is also worrying that the decline has continued despite the stimulus measures that the government and the Bank of England have introduced.

“Continued intervention – including help for businesses to access finance, and incentives to promote investment – is still needed,” said David Kern, chief economist at the British Chambers of Commerce.

“Above all else, business confidence must be nurtured, to ensure that recovery is not further delayed.”

‘Deeply disappointing’

Chancellor Alistair Darling said he had never expected to see growth before the end of 2009.

Chancellor Alistair Darling: ”Confidence is beginning to return”

“Our job is to support the economy as we come through towards recovery,” he said.

“[Growth] will come – I’m confident about that – and I’m confident that businesses and people generally will begin to see a difference, but it will take time.”

Shadow chancellor George Osborne described the figures as “deeply, deeply disappointing”.

There are many millions of people who will be deeply concerned to see that Britain is still in recession six months after France and Germany came out of recession,” he told the BBC.

“It destroys the myth that Britain was better prepared.”

Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Vince Cable said the figures were “a cold blast of realism”.

“We’ve had a lot of talk recently based on a booming stock exchange and prices of luxury houses in London that somehow this problem was at an end, and it isn’t,” he said.

One of the measures expected to be a particular help in the final quarter of the year is the change in VAT.

The rate of VAT is due to return to 17.5% from 15% at the beginning of January and consumers are expected to step up their purchasing ahead of that increase.

Sourced from The BBC

Filed under: banking sector, bbc, British Goverment, recession, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Full impact of recession yet to hit UK public sector, study claims

Research says that effects of downturn will not hit some parts of Britain for several months – and that local councils need to prepare for this ‘aftershock’

 

The full cost of the worst global downturn since the second world war has yet to hit Britain’s local and central government finances, new research reveals .

Analysis by data company Experian shows that the recession – in terms of unemployment, debt, fraud and increasing demand for public services – will not hit some areas of the UK for another seven months and, in some places, will be felt for many years after growth resumes.

Experian found that the south, from Kent through to Cornwall, was feeling the least impact from the recession; the midlands, Wales and the north-east the severest impact; with Scotland between the two extremes.

Local authority areas that would be hit hardest, it said, were Blaenau Gwent, Kingston-upon-Hull, Inverclyde, Glasgow and Wolverhampton. Areas that would suffer the least included the City of London, Kensington and Chelsea, and Westminster.

Charlotte Hogg, managing director of Experian, said: “The tremors of the recession may have been felt in many households and businesses, but local and central government now needs to brace itself for the aftershock.

“So far, the public sector has been cushioned by government investment and spending. But with unemployment rising, revenues falling and the need for public spending cuts, local authorities need to think how they can do more for less.”

Over the next 10 years, Experian expects London, Edinburgh and Leeds, as well as a number of other major northern cities, to prosper the most. However, many Scottish locations such as Dumfries and Galloway, East Dunbartonshire, South Ayrshire and Argyll and Bute as well as English local authorities including Copeland, Malvern Hills, Weymouth and Portland, West Somerset and Stafford will take much longer to recover from recession due to persistent unemployment and deprivation problems.

According to the research, the people who will experience the greatest levels of financial stress are young single people on limited incomes who rent small flats from local councils or housing associations, and older pensioners who have found their retirement incomes eroded by inflation and are dependent on state pensions.

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Filed under: banking sector, bbc, blog, British Goverment, news, recession, The Guardian, , , , , , , , , , ,

Brown optimistic over UK economy

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has painted an optimistic prediction for the economy, saying it was “simply not true” that tough times are ahead.

Shoppers

Gordon Brown is optimistic about the UK’s economic growth

Mr Brown told the Daily Telegraph that the action the government had taken was bringing the economy around.

“We’ve said that the economy will grow by 1.5% next year and more people are moving towards our position,” he said.

Mr Brown’s assessment of the rate of recovery contrasts with the Treasury’s forecasts for annual growth of 1.25%.

And the IMF has made a prediction of 0.9%.

Mr Brown said: “If you have a growth policy for Britain, get unemployment down, get the economy moving forward, then Britain can have upgrowth,” he said.

“I think people have moved closer to our view that Britain is capable of coming back to growth at a higher rate next year than people were originally assuming, and higher rates in the future.”

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Filed under: bbc, British Goverment, Conservatives, recession, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Banks 'show first recovery signs'

Financial firms may be recovering, with business volumes growing for the first time in two years, a survey has shown.

cash machines

Confidence among banks is growing for the first time since June 2007

Business increased in three months to early September, said 7% of those surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers and business organisation the CBI.

But building societies returned to feeling “downbeat” and business levels were weak in other areas, suggesting the recovery still has a way to go.

“Future demand is still a major concern,” said the researchers.

‘Upswing’

On balance, 36% of financial services firms are more optimistic about the general business situation than in June.

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Filed under: banking sector, bbc, news, recession, , , , , , , , , , , ,

Watch The BBC Last Days of the Lehman Brothers

Watch The BBC  Last Days of the Lehman Brothers

Watch the documentry made by the BBC

Filed under: banking sector, bbc, economic depression, Great Depression, lehman brothers, recession, USA, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

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