Godlike Productions - Discussion Forum
Users Online Now: 2,186 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 923,263
Pageviews Today: 1,228,305Threads Today: 306Posts Today: 4,740
10:13 AM


Rate this Thread

Absolute BS Crap Reasonable Nice Amazing
 

WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup

 
Fantasia II
Koo Koo Ka Choo

User ID: 255967
United States
02/23/2009 04:06 PM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup
The Wall Street Journal said Citigroup and U.S. officials are discussing a plan under which the government could convert a big chunk of the $45 billion of preferred shares it bought last year.
The British government last month said it would convert preferred shares it took in Royal Bank of Scotland, which is expected to announce a restructuring plan this week.
Citi executives hope to limit the U.S. government stake to closer to 25 per cent, the Journal reported. The preferred shares now amount to a stake of less than 8 per cent.
'This gives you the sense that authorities' worries have intensified, that problems relating to the U.S. economy may potentially spill over to the rest of the world,' said Sailesh Jha, senior regional economist at Barclays Capital in Singapore.
The Financial Times said Citi's aim was to keep the government's stake to no more than 40 per cent -or at least below the 50 per cent mark that would spell nationalisation.

Nationalisation is anathema to many U.S. politicians, executives and voters.
The U.S. Treasury declined to comment on Citigroup but said it would consider converting preferred shares it owns in banks into common equity to strengthen their capital structure.
'We are open to considering a request to do so if the institution and its regulator believe it would promote the long-term stability of that institution, and if we believe it's in the best interest of long-term stability of our economy and financial system,' spokesman Isaac Baker said.

European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said today that the euro zone's financial system is under severe strain and that net credit flows have started to fall in recent weeks.
'What has become increasingly clear since the intensification of the crisis mid-September last year is that the strains in the financial sector are spilling over to the real economy,' Trichet told a conference on regulation.
'This situation is more difficult to combat than if the problems had remained largely confined to the financial sector,' he said.
European Union leaders at a weekend summit in Berlin backed a doubling of funds for the International Monetary Fund, which has spent billions of dollars in recent months shoring up economies in eastern Europe and elsewhere.
Latvia's government collapsed on Friday and the currencies of countries such as Poland, the Czech Republic and Hungary have come under severe pressure, hitting millions of citizens across the region who have borrowed in foreign currencies such as the euro.
'We're dealing with an extraordinary international crisis the likes of which we have not seen for decades, both as regards financial markets and the global economy,' German Chancellor Angela Merkel said.
There was no respite for Western European banks and brokerages either, as French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde today pledged to extend up to 5 billion euros ($6.3 billion) in additional aid to Banque Populaire and Groupe Caisse d'Epargne, two mutual banks which are merging.
A source close to the deal said that the French state could take a stake of up to 20 per cent in the merged company, which will be France's second-biggest retail bank behind Credit Agricole.
The United Arab Emirates central bank subscribed to half of a $20 billion sovereign bond programme launched on Sunday by the government of Dubai.
The financial and tourism hub needs funds to refinance debt it accumulated to finance expansion projects during a six-year economic boom spurred by high global energy prices.
In Asia, Japan's biggest brokerage Nomura Holdings Inc said it expected to raise about 302 billion yen ($3.3 billion) by selling new shares to boost its capital.
Japan also saw its biggest bankruptcy of the year measured by debt as SFCG Co Ltd, a lender to smaller companies, failed with debts of $3.6 billion.
Nomura, which bought Lehman Brothers operations in Asia, Europe and the Middle East last year, posted a record quarterly loss of 342.9 billion yen ($3.67 billion) last month.
World stocks rose from last week's three-month lows and government bonds fell today as expectations grew that the U.S. government will increase its stake in Citigroup instead of fully nationalising the bank.

'They are certainly moving much faster this time, and it can be taken as a commitment that some banks are too big to fail and the economic consequences too bad to contemplate,' said Tony Morriss, senior markets strategist at ANZ investment bank in Sydney.
U.S. President Barack Obama chairs a fiscal responsibility summit today and is expected to unveil a plan to halve the budget deficit by 2013 with a mix of tax increases on wealthier Americans and spending cuts.

Obama releases his first budget on Thursday.
[link to www.dailymail.co.uk]
George Orwell was right..Black is White, Up is Down, War is Peace...

"Never believe anything until it has been officially denied."

Yesterday is history.......Tomorrow a mystery.......Today is a gift......thats why we call it the Present!!!
bill shitters

User ID: 621466
United Kingdom
02/23/2009 04:19 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup
may be nationalisation is the best thing to happen
as soon as its declared before too much money is wasted to enrich en the blood sucking parasites at the top of it
i think by default we the people win as that would be the first time in over 2 to 300 yrs any nation actually owned its own bank outright
but how we write down the debt or write off is for far greater minds than i
The retired thread killer


Still the killa of threads

we come in peace shoot to kill
[link to au.youtube.com]

I can not talk TO aliens but do listen to the anally probed
Fantasia II  (OP)
Koo Koo Ka Choo

User ID: 255967
United States
02/23/2009 04:27 PM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup
may be nationalisation is the best thing to happen
as soon as its declared before too much money is wasted to enrich en the blood sucking parasites at the top of it
i think by default we the people win as that would be the first time in over 2 to 300 yrs any nation actually owned its own bank outright
but how we write down the debt or write off is for far greater minds than i
 Quoting: bill shitters

hf
I never dreamed that we would end up in this mess in the first place. It was those great minds and greed that got us in this situation.
George Orwell was right..Black is White, Up is Down, War is Peace...

"Never believe anything until it has been officially denied."

Yesterday is history.......Tomorrow a mystery.......Today is a gift......thats why we call it the Present!!!
Nothing Is True

User ID: 618375
United Kingdom
02/23/2009 04:29 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup
may be nationalisation is the best thing to happen
as soon as its declared before too much money is wasted to enrich en the blood sucking parasites at the top of it
i think by default we the people win as that would be the first time in over 2 to 300 yrs any nation actually owned its own bank outright
but how we write down the debt or write off is for far greater minds than i
 Quoting: bill shitters

Nationalisation is the next step.

It is NOT the best thing that could happen.

Do you really think that nationalisation will mean that YOU own the banks?

Get real.

You've just been shafted.

So have I - So no hard feelings!

hf
Everything is permitted..
bill shitters

User ID: 621466
United Kingdom
02/23/2009 04:59 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: WTF,,,British jobs to be supported by American taxpayer with U.S. government set to buy 40% of Citigroup
i know but we can do what ever we want with what we own
The retired thread killer


Still the killa of threads

we come in peace shoot to kill
[link to au.youtube.com]

I can not talk TO aliens but do listen to the anally probed





GLP