Archive for November, 2008

Borrowing to get yourself out of a mess

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

That’s basically what governments around the world are doing right now when they’re supporting the banking system.

For normal people, borrowing even more to get yourself out of a hole can only be a short term solution and even then it only works if you have something else up your sleeve. Bridging loans are typically successful in this area because you’ve a house for sale on the market and will repay the loan when it’s sold.

It’s also only a short term solution for governments too, albeit the term over which they can get away with it is somewhat longer: typically several years or perhaps a decade. That “something up the sleeve” is mainly tax rises to pay interest on the loans that they’re getting and to start repaying them as well so we can all look forward to significant rises in taxes in the next term of our governments (perhaps even in the current Obama term as he won at a very unfortunate time). Other possibilities are asset sales of course so we can look forward to privatisations on a grand scale in a few years time although the unwinding of the various nationalisations of various banks will also need thought.

The other downer for governments is that borrowing more basically means printing more money which in turn reduces the value of that money which is why exchange rates are all over the place at the moment.

Of course, all this work is dependent on the banks returning to normal loan criteria and everyone spending money to get the economies going again…. not an easy thing to do when things look this bleak.

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Copyright 2008 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Just where should you put your money right now?

Thursday, November 27th, 2008

Strangely enough, it might not be where you think.

Typically most people will move their money into cash savings in times like these and put those cash savings in a local savings institution on the basis that they know and trust the people in the branch. However, that’s a fatal error to make. Sure, you can trust the people in your local bank or building society branch with your cash but the problem is that they aren’t the people who’ll be investing that cash.

That’s how come Northern Rock created such a stir last year: it was very much trusted locally and indeed was well thought of generally too for that matter. However, what felled it was the way in which the financial wizards at HQ invested the money and pulled in more money to fund mortgages.

In fact, the safest place at the moment is one that’s commonly overlooked. It’s National Savings in the UK. That’s part of HM Treasury and it’s the one UK financial instution that can’t go bankrupt because they’re the people that create the money in the first place. No, interest rates with them aren’t as high as with other places but then interest rates aren’t that great at the moment anywhere and these days it’s safety that you should be looking towards.

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Copyright 2008 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.

Looking into the abyss

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008

Not so long ago I was joking that either Citibank or HSBC going bankrupt would be a really spectacular event as both are based in one country yet have the bulk of their interests overseas, so who would support them?

Well, it’s happened to Citibank now and it turns out that the American government figured that if they were allowed to go to the wall it would be just that little bit too spectacular to happen so they’ve bailed them out. One wonders how long it can be before we see if the UK government have a similar view of HSBC although that might be quite a while from now as HSBC management dumped the problem HFC quite some time ago and that’s where a lot of their high risk loans lay.

But when you’ve the situation of the largest banks in the world at risk like this it sounds to me that it’ll be quite some time before we get ourselves out of this particular financial mess.

 

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Copyright 2008 by Financial Perspectives. All rights reserved.