Posted on 11/25/2007 7:02:55 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
Credit squeeze spreads to Norwegian towns
By David Ibison in Stockholm
Published: November 23 2007 22:19 | Last updated:
November 23 2007 22:19
Few people in the remote Norwegian town of Narvik, 200km north of the Arctic Circle where the sun has disappeared until January, were likely to have given a lot of thought to the credit squeeze sweeping the global money markets that is, until it threatened their wages over Christmas.
Narvik, along with three other similarly isolated towns of Hemnes, Rana and Hattfjelldal, has become the latest community to discover just how directly even the most remote places can be affected by the financial turmoil after it made multi-million dollar bets on complicated US-linked financial products.
The towns invested about $96m (65m) in complex products linked to unspecified municipal bonds in the US, designed by Citigroup, and sold to them by Terra Securities, the investment banking arm of one of Norways leading banking groups.
Now representatives of the towns have admitted that recent market movements linked to the credit crisis had destroyed most of the value of their investments.
Arne Sørensen, leader of the Hemnes municipal government, said the town faced total possible losses of NKr170m (21m), but he was hoping to close the positions with losses of about NKr55m.
We can live through it, he said with Norwegian stoicism. Its serious, but not tragic.
He told the Financial Times he feels badly served by Terra and the way it got his town of 4,500 residents to buy the products. Terra gave us two documents, one in English and one in Norwegian. We only read the Norwegian one, but it seems there is a huge difference between the two as the Norwegian document didnt disclose all of the risks.
He added the town wanted to read both documents before signing, but Terra said we only had a few days to make a decision.
Friday night, Terra rejected the criticism, saying: The client was presented [with] the English presentation as well as the Norwegian summary.
Putting the municipality of Hemnes under time pressure is new to us, and on which we have not seen supporting evidence.
Mr Sørensen admitted Hemnes bore some of the responsibility but added the town had sought legal advice on the issue.
The Norwegian ministry of finance has asked the countrys main financial regulator to investigate the affair. A report is due in a couple of weeks.
Citigroup said it is confident the risks of investing in the notes were described in the materials provided to Terra Securities.
Terra is the investment banking arm of a group of 78 local savings banks in Norway. The group is the main source of financing for many local communities and there is a deep tradition of trust between the towns and the bank.
Terra said in a previously published statement that the products had generated good returns until severe market movements damaged the investments.
The group added the affected towns have responsibility for their decisions, but emphasised that it would seek a solution and was in talks with town representatives.
Ping!
This is becoming the S&L Crisis of the 21st. Century. The only question is whether we can get out of this mess, as well.
The failure of Globalism pokes its head out again
They have plenty of people in Norway who can read English. Anyone who invests millions without having careful legal review of the documents is acting rashly.
Federal regulation has taken control of nearly ALL business activity, and soon will take total control of the Medical Business, too.
Free markets are few and far between, as fools on the Left who think the gubmint should halt the wealth-building of "big business" simply will pay more for everything (they already are), while thinking somehow that "those rich bastards" are somehow being penalized.
All the rhetoric about taxing "obscene profits" of "BIG OIL" is more consumer price increases on the horizon.
Regulation by the Federal Government (or ANY government, for that matter) is nothing more than an indirect tax on the people.
The Chinese export lead painted toys, and we export bad investments schemes.
The contagion spreads, like an overdose of curare.
That was the whole point.
Greedy bankers and loan brokers cooked up very risky loans, threw them at borrowers that could not afford conventional loans, artificially drove up housing prices with a flood of easy money, encouraged home owners to take out home equity loans against the artificially inflated value of their houses, sold the high yield debt to investors and after the house of cards collapses, cry out for U.S. Government bailouts.
Result:
1.) Greedy bankers and loan brokers get rich.
2.) Home buyers, borrowers, foreign and domestic investors and the U.S. taxpayers get screwed.
"There's a sucker born every minute" ..... P.T. Barnum
Actually, we import some of them - like GM buying a bridge in Germany, under a lease-back arrangement, for the tax write-off.
Eggs, meet basket.
What amazes me is that America-haters all around the world press for any course of action that might bring us down a notch-—all the while the entire world economy is bound up with the prosperity and success of the American enterprise, for better or worse.
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