Posted on 03/13/2009 9:17:21 PM PDT by Ernest_at_the_Beach
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- The world's largest financial institutions urged the G20 financial leaders on Friday to endorse the "bad bank" approach to dealing with the credit crisis, an expensive model one expert likened to another ransom note.
The request came in a letter to U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown from the Institute of International Finance, a trade group of the world's largest global banks. The IIF wants Brown and his G20 colleagues to push the Obama administration in the direction of setting up a bad bank.
Instead, Geithner has proposed a public-private fund to get toxic assets off banks' books. Details of the plan remain murky; Geithner's apparent change of heart also was greeted with a sharp sell-off in the stock market.
(Excerpt) Read more at marketwatch.com ...
Former BoC chief Dodge named to global bank group
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Fri Mar 13, 2009 1:52pm EDT
OTTAWA, March 13 (Reuters) - Former Canadian central bank chief David Dodge will co-chair a group that will act as an early warning system for risk in the global financial system.
The Institute of International Finance (IIF), which represents many of the world's largest banks, announced the creation of the "market monitoring group" on Friday.
Dodge, who stepped down as Bank of Canada governor in early 2008, will head the group along with Jacques de Larosiere, former managing director of the International Monetary Fund and former governor of the Bank of France.
Dodge's job will be to try to prevent crises through early detection of dangerous practices or trends in the financial system and then to alert industry officials and policymakers before the problem escalates.
"Looking back at the origins of today's crisis there is no doubt that many financial institutions underestimated the scale of risks and the potential scope of the threats to the stability of the financial system," said IIF Managing Director Charles Dallara.
The IIF urged world leaders on Friday to take stronger action to stabilize financial markets, including internationally coordinated regulatory reform.
BIS Quarterly Review, December 2008 ( Global Financial Information )
Bank for International Settlements
How about create a new bank called “The Good Bank” and move all the good assets there and let all the bad assets remain in the old banks and let them fall
LOL!
Ohhh for goodness sakes the pirates demand their next scheme.
Nobody had that job before? I assumed the SEC or some other agency was supposed to provide that function.
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