|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : World
Economy
World economy: Credit crunch fallout begins to spread
By Nick Beams
24 August 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
While stock markets have stabilisedat least for the time
beingthe effects of the credit crunch sparked by the crisis
in the US subprime mortgage market are now working their way through
the banks and financial institutions and the economy as a whole.
This week, the financial fallout spread to Britain where HBOS,
the owner of Halifax and Bank of Scotland, announced that it would
extend credit to Grampian, a $37 billion debt-financed fund, or
conduit, which deals in repackaged loans, including mortgages,
credit cards, and motor loans. The bank said the funding would
continue until market finance improved to an acceptable level.
In Germany, where two banks IKB and SachsenLB have already
been hit by the liquidity crisis, it is clear that the problems
extend deep into the financial system. As a report in Mondays
Financial Times noted: SachsenLB and IKB may have
been small players but the impact of their downfall and the embarrassment
faced by the Bundesbank [Germanys central bank] have spread
far beyond Germany. Financial markets and policymakers have been
left worrying whether further bank crises are lurking and whether
bank regulators are really in command of the facts.
According to Alexander Stuhlmann, the chief executive of WestLB,
another state-owned regional bank, the situation facing the German
banks was not uncritical. We sense a reluctance
on the part of foreign partners to extend credit to German banks,
he said. If we have a banking crisis in Germany with other
countries cutting us off, then other banks will also face difficulties.
The German banking system has been among the hardest hit by
the credit crisis because of the moves over recent years by smaller
banks, particularly the state-owned Landesbanken, to counteract
the effects of a downturn in the domestic market and increased
competition pressures by engaging in riskier financial investments.
While the major Landesbanken are outside the top 30 of Europes
biggest banks, they all rank among the top 30 conduit sponsors.
The problems in the banking sector have led to calls from industry
for the European Central Bank [ECB] to cancel a rise in interest
rates planned for next month. According to the German Chamber
of Industry and Commerce (DIHK), banks had already tightened lending
standards and raised borrowing costs for small companies.
Issuing a plea that the ECB not raise rates, DIHK chief economist
Axel Nitschke said: What we are seeing in the credit markets
is likely to have a major effect, damping economic dynamism in
coming months, not just in Germany but across the world.
He said the DIHK had been receiving distress calls from middle-sized
German companies back in June.
The flow-on effects of the crisis on the broader economy were
also the subject of a warning by John Lipsky, the number two official
at the International Monetary Fund. Speaking to the Financial
Times, the IMF first deputy managing director warned that
the financial market turmoil would undoubtedly dampen economic
growth. While so-called emerging markets had
so far withstood the crisis, he added, it was far too optimistic
to assume that there would be no impact at all.
There would be no quick end to the turmoil because of the uncertainty
as to how much damage it would do to economic growth. There were
also dangers for the entire financial system caused by the lack
of transparency on the part of the banks as to the true extent
of their exposure to riskier investments.
Lack of transparency can create doubts that translate
into market volatility, Lipsky said. We are finding
that in some cases regulated financial institutions are carrying
off-balance-sheet risks that have indirect implications for those
institutions. This had caused uncertainty about the level
of risk borne by major institutions, which contributed to the
drying up of liquidity in parts of the financial market.
As far as the broader economy is concern, the chief fear is
that the slump in the US housing market will lead to a fall in
consumption spending and the onset of a recession. On Thursday,
Countrywide Financials chief executive Angelo Mozilo warned
that the housing market was showing no signs of improvement. Asked
if this could bring about a recession, he said: I think
so ... I cant believe ... that doesnt have a material
effect. There was a very serious situation in
the US housing market and the environment was certainly
not getting better.
The latest industry figures and surveys bear this out. The
median price of new homes has fallen from $262,000 in March to
$237,000 in Junea decline of nearly 10 percent in just three
monthswhile the overhang of unsold homes is equivalent to
7.8 months supply.
According to the data firm RealtyTrac, the number of US homes
facing foreclosure increased by 58 percent in the first six months
of the year. In all, 573,397 properties faced some kind of foreclosure
activity in the first half the year, including notices of default,
auction sale notices, or repossession by lenders. And the number
of foreclosure filings could rise to 2 million by the end of the
year.
The housing slump is impacting on other areas of the economy
as profit warnings by Wal-Mart, Home Depot and Macys indicate.
Car sales in July were the lowest in nine years.
Some of the processes at work in the mortgage crisis and in
the US economy as a whole were revealed in an article on income
figures published in the New York Times on Monday. An analysis
of tax statistics revealed that the average income in 2005 was
still 1 percent less than in 2000 after adjusting for inflation.
This was the fifth consecutive year that American wage-earners
had made less money than at the peak of the last cycle of economic
expansion in 2000. This was a totally new experience
in the post-war period, which saw total incomes listed on tax
returns grow every year, with a single-year exception, until 2001.
These statistics make clear why the housing bubble, which played
such a decisive role in the growth of the US economy since the
recession of 2000-2001, was destined to collapse. While house
prices and consumption spending in general were being inflated
by the expansion of credit and lower interest rates, real income
for the vast majority of working people in the US was going in
the opposite direction, creating the conditions for a scissors
crisis. Now the bursting of the bubble has set in motion
economic forces that could bring a recession not only in the US,
but in the world economy as a whole.
See Also:
Credit crisis claims another bank
[20 August 2007]
Fed moves to halt market meltdown
[18 August 2007]
Wild gyrations on world markets
[17 August 2007]
Worldwide market panic compels central
banks to intervene
[13 August 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |