Lenders may have tapped Bank scheme for £200bn

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by THE-BEAKER, Sep 3, 2008.

  1. this does not sound like good news.

    Troubled lenders in the UK may have tapped the Bank of England's emergency funding scheme for as much as £200bn, according to investment bank UBS - double the most aggressive estimates.

    Alastair Ryan, UBS banks analyst, has calculated that "the take-up could be £200bn or more".

    When Bank Governor Mervyn King first unveiled the Special Liquidity Scheme in April he indicated that it might be used for £50bn, while debt specialists forecast a total take-up of £90bn-£100bn by the time the scheme closed on October 20.

    A Bank spokesman said yesterday: "As has always been the case, there is no cap on the scheme. Its size will reflect its use."

    The scheme, which allows banks to swap untradeable mortgage securities for liquid Treasury bills for up to three years, has filled the funding hole left by the closure of the wholesale markets since the credit crisis. The last major syndication of mortgage securities was in June last year.

    Mr Ryan believes banks are using the scheme to replace maturing funding lines, as well as to fund future lending and past lending that would normally have already been syndicated.

    Such action would tally with assertions by Sir James Crosby in his recent mortgage report for the Treasury that "the shortage of mortgage finance will persist throughout 2008, 2009 and 2010" and that banks must find £40bn a year to meet their existing obligations before making any new loans. HBOS alone, Britain's biggest mortgage lender, has £156bn of wholesale funding that comes up for renewal before June.

    The Bank for International Settlements on Monday revealed that UK lenders issued a record £45bn of mortgage-backed bonds in the three months to June in order to use the scheme. Mr Ryan described it as "a qualified success" because inter-bank lending rates are still well above base rate at about 5.75pc.

    Bankers and economists were surprised by the forecast, calling it "unlikely but plausible". One, Simon Ward, economist at New Star, said: "If it is right, then the British banking system is relying much more heavily on state support than either Europe or the US, which would suggest the banking system here is in greater trouble."



    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2008/09/03/cnsls103.xml
     
  2. Actually its good news, simply means this will take more time to settle, and hopefully creates more trading opportunities. Its either you are in this to trade or to have quasi academic discussions about the current situation. I know what l am after :)
     
  3. Its either you are in this to trade or to have quasi academic discussions about the current situation. I know what l am after
    ------------------

    lol. Priceless. "Quasi academic" would be a good screen name.
     
  4. Cutten

    Cutten

    You don't think signs of greater than expected distress in the UK banking sector are relevant to trading? Lol.
     
  5. Right on. Only buy-and-hold investors should be rattled about government fiscal woes.