Posts Tagged ‘International’

U.S. subprime issues were again felt in Germany as British investors pulled back. A rippling wave might build to tsunami proportions in weeks to come as more companies are singing the mortgage blues. As the ripple moves from subprime to Alt-A, and to credit card asset-backed securities, caution is the mode of the day as investors open their eyes to what their holdings are really worth. By Thursday morning, reports were coming in from Holland, France, Germany, Australia and England. Here is an example:

Many people have asked why I predicted an implosion on or about August 15th. First let me be prefectly clear that I did not believe problems were contained to subprime, as we were told in earlier reports. Nor did I believe problems were contained to the United States, as others would like us to believe. In fact my partner and I tracked subprime and predatory loans every day since 1999, often receiving reports from borrowers. The problem is spreading to asset-backed securities and the credit card market. My position is supported by this article:

Concerns that U.S. subprime problems might spread to Europe caused suspended fund redemptions. When the French asre singing the U.S. mortgage blues the problem does not appear to be contained, as was stated in earlier by some. Here is the report — NEW YORK, Aug 9 (Reuters) – A safety bid drove U.S. government securities prices sharply higher on Thursday when French bank BNP Paribas suspended redemptions in three funds and the European Central Bank was forced to inject extra funds into the system in a quick overnight tender. France’s biggest listed bank, BNP Paribas, said it froze 1.6 billion euros ($1.17 billion) in three of its funds, citing U.S. subprime mortgage sector problems.

Problem contained? Only a U.S. problem? Subprime will not effect other countries? Think again as this article came from Germany on August 6th:

Home foreclosures, called repossessions in the U.K., are on the rise. Although the mortgage market structure is totally different in the U.K., loan losses and bad debt effect financial institutions the same way. People in the U.K. have a record amount of unsecured personal debt.

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