Siobhan Kennedy
The global credit crisis plunged to new depths yesterday as persistent
fears over the collapse of a large financial institution caused funding
markets to dry up and forced the US Federal Reserve to make available
up to $200 billion (£99.3 billion) of emergency financing.
The Fed said that a "rapid deterioration" in the credit markets in
recent days had prompted it to begin a series of fresh cash injections
in an effort to shore up the balance sheets of America's stricken
banks. Unemployment also shot up in the US last month, adding to the
gloom. US stocks tumbled, dragging the Dow Jones industrial average
down 138.40 points to 11.902.00.
Treasury prices jumped and the dollar fell to record lows.
Bankers said that the moves underscored the deepening severity of the
crisis, which was triggered last June by the collapse of the American
sub-prime mortgage market and has got progressively worse since. One
senior banker in London said: "This is the beginning of the real credit
crisis and it's not going to end without a major casualty."
Sources said that the present crisis was triggered by cash-strapped
banks starting to get tough with their hedge fund clients by making
margin calls on loans and drastically raising interest rate payments
overnight. The move has pushed the funds into the panic-selling of
assets, mostly AAA-rated US mortgage securities, and several are
thought to be on the brink of collapse.
One of them, Carlyle Capital Corporation (CCC), said yesterday that
overnight it had received "substantial additional margin calls" linked
to its souring investments in US mortgages.
Thornburg, the US mortgage lender, exacerbated investor jitters when it
said that it did not have enough cash to meet $610 million of margin
calls.
Last week Peloton, a London hedge fund, collapsed after it became
unable to meet the banks' demands.
Bankers said that the problem was related to a perceived increased risk
surrounding the AAA-rated prime mortgages and to the consequences of
dangerous overleveraging of the funds themselves. In the case of
Carlyle, its CCC fund had leveraged its assets by $30 for every $1 of
its own cash.
"The whole industry was created by cheap debt," the banking source
said. "It was really all just an illusion."
Underlining the Fed's desperate attempts to calm markets, for the
first time it said that it would accept mortgage-backed assets as
collateral from the banks for fresh loans. As the fear spread, the
perceived risk of owning US
corporate bonds - measured by the widening of credit spreads – also
rose to its highest level.
Friedman, Billings, Ramsey, the US analyst firm, said that the US
financial industry would need $1 trillion of permanent capital to
maintain current pricing of mortgage assets. However, it added that the
industry would not be
able to obtain that amount.
Shares of Carlyle's CCC fund were suspended in Amsterdam yesterday as
it disclosed that it had received more default notices from its lenders
and that some of those lenders had been forced to sell CCC's mortgage
assets in an effort to recover their loans. The dire forecast came only
24 hours after CCC said that it had been issued with $37 million of
margin calls from
lenders, having satisfied $60 million of calls only the week before.
Sean Egan, of the Egan-Jones Ratings Company, said: "When financial
history is written, the Carlyle liquidation will go down as one of the
single most major events. Carlyle has built an image as one of the
smartest investors around, and to see one of its funds fall apart shows
there is a fundamental
problem with the market."
Original
Source
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US Fed releases $200bn as credit crisis hits new depths
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