Peter Stiff, Leo Lewis, Marcus Leroux
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Wall Street today made small in-roads into reversing last week's disastrous trading when American shares rose by more than 900 points after the UK and Europe unveiled plans to bailout banking systems.
The Dow Jones industrial average rose by 936.42 points to close at 9,387.61, after last week falling by 18 per cent as panic spread throughout stock markets over the future of the economy.
The London market remained robust after America opened, with the FTSE index of leading shares rising to close at 293.06 points to 4,225.12 after the Treasury details its proposals to sink £37 billion in the UK's largest banks in exchange for a stake.
France's CAC 40 index closed up 9.7 per cent at 3471.4 today after European leaders revealed proposals to pump billions of euros into banks as well as guaranteeing lenders loans. Germany's Dax rose by 10.8 per cent after its Government approved plans for a €500 billion bailout scheme.
Despite confidence returning to global markets, and the effort to protect banks, shares in Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS) and HBOS continued to decline.
HBOS saw its shares lose 33.6 per cent to 82.5p after it emerged that the terms of a takeover by Lloyds TSB had been changed in the light of the Treasury's plan to inject £17 billion into the two banks once a deal has been secured. Lloyds' stock also fell, by 18.80 per cent to 153.8p.
RBS shares also declined, by 8.37 per cent to 65.7p, just above the 65.5p per share price the bank will issue equity at to secure £15 billion. RBS will raise an additional £5 billion by selling preference shares to the Government.
It also emerged today that the Bank of England was joining other central lenders in pumping in billions of dollars into the wholesale market, where banks borrow money from each other, in a further move to ease funding costs.
In a joint statement, the Bank of England, the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Swiss National Bank (SNB) said they will swap their local currency in return for dollars supplied by the US Federal Reserve.
Conditions in the interbank lending market have eased, suggesting that banks are beginning to lend to each other more willingly.
The benchmark overnight three-month Libor, the average rate at which banks are lending to each other, dropped to 6.269 per cent today, down from 6.285 on Friday. The cost of borrowing dollars also dropped.
Overnight three-month dollar Libor fell to 4.753 per cent from 4.819 per cent.
The central banks said they would continue to work together and are prepared to take “whatever measures are necessary to provide sufficient liquidity in short term funding markets.”
The banks' statement echoes calls from Prime Minister Gordon Brown for the world's largest economies to work more closely together to secure the future of the global financial system.
Mr Brown said: "This is perhaps the first government to do what I believe a large number of governments are going to do over the next few days and it is about restoring trust and confidence in the banking system, which is absolutely essential.
“I spoke to President Bush last night after returning from Paris and we agreed the common ground for action in our two continents.”
He added: "I believe that only by global action can we fully restore the confidence that is needed and build the international financial order."
Gains in the UK and Europe follow a strong recovery in Asia where Hong Kong's Hang Seng jumped by 10 per cent in afternoon trading. Singapore shares rose 2 per cent though dealing rooms said that progress had been a white-knuckle ride through a series of wild dips and peaks.
Japan’s Nikkei is closed today for a national holiday Japan announced today that it is considering borrowing more dollars to pump into its system as well as guaranteeing depositors.
The MSCI index of non-Japanese Asia-Pacific stocks staged a 3.75 per cent rally as buying returned to many of the smaller emerging markets whose stocks shed about 20 per cent of their value last week
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I agree with Serge - McBean's obvious enjoyment of this crisis is utterly sick-making. While he may have averted the worst of the crisis now, we will be paying the price of his gross mis-management of the economy for years or even decades to come.
david Williams, Bedford, United Kingdom
So taxpayers are now subsidising share prices.
Paul, Coventry,
u can actually blaim the clinton admin. for this mess
matt, london,
Governments can print money. There may be inflation problems except that every government is doing the same.
Commodity prices are dropping like a stone
This looks like blessed relief and a restoration of confidence will surely follow now that there is a credible backstop for the banks.
David Nammory, Liverpool,
The Government guarantees to support the banking system, and yet share prices continue to fall. Doesn't that make it obvious where the real problem lies? The investors! The only way fickle trading can be stopped is with greater regulation of the investors. Their knee-jerk behaviour MUST be stopped.
David, Cheshire,
So - the ECB swaps Euros for dollars, the Swiss do the same with their Franc and Sterling also punts into the greenback.
Who thought this one up?
jeannie, perugia,
Who would have thought :)
Farrukh, Woking,
Why are these two still in charge? Has the world gone mad or something? Aren't they both responsible for the huge mountain of debt that was gradually built and encouraged over the last 11 years, on their watch? Just get rid of them, honestly, the smile on McBroon's face is disgusting.
serge, hong kong,
The rally is a 'technical buy-back' and is very common after a violent downswing. Also known as dead cat bounce.
There's more downside on the way!
John, London,
Talk of euphoria. But don't count on it. It never last long. The problem is bigger than the bailout. The ideal thing is to allow these stocks to be traded at their real value. It'll take a lot of down grading but the economy will be the stronger for it. Speculators can go for a new job training.
Sylvester, Amaigbo, Nigeria
This is all complete nonsense: the derivatives trading based on gambling and not on any real product has reached over $1 quadrillion.
The potential explosion of loss is therefore 16 times greater than the entire sum of the world's real money ($60 trillion) and simply can't be fixed with billions!
iain, bedford, uk
Can some one please explain why Lloyds [a relativey well managed bank and not expeosed to sub prime assets] would want to buy HBOS given the government is in effect nationalisiing HBOS? Surely this is not a good deal for Lloyds shareholders.
Why is Brown allowing such an anticompetitive merger?
chris, Epsom , UK
I have to agree with Rupert, 9% return is dismal for the level of risk, I was expecting 15%. Even Buffett got 10% and an option to buy in in 3/5 years at discount to today's price on GE. We would do better investing similarly in UK companies rather than their banks, i.e. provide the finance directly
Michael, London,
The principle is right however the terms of the deal are poor. 9% interest on preference shares is a dire return. Capitalisits would expect 33% return as standard. We put in 20bn to RBS whose market cap is 20bn yet we only get 60% stake. Why not 100% stake? Nor does it get lending going again.
Rupert, London, UK
So we have the ECB swapping Euros for Dollars, the Swiss parting with their Francs, and Sterling punting into the greenback.
Who thought this one up? And why?
jeannie, perugia,
Why on earth does LTSB want to buy HBOS,? its riddled with bad debt. LTSB is a triple AAA rated bank, refused a rights issue three months ago. Can stand alone and raise funds by themselves. Shareholders are getting a poor deal. I will ber voting agaisnt the merger.
jackmcmullen, Lincoln, England
Dear Allistair & Gordon
I've been completely irresponsible in my personal & business life. I owe thousands to people all over the World on bad bets it was obvious to most I should never have made.
Presumably I'm next on the handout list
PS Were n't you in charge of regulation & debt policy guys?
Mark, Birmingham, UK
The house-o-cards that the financial market is an ideal rated against a conceived notion of value that has little worth. If the government's injected £37 billions can reverse the £250 billions washout in a few seconds, how much faith is there in such a market? Talk of investment where moths eat it
Ayub Chege, Bristol,