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Pollo
10-08-2008, 04:31 AM
REYKJAVIK, Iceland - This volcanic island near the Arctic Circle is on the brink of becoming the first "national bankruptcy" of the global financial meltdown.
http://ad.doubleclick.net/ad/N3977.yahoonokia.com/B2983291.82;sz=300x250;ord=1223458622000782? http://us.bc.yahoo.com/b?P=s299IdG_Rt1AgLQtSOx7.gx7RAVwdkjsfz0ADlRr&T=1hhtholfr%2fX%3d1223458622%2fE%3d84962395%2fR%3d news%2fK%3d5%2fV%3d2.1%2fW%3dH%2fY%3dYAHOO%2fF%3d2 728567465%2fH%3dY2FjaGVoaW50PSJuZXdzIiBjb250ZW50PS JIb21lO2Jhbmtpbmc7c29jY2VyO2N1cnJlbmN5O2xlbmRpbmc7 c3RvY2s7bW9uZXk7YmFuaztnb3Zlcm5tZW50O2l0O2VtZXJnZW 5jeTtpbnZlc3RtZW50O3RyYWRpbmc7bG9hbjtjcmVkaXQ7Q29s ZDtjb2xkO3dlYXRoZXI7cmVhbCBlc3RhdGU7cG9vcjtnaXZlO2 hvbWU7aGVscDtmdW5kO0Jhbms7ZXhjaGFuZ2UgcmF0ZTtldXJv O2VuZXJneTt2aWN0aW1zO0J1c2luZXNzO3JlZnVybF93d3dfZ2 9vZ2xlX2NvbSIgcmVmdXJsPSJyZWZ1cmxfd3d3X2dvb2dsZV9j b20iIHRvcGljcz0icmVmdXJsX3d3d19nb29nbGVfY29tIg--%2fQ%3d-1%2fS%3d1%2fJ%3d7047BFD1&U=13fkigmvr%2fN%3dF65pDdG_RuI-%2fC%3d655938.12971737.13241332.1414694%2fD%3dLREC %2fB%3d5514299%2fV%3d1
Home to just 320,000 people on a territory the size of Kentucky, Iceland has formidable international reach because of an outsized banking sector that set out with Viking confidence to conquer swaths of the British economy — from fashion retailers to top soccer teams.

The strategy gave Icelanders one of the world's highest per capita incomes. But now they are watching helplessly as their economy implodes — their currency losing almost half its value, and their heavily exposed banks collapsing under the weight of debts incurred by lending in the boom times.

"Everything is closed. We couldn't sell our stock or take money from the bank," said Johann Sigurdsson as he left a branch of Landsbanki in downtown Reykjavik.

The government had earlier announced it had nationalized the bank under emergency laws enacted to deal with the crisis.

"We have been forced to take decisive action to save the country," Prime Minister Geir H. Haarde said of those sweeping new powers that allow the government to take over companies, limit the authority of boards, and call shareholder meetings.

A full-blown collapse of Iceland's financial system would send shock waves across Europe, given the heavy investment by Icelandic banks and companies across the continent.

One of Iceland's biggest companies, retailing investment group Baugur, owns or has stakes in dozens of major European retailers — including enough to make it the largest private company in Britain, where it owns a handful of stores such as the famous toy store Hamley's.

Kaupthing, Iceland's largest bank and one of those whose share trading was suspended last week to stop a huge sell-off, has also invested in European retail groups.

Thousands of Britons have accounts with Icesave, the online arm of Landsbanki that regulators said was likely to file for bankruptcy after it stopped permitting customers to withdraw money from their accounts Tuesday.

To try to wrest control of the spiraling situation, the government also loaned $680 million to Kaupthing to tide it over and said it was negotiating a $5.4 billion loan from Russia to shore up the nation's finances.

The speed of Iceland's downfall in the week since it announced it was nationalizing Glitnir bank, the country's third largest, caught many by surprise despite warnings that it was the "canary in the coal mine" of the global credit squeeze.

Famous for its cod fishing industry, geysers, moonscape and the Blue Lagoon, Iceland was the site of the Cold War showdown in which Bobby Fischer of the United States defeated Boris Spassky of the Soviet Union in 1972 for the world chess championship. Last year, Iceland won the U.N.'s "best country to live in" poll, with its residents deemed the most contented in the world.

No more.

Despite sunny skies Tuesday after three days of unseasonably cold weather, Reykjavik's mood remained grim — cafes were half-empty, real estate agents sat idle, and retailers reported few sales.

"I'm really starting to get worried now. Everything is bad news. I don't know what's happening," said retiree Helga Jonsdottir as she headed to a supermarket.

Icelanders are also beginning to question how a relative few were able to generate the disproportionate wealth — and associated debt — that Haarde has warned puts the entire country at risk of bankruptcy.

Iceland's reinvention from the poor cousin in Europe to one of the region's wealthiest countries dates to the deregulation of the banking industry and the creation of the domestic stock market in the mid-1990s.

Those free market reforms turned Iceland from a conservative, inward-looking country to one of a new generation of internationally educated young businessmen and women who were determined to give Iceland a modern profile far beyond its fishing base.

Entrepreneurs become its greatest export, as banks and companies marched across Europe and their acquisition wallets were filled by a stock market boom and a well-funded pension system. Among the purchases were the iconic Hamley's toy store and the West Ham soccer team.

Back home, the average family's wealth soared 45 percent in half a decade and gross domestic product rose at around 5 percent a year.

But the whole system was built on a shaky foundation of foreign debt.

The country's top four banks now hold foreign liabilities in excess of $100 billion, debts that dwarf Iceland's gross domestic product of $14 billion.

Those external liabilities mean the private sector has had great difficulty financing its debts, such as the more than $5.25 billion racked up by Kaupthing in five years to help fund British deals.

Iceland is unique "because the sheer size of its financial sector puts it in a vulnerable situation, and its currency has always been seen as a high risk and high yield," said Venla Sipila, a senior economist at Global Insight in London.

The krona is suffering in part from a withdrawal by a falloff in what are called carry trades — where investors borrow cheaply in a country with low rates, such as Japan, and invest in a country where returns, and often risks, are higher.

After watching the free-fall for several days, the Central Bank of Iceland stepped in Tuesday to fix the exchange rate of the currency at 175 — a level equal to 131 krona against the euro.

Haarde said he believed the measures had renewed confidence in the system. He also was critical of the lack of an Europe-wide response to the crisis, saying Iceland had been forced to adopt an "every-country-for-itself" mentality.

He acknowledged that Iceland's financial reputation was likely to suffer from both the crisis and the response despite strong fundamentals such as the fishing industry and clean and renewable energy resources.

As regular Icelanders begin to blame the government and market regulators, Haarde said the banks had been "victims of external circumstances."

Richard Portes of the London Business School agreed, noting the banks were well-capitalized and had not bought any of the toxic debt that has brought down banks elsewhere.

"I believe it is absolutely wrong to say these banks were reckless," said. "Quite the contrary. They were hugely unlucky."

Pax Britannia
10-08-2008, 08:20 AM
If I was Prime Minister I would buy Iceland and use it as a prison island.

Worked well for Australia.

Morfin
10-08-2008, 08:59 AM
The British Empire is gone and cannot be resurrected. But obviously, from Pax's post, the desire to rule, rule Britannia, still flows in the veins of the Brits today.

Pax Britannia
10-08-2008, 09:02 AM
The British Empire is gone and cannot be resurrected. But obviously, from Pax's post, the desire to rule, rule Britannia, still flows in the veins of the Brits today.

Enjoy your time in the sun my boy. We sure did.

comicfan
10-08-2008, 11:38 AM
It will definitely be interesting to see how this unfolds. I wonder if Iceland will be the only country that will undergo a National Bankruptcy this year? It is sad how the banks have seemingly screwed everyone!

vasili denisov
10-09-2008, 01:37 AM
It is sad how the banks have seemingly screwed everyone!
In this case, the banks didn't screw anyone. Yes, they overleveraged, but as far as I can tell, they didn't go into anything as colossally stupid as the toxic mortgage securities. They kept their investments in substantial, brick and mortar businesses - the only problem is that they had huge investments in proportion to their assets, and suddenly there's no credit, because of dumb moves made by other banks.

Ghostrider
10-09-2008, 11:35 PM
The bedlum is just beginning.

BIG PIZZLE
10-10-2008, 12:01 AM
We should be able to get a couple international accountants together and amicably press the reset button on every country's till. Boom. Even steven we're leaving.

Claydon
10-10-2008, 12:03 AM
Someone else posted about the end of Fight Club, I have to admit, that is becoming more and more of an appealing idea.

vasili denisov
10-10-2008, 12:22 AM
They're going to the IMF. (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/10/business/worldbusiness/10icebank.html?_r=1&oref=slogin)


Iceland, in Financial Collapse, Is Likely to Turn to the I.M.F.

REYKJAVIK, Iceland — Iceland’s financial system collapsed Thursday, and analysts said it was probably only a matter of time before the country would have to turn to the International Monetary Fund for help.

Such a move, which would make this small island nation the first sovereign state to fall victim to the credit squeeze that began last year, would require it to accept harsh measures to restore fiscal and monetary stability.

Iceland has tried desperately to avoid such a step. But the odds against it grew worse on Thursday when the government took over the last of three major banks and shut down the stock exchange.

Trading in the Icelandic krona ceased, with foreign banks no longer willing to take the currency — even at what seemed like bargain rates.

Adding to Iceland’s sense of isolation, a diplomatic dispute with Britain over money stranded in the failed banks deepened as the British government invoked antiterrorism laws in an effort to get the money.

“Iceland is bankrupt,” said Arsaell Valfells, a professor at the University of Iceland. “The Icelandic krona is history. The only sensible option is for the I.M.F. to come and rescue us.”

Claydon
10-10-2008, 12:24 AM
How does the IMF even have money right now?

mongo
10-10-2008, 12:26 AM
they should turn to bill gates.

Warden
10-10-2008, 12:33 AM
Iceland is the first, but it won't be the last..

First World Great Depression?

Mustard
10-10-2008, 12:34 AM
Does this mean I can buy Iceland for the right price?

Claydon
10-10-2008, 12:51 AM
I want to buy bjork and ram her in the ass and punch her.

Claydon
10-10-2008, 12:52 AM
LZizOAR6a-c

Warden
10-10-2008, 02:01 AM
I would prefer if it happened like that instead of the current circumstances.

Hanover Fist
10-10-2008, 05:10 AM
Not related to Iceland really, but to the economic mess as a whole.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2008-10-09-russia_N.htm?loc=interstitialskip

Russia among hardest-hit in economic meltdown
Regulators periodically halted trading to curb the Russian markets' volatility.

By Tai Adelaja and Jeffrey Stinson, USA TODAY
MOSCOW — They were heady days. But they ended so quickly.

Just two months ago, a lopsided war with Georgia supposedly marked Russia's return as a world power. Now, Russians are watching in disbelief as their country has been one of the hardest-hit by the global economic crisis.

Credit is drying up, billions of dollars in investment have flowed out, and the 60% decline in Russian stocks this year is even worse than the routs in most other countries. As if that weren't enough to bruise local egos: the conflict with Georgia, once regarded here as a triumph over the West, is partly to blame for the turmoil.

Vladimir Chichikov, a 52-year-old customer browsing at an auto dealership in southwest Moscow, can't believe how quickly things have changed.

"It looks like we're at the epicenter of the global financial crisis," he said as he tried to secure credit for a new car. Loans are now running at 14% interest, he says, "even though they begged people to take them at 9% a couple of months ago."

A large part of Russia's recent downturn can be attributed to falling oil prices, since Russia is the world's No. 2 exporter of crude, says Philip Hanson of London's Chatham House foreign policy think tank.

Yet, since the Russian invasion of Georgia on Aug. 8, Russia no longer looks like it's "on top of the world," Hanson says. Foreign investors, spooked by Russia's sudden military belligerence and hostility toward some Western companies, have pulled $57 billion out of Russia since then, according to European bank BNP Paribas SA.

Many Russians have followed suit: the outflow of private capital from Russia was $16.7 billion in the third quarter, the central bank reported last week.

The tough times have spread throughout the economy, turning lives upside down. Alevtina Petrova, 36, thought she had secured approval for a $134,000 loan to buy an apartment in Moscow.

"This was a done deal a couple of weeks ago but now they are dillydallying," she said. She now doubts she'll get the money.

Russian politicians, including Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, have been quick to shift the blame, saying "everything happening now … began in the United States."

Chichikov, the car shopper, concedes that "maybe we overreacted (in the war), considering that Georgia is a small nation." But he says he ultimately agrees with Putin's theory, and believes that the U.S. deliberately orchestrated Russia's troubles.

For now, Russia is far from going bankrupt like it did in 1998, analysts like Hanson say. The government has a budget surplus of $188 billion, and the world's third-largest gold and foreign exchange reserves — $556 billion as of October 1 — to help ease the pain if the global liquidity crisis becomes more severe.

There also are signs that Russia is trying to woo back investors. Igor Yurgens, a close adviser to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, said Monday that the country wanted to mend fences with the West that were splintered by the war.

However, some Russians could lose patience if growth isn't restored to the 7% annual pace of recent years.

Russians "have seen a double-digit rise in their incomes annually," said Cliff Kupchan, a Russia analyst with the Eurasia Group, a New York-based consulting firm. "They've come to expect a 'yes' answer to the question of, 'Are you better off today than you were yesterday?' "

That's why Russian leaders would be wise to cool their anti-Western rhetoric and encourage foreign investors to return, Hanson says.

"Their popularity comes from prosperity," Hanson says. "If that sense of prosperity wanes, they could find their support will slip."