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15.10.2008, 02:09

Financial crisis: what no one wants to admit

It’s the financial crisis that has affected all of us in one way or another. However, it now looks like we may just be getting over the worst of it.

15.10.2008, 13:01

It must be raining cents in Washington

The penny has dropped and U.S. leaders have followed Germany and several other European countries in buying government stakes in banks to boost public confidence and prevent a rush by depositors to stuff their savings under the mattress.

AFP Photo / Jean-Christophe Verhaegen 16.10.2008, 17:18

World financial system needs to be revised – Sarkozy

EU leaders, who are meeting in Brussels, say the current world banking system needs an overhaul. French President Nicolas Sarkozy says that it’s vital to hold talks on the revision of the world financial system by the end of the year, without waiting till

27.10.2008, 16:59

U.S. pulls the plug on the world

The U.S. administration has prompted a huge surge in the U.S. dollar, which may help refinance its financial sector. The cost is a currency whirlwind that threatens the collapse not just of banks and companies but entire countries.

Crisis survival guide

Published: 13 October, 2008, 22:54

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The UK is heavily reliant on its financial sector, and the financial crisis has been affecting its people more than other Europeans. Even the Queen is feeling the crunch and is forced to strict control of her budget.

Mike Polson used to be an IT engineer for the financial services company JP Morgan. When the credit crunch was only just starting he took up plumbing lessons – as a precaution. When the crisis hit he was well placed to change career and got a job as a plumber.
 
“I started to get disillusioned with the City. So I decided to go into plumbing – people will always need that,” Mike explains.

The financial crisis has hit people at all levels of British society, even the Queen. One British tabloid reported that Buckingham Palace may even run out of money in three years. Its pleas to the government for extra cash have been refused forcing it to make cutbacks – just like any ordinary homeowners facing escalating prices for fuel, food and home repairs.

In a dramatic announcement before the stock market opened on Monday, three British banks received the ultimate humiliation – and helping hand – when the government announced a 37 billion pound rescue package.

It means the taxpayer now has a large stake in Lloyds TSB, Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS.

“I think a lot of banks have been humiliated but frankly pride goes before the fall. We had an awful lot of pompous bankers over the years – telling the people that they had a magic formula to make an awful lot of money and asking for bonus as well. Now of course you find that’s just not true,” says Justin Urquhart-Stewart from Seven Investment Management.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown has said the bailout was ‘unprecedented but essential’: “In extraordinary times, with financial markets ceasing to work, the government cannot just leave people on their own to be buffeted about,” he said.

As consumers feel the bite, retailers are seeing slowing sales and people resorting to new methods to save money.

The leading person-to-person online shopping website in the UK had its busiest ever month in September 2008. Newspapers and magazines are also full of advice on how to save and survive without spending a fortune.

Credit Crunch Couture! – that’s the new advice to fashionistas who are watching their pennies. “Revamping or making it yourself” is in fashion these days. With no money in their pockets and uncertainty looming over the future, people are starting to use their imagination to help them get through tough times.

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Russian trader (AFP Photo / Alexey Sazonov) 13.10.2008, 20:27

Russian markets fall as Government responds

Russia’s two stock markets fell further on Monday despite government intervention aimed at helping overcome the global financial crisis. At the close of trading, the markets were in the red, with Micex losing 3.48 per cent and reaching 666.31 points. The

14.10.2008, 01:47

Let the market do its job

Amid the financial turmoil, the U.S. President George W. Bush daily delivers his views on the nation’s crippled economy. Those who hope to succeed him in office claim only they know how to get America off its knees. But the one winning the public trust ba