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Sir, Within the pages and pages of press comment concerning the current turmoil in financial markets no one has answered the question, why?
How can a financial institution be allowed to set the worth of non-liquid assets held on its books, where there is no published value for such an asset and nobody wishing to purchase it? This is the same as a homeowner deciding his house is worth £300,000 when the true market value is only £100,000.
How can the regulatory authorities have allowed increasingly exotic “off-balance sheet instruments” to have grown to a $65 trillion market, when only a few short years ago it was negligible, without taking any steps to regulate this unprecedented growth?
How after the well-documented collapse of the hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management (which nearly brought world financial markets to their knees in 1998, in the main due to “on-balance sheet leverage” and “off-balance sheet leverage”, with an insufficient capital base to support such positions), have so many of our financial institutions been allowed to re-enact the same folly only a decade later?
When will somebody attempt to start telling the truth that this is not a crisis brought about by defaulting homeowners in the US but a problem of accounting standards, off-balance sheet exotica and leverage perpetrated by the majority of the world’s financial institutions so as to benefit their own in-house bonus schemes?
John Betts
Cherhill, Wilts
Sir, Let’s all calm down about the housing market. The national press and broadcasting media have bombarded us with dire warnings of a crash. The facts, however, are as follows.
According to the Land Registry (the only institution with no vested interest), property prices haven’t even started to fall. But it’s only a matter of time before the real issue of demand becomes the dominant factor in the housing market, not the credit crunch.
The press tells us that the banks won’t lend. Of course they will. The vast majority of people who got a mortgage last year will get one this year and, what’s more, at a very affordable rate of interest. Money is still relatively cheap.
The people who are refused a mortgage are those who probably shouldn’t have had one in the first place. Banks have to lend money in order to make a profit.
We are told that first-time buyers are “struggling to get on the housing ladder”. Actually they are choosing not to buy at the moment in the misguided hope that prices will fall off a cliff.
They will probably regret it. To buy now, at a time when vendors’ confidence has been eroded by cavalier journalism, may be the smartest move they could make. A spooked vendor is likely to be more open to offers and there are bargains to be had.
So let’s get things in perspective. A year with no increase does not constitute financial meltdown. Don’t be misled.
Nick Taylor
Norwich
Sir. If we taxpayers are to bail out the imprudent banks by taking on their dodgy mortgage loans, should there not be a quid pro quo? A condition that, during the period of the bailout, no bonuses can be paid to bank directors and dividends must be cut by at least 50 per cent?
Philip Hamilton-Grierson
Inverness
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"How can a financial institution be allowed to set the worth of non-liquid assets held on its books, where there is no published value for such an asset and nobody wishing to purchase it?"
By following the lead of the Treasury who don't include PFI debt in their figures even though the debt is real and has to be repaid.
Bernard, Edinburgh, Scotland
John Betts has stated the real issue - Derivatives. The rest is smoke and mirrors as we expect from Investment Bank PR Advisers. Noone wants to admit that Bear Stearns was always a casino - that it was at the centre of the LTCM web of deals, and that it has finally bitten the dust as the scale of its gambling debts became too high to service.
The simple fact that The West - especially the Anglo-Saxon West - has lived on gambling in financial markets for the past 3 decades and let the real industrial base offshore to Asia with the rewards flowing to coastal cities like New York, Los Angeles, London rather than heartland cities manufacturing and innovating.
TomTom, Leeds, England
Ever thought of two currencies? a domestic and a national or international. Then the wide boys could play at casinos until boredom set in, and home life would have a better chance to prosper. Unnecessary shortages in the home can cause despair and hatred. Our enrgy-sapping ludicrous 'Economy' calls for a concentrated effort to understand the true purpose of a man-made virtual currency. One thing is certain it has no powers of understanding in itself - we are the functionaries. 'In the beginning' it is said to have been a bride price. Was it a measure of appreciation? Then it has to be a 'measure' of appreciation for each person, not just the bride.
sheila knight, london, u.k.
What a strange Country we live in (and an unfair one) we have Mr Brown that wise old money man helping out the rich banks with taxpayers money and at the same time increasing the tax on low earners by 100% all for the good of the Country.It makes one feel all warm and cosy knowing what capable hands we are in.What next ?Mr Brown another rise in taxes for Africa or houses for immigrants or maybe you are going to start your own war perhaps,i can't wait to see what else you are going to fluff up next.
Yours in anticipation.
Kenneth O'Boyle, Perth, United Kingdom
I see no no reason for any bonuses to be paid to directors or managers at all. Negotiate a salary. Do your job. That should be enough.
Rosemary, Germany,
I think the gentleman John Betts is spot on - regarding "off balance sheet instruments". Something has to be done about this and other questionable accounting standards. Excellent job - I thank the Times for publishing his letter. Keep up the good work!
Robert Tilford, McCracken, USA, Kansas