Saturday, September 12, 2009

Missing Lehman Lesson of Shakeout Means Too Big Banks May Fail

By Bob Ivry, Christine Harper and Mark Pittman

The warning was ominous: “Massive global wealth destruction.”

That’s what Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. executives predicted before they filed the biggest bankruptcy in U.S. history. “Impacts all financial institutions,” read one bullet point in a confidential memo prepared for government officials obtained by Bloomberg News. “Retail investors/retirees assets are devastated.”

The message didn’t get through. Two dozen of the world’s most powerful bankers, brought together by Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. and Federal Reserve Bank of New York President Timothy F. Geithner the weekend of Sept. 13, 2008, to devise a rescue plan for Lehman, were too busy saving themselves to see the larger threat.

“The discussion among the CEOs was ‘How do we prevent the next firm from going under?’” former Merrill Lynch & Co. Chief Executive Officer John A. Thain, who cut a deal to sell his company that weekend, said in an interview. “There should have been much more discussion about the impact directly on the markets if Lehman went bankrupt.”

While everyone assembled at the New York Fed was aware that unbridled subprime-mortgage lending and the packaging of such inferior loans into investment vehicles such as collateralized- debt obligations had pushed the financial system to the breaking point, what the bankers missed almost destroyed them -- and the rest of the global economy.

Blankfein, Dimon

Lehman’s downfall on Monday, Sept. 15, sparked a run on the $3.6 trillion money market industry, which provides short-term loans called commercial paper used by businesses worldwide to cover everyday expenses, including payroll and utilities. The panic left companies such as Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. stranded with insufficient cash and ravaged the accounts of millions of people.

For Goldman Sachs Group Inc. CEO Lloyd C. Blankfein, JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Jamie Dimon and the rest of the financial chieftains who spent a weekend trying to unwind derivatives trades and keep bank-to-bank loans flowing, ignoring the commercial-paper market, the lifeblood of the economy, proved a catastrophic oversight. Within a week, the U.S. stepped in to halt withdrawals from money market funds, leading to a $1.6 trillion industry backstop, part of $13.2 trillion it has committed to beating back the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.

‘System at Risk’

Of all the quakes of 2008 -- the fall of Bear Stearns Cos. in March, the takeover of mortgage buyers Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the salvaging of American International Group Inc. in September -- the failure to account for the effects of Lehman’s demise was the most critical because its aftershocks came closest to wrecking the world economy.

“They put the entire financial system at risk, and they didn’t have to,” said Harvey R. Miller, a partner at Weil Gotshal & Manges LLP in New York who represented Lehman in the bankruptcy, referring to government officials. “They were warned. I told them, ‘Armageddon is coming. You don’t know what the consequences will be.’ Their response was, ‘We have it covered.’”

Paulson and Geithner, who succeeded him as Treasury secretary, both declined to comment.

Inviting ‘Catastrophe’

One year later, policymakers haven’t learned the lesson of the bankruptcy, said Richard Bernstein, CEO of Richard Bernstein Capital Management LLC in New York and former chief investment strategist for Merrill Lynch.

Rather than break up institutions such as Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., or limit their expansion, the U.S. has given them billions of dollars in tax incentives and loan guarantees that enabled them to grow even bigger. To protect against a bank collapse touching off another freefall, President Barack Obama has proposed regulatory changes that rely on the wisdom of bankers and government overseers -- the same people who created the conditions that led to Lehman’s bankruptcy and were unable to foresee its consequences.

“Designating certain institutions as too big to fail, and not having a thorough regulatory process to match, practically invites another catastrophe,” Bernstein said.

Rescue efforts exposed a financial system with so many moving parts that U.S. regulators and the world’s top bankers couldn’t keep track of them all. A reconstruction of the meetings at the New York Fed that preceded Lehman’s bankruptcy, drawn from more than a dozen interviews with participants, reveals a failure to understand the importance of commercial paper and how that market would be affected by the collapse of the New York investment bank.

Ice-Nine

It turned out to be a $3.6 trillion blind spot.

Like the fictitious substance ice-nine in Kurt Vonnegut Jr.’s 1963 novel “Cat’s Cradle,” a seed of which set off a chain reaction that transformed all the world’s water into ice, Lehman’s failure froze credit markets, said Simon H. Johnson, a former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund.

“Ice-nine was invented by a crackpot scientist, and it was unleashed by mistake,” said Johnson, now a professor of finance at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Sloan School of Management in Cambridge. “How did the financial system get so fragile that this could happen? What were the guys overseeing it doing?”

The bankers and regulators who met at the New York Fed unwittingly dropped the first seed.

‘Take Cash Out’

Within days, Mohamed El-Erian, CEO of Pacific Investment Management Co., the world’s largest bond-fund manager, was fearful of a banking breakdown.

“I remember at the end of the week calling up my wife and saying, ‘Jamie, go to the ATM, go to the cash machine, and take cash out,’” said El-Erian, who spent the prior weekend at the firm’s Newport Beach, California, headquarters trying to anticipate what might happen to Lehman. “She said, ‘Why?’ I said, ‘I don’t know whether the banks are going to open tomorrow.’ The system was freezing in front of our eyes.”

The crisis shattered household and business confidence around the world, Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said in an Aug. 21 speech in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

“The role played by panic helps to explain the remarkably sharp and sudden intensification of the financial crisis last fall, its rapid global spread, and the fact that the abrupt deterioration in financial conditions was largely unforecasted by standard market indicators,” Bernanke said.

Bernanke, Paulson

Subsequent actions by Bernanke, Paulson and Geithner helped stabilize equity and credit markets and may have prevented a deeper recession. As the lender of last resort, the Fed doubled its balance sheet, providing twice as much lending in dollars worldwide, an unprecedented bulwark of the banking system. The Treasury’s Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, pumped almost $300 billion into the U.S. banking system; no major banks have failed since its October inception.

It’s what happened, or didn’t happen, before the Lehman bankruptcy that ended up pushing the system to the brink, said Peter J. Solomon, a vice chairman at Lehman before founding his New York-based investment bank, Peter J. Solomon Co., in 1989.

“How could Geithner and the Fed generally, and Paulson and the Treasury generally, not have seen the buildup during the summer?” Solomon said. “The fault with these guys lies not in their action and not in their inaction on that day in September. It lies in the summer.”

Money Market Panic

Like other financial institutions, Lehman’s problems stemmed from borrowing too much to finance too many hard-to-sell investments, such as mortgage-backed securities, that were declining in value as a result of the deteriorating real estate market. Lehman was different because the government let it declare bankruptcy, meaning the company’s creditors were wiped out as well as its stockholders.

The ensuing panic doomed the oldest U.S. money market fund, the $62.5 billion Reserve Primary Fund, started in 1971 by Bruce R. Bent, founder and CEO of New York-based Reserve Management Co.

In the fund’s 2008 annual report, Bent promised to bore investors to sleep. Those same investors woke with alarm on Sept. 15. Reserve Primary had lent Lehman $785 million, about 1.3 percent of its assets, some of it in short-term loans that Lehman was now unable to repay. In a two-day run on the fund, more than 60 percent of its money was withdrawn. Its net asset value fell below $1 a share, or “broke the buck,” on Sept. 16, making investors vulnerable to losses and triggering withdrawals at other funds.

Lung Transplant

Willard Scolnik, a 78-year-old retired architect in Palm Harbor, Florida, who said he had $400,000 in Reserve Primary that he needed to help pay for a lung transplant for his son, was one of the unlucky ones. He couldn’t get his money out. Neither could Akron, Ohio-based Goodyear, the largest U.S. tiremaker by revenue, which had $360 million stuck in the fund.

Another loser was Colorado Diversified Trust. Municipalities park their cash in the trust before shelling out for projects such as a new road or sewer improvements. Boulder County was forced to write off $687,000, its share of the trust’s losses, according to Bob Hullinghorst, the county treasurer. That would have paid for 20 new health-care employees, he said.

“It makes me mad,” Hullinghorst said. “We thought our money was safe.”

Commercial Paper

The run on money market funds, considered the safest investments after bank deposits and the major buyers of commercial paper, sent shivers through the global economy. World stock markets lost $2.85 trillion, or more than 6 percent of their value, in three days. Banks’ cost of borrowing overnight from other banks, as measured by the London Interbank Offered Rate, or Libor, jumped 4.29 percentage points between Friday, Sept. 12, and Tuesday, Sept. 16.

“We did not expect how the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy would transmit through the commercial-paper market and cause all the stress in the money funds,” said David Nason, a former assistant Treasury secretary for financial institutions under Paulson and now a managing director at Washington-based Promontory Financial Group.

The disintegration of the commercial-paper market came around to bite banks such as Morgan Stanley and Citigroup, whose CEOs, John J. Mack and Vikram S. Pandit, were at the weekend meetings. It sapped them of the capital they needed to extend credit, even to one another.

Foam on Tarmac

One bank CEO, assigned to a group of executives asked by Geithner to consider what would happen in the event of a Lehman bankruptcy, said he couldn’t recall any conversations that weekend about commercial paper or money markets. The banker declined to be identified.

That may have had something to do with who was in the room, said Joshua H. Rosner, managing director at New York investment research company Graham Fisher & Co. They were all bankers. There were no corporate treasurers, academics, consumer advocates or labor representatives.

“It wasn’t a mistake to let Lehman fail; it was a mistake to let them go without putting foam on the tarmac,” Rosner said. “If they had a variety of stakeholders in the room, those stakeholders would’ve told the regulators they needed to do something about commercial paper.”

For some participants, such as Merrill’s Thain and Paul Calello, CEO of Credit Suisse Group AG’s investment bank, the gathering resembled a similar meeting at the New York Fed a decade earlier in which executives from 16 banks bailed out hedge fund Long-Term Capital Management LP. The key difference: That rescue, coordinated by then-New York Fed President William J.N. McDonough, required $3.5 billion from the banks, an eighth of what Lehman needed.

Blind Spot

Steven Shafran, a senior adviser to Paulson at the Treasury and a former Goldman Sachs partner, said the bankers and regulators were limited in what they could accomplish this time.

“We knew we’d never be smart enough to think of everything, so we picked the big problems and reacted to the rest,” said Shafran, who attended the meetings.

The blind spot led to borrowing rates on 30-day commercial paper issued by investment-grade companies without the highest rating doubling to 6.02 percent in the four days after Lehman’s bankruptcy, according to a presentation made by Brad Fox, chairman of the National Association of Corporate Treasurers, at the group’s annual meeting in May.

Fox, who is also treasurer of Pleasanton, California-based Safeway Inc., the third-largest U.S. supermarket chain, said in an interview that nervous CEOs and boards ordered some members of his association to restrict purchases to money market funds that bought only government securities. Corporate treasurers use money market funds to set aside cash in the same way individuals might use a bank account.

Hong Kong Minibonds

“The fear factor that went through the markets was pretty amazing” as credit concerns caused banks to stop lending to each other, Fox said. “The ripple effect was huge.”

The ripples reached as far as Hong Kong, where Lehman’s default on commercial-paper debt paralyzed payments on so-called minibonds, structured notes sold in $5,000 denominations and guaranteed by Lehman.

Sun Kwan, 58, a retired parks worker, said he invested $285,000, most of his life savings, in Lehman minibonds. He was among an estimated 43,000 in the city who bought $1.8 billion of the notes, according to the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Sun lost it all and has taken part in protests since October, rain or shine, trying to get his money back.

Molasses Reef

Real estate projects whose funding relied on Lehman’s ability to sell commercial paper came to a halt.

On the otherwise uninhabited Atlantic Ocean island of West Caicos, work stopped in October on the Molasses Reef Ritz- Carlton Hotel and Residences, where cottages were priced at $6.5 million. About 400 Chinese employees of an Israeli construction firm, Ashtrom Properties Ltd., didn’t get paid, according to Jonathan Siegel, New York-based managing director of the project for Logwood Hotel Development Co. Some of them protested, surrounding the temporary housing occupied by their supervisors, preventing them from leaving until they received their money.

The bankers who gathered at the New York Fed last September anticipated little of this. Instead, their meetings were filled with confusion, false starts and dust-ups.

Discussions began Friday evening during a pelting rain with a statement by Paulson, 63, who sat opposite Geithner, 48, at a rectangular table in a first-floor conference room and informed the bankers in a raspy voice that the Bush administration wasn’t about to commit one dime of taxpayer money to salvage Lehman.

‘Not Another Bailout’

A week earlier, the Treasury had engineered the rescue of government-sponsored mortgage-finance companies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Six months before that, Paulson had arranged for the Fed to guarantee $29 billion of Bear Stearns toxic assets to facilitate the firm’s sale to JPMorgan Chase.

“If you look back at what was being said on TV and in Congress, the constant refrain was, ‘No, not another Bear Stearns, not another bailout,’” said Michele Davis, assistant Treasury secretary for public affairs under Paulson.

If Lehman was going to be saved, Paulson said, it would have to be by those sitting around the table, all of whom knew that without a buyer or a bailout in place by the time markets opened Monday morning the 158-year-old firm would be history.

Some participants said the bankruptcy filing took them by surprise because they were betting Paulson and Geithner would pull off a last-minute rescue.

“There was always a tiny thought in my mind that the government would flinch at the last minute,” said Gary D. Cohn, president and chief operating officer of New York-based Goldman Sachs, who attended the meetings.

Geithner ‘Homework’

Geithner divided the bankers on Friday evening into three teams to do what one participant called “homework.”

The first group, which included Cohn of Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse’s Calello, was assigned to evaluate Lehman’s real estate and private equity holdings to determine how much of a capital deficiency the firm faced. The second team, with Mack and Thain, tried to cobble together a funding mechanism for the company’s bad assets in the event Lehman could woo a white knight, participants said.

“The No. 1 priority was to find a buyer,” said Davis, now a partner at Brunswick Group LLP, a public relations firm based in Washington.

Lehman executives, who had watched the share price tumble 94 percent since the beginning of the year, were talking to two: Bank of America and Barclays Plc.

Selling Merrill

The third team of bankers -- including Robert P. Kelly, CEO of Bank of New York Mellon Corp., the world’s biggest custody bank, which keeps records, tracks performance and lends securities to institutional investors -- was asked to look at the risks of a possible bankruptcy.

Every few hours, the teams would regroup at the conference table and report back. The bankers discussed which firms might follow Lehman down the drain, according to Thain, 54. There was little doubt Merrill would be next, he said.

By Saturday, Thain had snatched one of Lehman’s suitors and was in talks to sell Merrill, the third-biggest U.S. investment bank, to Charlotte, North Carolina-based Bank of America for about $50 billion. At one point, Paulson looked at the Merrill Lynch chief and said, “John, you know what to do,” according to another executive who attended the meetings.

The marriage, approved by the banks’ boards before Lehman declared bankruptcy, took less than two days to consummate.

Barclays Talks

That left only Barclays. While the London-based bank was interested in Lehman, it didn’t want to touch the firm’s real estate holdings, especially after the team responsible for scrutinizing the books estimated that Lehman had overvalued them by as much as $30 billion, three participants said. One said Barclays kept coming back with less attractive offers, leaving more of the business’s worst assets behind.

By Saturday evening, the bankers -- many of whom stood to gain business after Lehman’s demise -- were still discussing how to come up with the $30 billion needed for a rescue. Barclays sought a temporary guarantee from the U.K. government to cover Lehman’s commitments until its shareholders could approve the deal. When Paulson phoned Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling, his counterpart in London, Darling told him he didn’t want to import the U.S. cancer, according to two people who said Paulson mentioned the remark later.

Darling, through a spokesman, denied using the word “cancer.”

“At no point were the British authorities asked to approve or reject a deal for the purchase of Lehman Brothers,” said Jason Knauf, senior press officer for the U.K. Treasury.

1 Million Bets

On Sunday morning, shortly before noon, Paulson announced that Barclays wouldn’t be buying Lehman on any terms, participants said. By then, the bankers had turned their attention to their own survival. Cohn of Goldman Sachs said he led the charge to make sure the banks didn’t lose money on derivatives trades either with Lehman or on Lehman.

Derivatives are contracts whose value is derived from stocks, bonds, loans, currencies, commodities or linked to specific events such as changes in interest rates. Lehman had made about 1 million such bets in the over-the-counter market, according to a person with access to that information.

The unregulated $592 trillion market for over-the-counter derivatives, 41 times the size of the U.S. economy, contributed more than half of some banks’ trading revenue and had never been tested by the bankruptcy of a major Wall Street firm.

Unwinding Trades

The Fed had already begun trying to untangle Lehman’s credit-default swaps on Saturday morning, calling in a group of experts in derivatives operations from Wall Street firms and asset-management companies. They were given one hour to show up at the New York Fed.

Swaps are a way for investors to gamble on whether companies will continue making debt payments or for lenders to buy insurance against borrowers who stop paying. If the company defaults, one side in the bet pays the buyer face value of the debt in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent.

In order to unwind the trades, the team would need to do so-called portfolio compression, reducing the number of outstanding swaps by eliminating duplication and combining similar bets made by the same counterparties. The process involves sending the trades to an outside vendor, running them through a software program, reviewing the results and deciding which ones to settle.

It couldn’t be done, at least not before trading began in Asia on Monday morning, the person said.

Repo Market

On Sunday, the banks called in their own traders to see if they could minimize any losses from dealings with Lehman. That also proved impossible. One snag was that some corporations involved in the trades couldn’t get their representatives to the New York Fed in time, said one participant. Another was that many of the banks couldn’t determine what bets they’d made on or with Lehman.

A last-ditch attempt on Sunday to try to resolve some outstanding derivatives contracts between Lehman and the other banks at the Fed had little success, according to two people who were in the room. One reason: The banks were only interested in resolving the contracts in which Lehman owed them money and not those where the banks owed Lehman money, said one of the people at the meeting.

The bankers acknowledged that one of their favorite avenues for borrowing would be disrupted by Lehman’s collapse. Making sure the market wouldn’t freeze for short-term loans called bank repurchase agreements, or repos, was where the participants had their biggest success -- and their bitterest disagreements.

‘Default Scenario’

In a repo arrangement, a lender sends cash to a borrower in return for collateral, often Treasury bills or notes, which the borrower agrees to repurchase as soon as the next day for the face value of the securities plus interest. When lenders perceived that Lehman might not pay repo loans or be able to post adequate collateral, they required more and higher quality assets from the firm.

The presentation prepared by Lehman employees, titled “Default Scenario: Liquidation Framework,” predicted, among other things, that a bankruptcy would trigger a freeze in the broader repo market.

“Repos default,” they wrote. “Financial institutions liquidate Lehman repo collateral. Repo defaults trigger default of a significant amount of holding company debt and cause the liquidation of hundreds of billions of dollars of securities.”

Repo collateral caused what might have been the tensest moment of the weekend, according to two participants.

Rule 23(a)

While poring over Lehman’s mortgage portfolio on Saturday, former Goldman Sachs partner Peter S. Kraus, a Merrill Lynch vice president and now CEO of New York-based AllianceBernstein Holding LP, accused JPMorgan’s Dimon of being too aggressive in demanding more collateral and margin from other banks to cover declining values, according to two people who were there.

JPMorgan, as a so-called clearing bank, holds collateral for other banks in what are known as tri-party repo transactions. When the value of the collateral declines, JPMorgan can require a borrower bank to post more or higher quality assets so the lending bank is protected.

Dimon didn’t respond to Kraus, the participants said, and the confrontation died down. Both declined to comment.

The Fed was sufficiently anxious about a standstill in repo funding that on Sunday, Sept. 14, it temporarily modified Rule 23(a) of the Federal Reserve Act to allow banks to use customer deposits to fund securities they couldn’t finance in the repo market. That change, scheduled to expire in January, has since been extended through Oct. 30.

Monday Morning Calm

Also that day, the Fed announced that in exchange for loans it would take the same collateral that private repo counterparties accepted. Instead of demanding only investment- grade securities, the central bank would take the mortgage- backed bonds that had sparked the financial crisis.

The Fed arranged for Lehman’s broker-dealer unit to remain open after the bankruptcy filing to allow for repo deals to be resolved in an orderly way.

Monday morning dawned breezy and warm on Wall Street. It was already 79 degrees Fahrenheit when Thomas G. Wipf, Morgan Stanley’s white-bearded head of secured financing, arrived before 6 a.m. at his office in Times Square, four blocks from where the ball drops on New Year’s Eve and around the corner from Lehman’s headquarters. Wipf, who participated in the weekend meetings, had worked for three decades in the short-term financing market and was used to busy mornings as client companies renewed their loans. Instead, he said there was an eerie hush.

The phones were quiet.

No one was calling.

No one was lending.

The ice-nine was silently spreading.

Source : Bloomberg

Kinh tế toàn cầu kỷ niệm một năm sống trong "Bão tố"

Ngày 15/9/2008, Lehman Brothers, một trong những ngân hàng lâu đời và uy tín nhất thế giới, sụp đổ. Cuộc khủng hoảng kinh tế có quy mô lớn nhất trong vòng 60 năm trở lại đây chính thức bắt đầu.

Hầu hết các chuyên gia đều cho rằng nguyên nhân của cuộc khủng hoảng kinh tế toàn cầu bắt nguồn từ hoạt động cho vay thế chấp dưới chuẩn tại Mỹ. Các ngân hàng của nước này đã cho phép những khách hàng có độ rủi ro tín dụng cao được phép vay tiền. Những khoản vay này, cùng với trái phiếu và tài sản thế chấp khác trở thành các Chứng chỉ nợ (CDO) - một loại hàng hóa được ưa chuộng trên thị trường tài chính toàn cầu.

Tuy nhiên, việc nhà đất trượt dốc trong khi lãi suất ngân hàng tăng khiến nhiều khách hàng mất khả năng trả nợ. CDO cũng vì thế mà kém sức hút đối với nhà đầu tư. Các ngân hàng miễn cưỡng phải cho nhau vay tiền trong khi không biết đối tác đang sở hữu bao nhiêu nợ xấu.

Ảnh hưởng của cuộc khủng hoảng tín dụng nhanh chóng vượt khỏi biên giới nước Mỹ. Các ngân hàng đầu tư tại Australia cũng nhanh chóng ghi nhận lỗ. Họ ngừng bán ra trái phiếu trong khi hồi hộp chờ đợi diễn biến thị trường.

Cục Dự trữ liên bang Mỹ và Ngân hàng trung ương châu Âu nhanh chóng nhảy vào cuộc bằng cách nới lỏng chính sách cho vay đối với các ngân hàng. Tỷ lệ lãi suất cũng được cắt giảm trong nỗ lực cứu vãn thị trường tín dụng.

Tuy nhiên những biện pháp ngắn hạn nêu trên không thể giúp các ngân hàng giải bài toán thanh khoản. Nguồn tiền cho vay không có sẵn khiến các công ty, cá nhân và ngay chính các ngân hàng lâm vào tình trạng khốn đốn. Người ta nhìn thấy những dấu hiệu đầu tiên của suy thoái như thất nghiệp, vỡ nợ hay giá tiêu dùng tăng vọt.

Tại Anh, ngân hàng Northern Rock phải nhờ đến khoản vay khẩn cấp của Chính phủ để tồn tại trong khi vẫn lo lắng về khoản tiền 2 tỷ bảng (3,3 tỷ USD) có thể bị các khách hàng gửi tiền rút bất cứ lúc nào. Ngân hàng này nhanh chóng bị quốc hữu hóa. Trong khi đó, sự sụp đổ của ngân hàng Bear Stearns làm tổn thương nghiêm trọng niềm tin của thị trường và đặt dấu chấm hết cho các ngân hàng chỉ hoạt động trong lĩnh vực đầu tư.

Trong nỗ lực tìm kiếm một giải pháp lâu dài, Chính phủ Mỹ đồng ý thông qua gói cứu trợ trị giá 700 tỷ USD giúp mua lại nợ xấu của Phố Wall. Kế hoạch này thực chất là việc Chính phủ nước này vay tiền từ thị trường tài chính thế giới. Họ hy vọng có thể trả được những khoản vay này một khi thị trường nhà đất ổn định trở lại.

Nước Anh cũng thực hiện một kế hoạch tương tự bằng việc bơm khoảng 400 tỷ Bảng (660 tỷ USD) cho 8 ngân hàng hàng đầu nước này. Đổi lại, Chính phủ sẽ nắm một lượng cổ phần nhất định của các ngân hàng này.

Các nền kinh tế lớn trên thế giới nhanh chóng chịu ảnh hưởng dây truyền của cuộc khủng hoảng tín dụng. Nhiều chính sách đối phó được đưa ra. Chính phủ Pháp hay Iceland tiến hành quốc hữu hóa một số ngân hàng trong khi tại Mỹ hay Canada, ngân hàng trung ương cố gắng cắt giảm lãi suất xuống khoảng 0,5%.

Tiếp theo thị trường tài chính, chứng khoán bắt đầu phản ứng trước những tin tức không mấy tốt lành. Niềm tin của các nhà đầu tư lung lay, cổ phiếu ngành ngân hàng trượt giá do nợ xấu trong khi các hãng bán lẻ cũng ở tình trạng tương tự do sức mua sụt giảm. Nhiều chuyên gia nhận định, cuộc khủng hoảng kinh tế mới chỉ bắt đầu.

Những vụ phá sản, sáp nhập hay quyết định đối phó của chính phủ các nước trở thành cột mốc đáng nhớ trên hành trình "xuống đáy" của cuộc khủng hoảng kinh tế làm rung chuyển cả thế giới suốt thời gian qua.

8/2/2007: Ngân hàng HSBC cảnh báo lỗ với hoạt động cho vay dưới chuẩn

Tập đoàn ngân hàng lớn thứ tư thế giới thông báo về việc Household Finance, công ty con chuyên cho vay thế chấp tại Mỹ lâm vào cảnh thua lỗ do sự đi xuống của thị trường nhà đất. HSBC cũng cảnh báo về ảnh hưởng của hiện tượng này đối với kinh tế toàn cầu. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

2/4/2007: New Century phá sản

Công ty hàng đầu trong hoạt động cho vay dưới chuẩn tại Mỹ, New Century Financial, buộc phải nộp đơn bảo hộ phá sản. Đây được coi là một trong những dấu hiệu bất ổn đầu tiên của thị trường cho vay thế chấp tại Mỹ. Cổ phiếu của các ngân hàng chuyên về hoạt động kinh doanh này như Countrywide cũng chịu nhiều sức ép. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

9/8/2007: Thị trường tín dụng đóng băng

Tín dụng rơi tự do sau khi BNP Paribas thông báo rằng 2 trong số những quỹ lớn nhất của họ "hoàn toàn mất thanh khoản" đối với những tài sản liên quan đến chứng khoán. Ngân hàng trung ương châu Âu buộc phải bơm khoảng 170 tỷ Euro vào thị trường ngân hàng trong khi FED cố gắng cắt giảm tỷ lệ lãi suất. Tuy nhiên, Ngân hàng trung ương Anh vẫn từ chối can thiệp vào thị trường tín dụng. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

14/9/2007: Nothern Rock thoi thóp
Khách hàng tại một trong những ngân hàng uy tín hàng đầu nước Anh ồ ạt rút tiền sau khi thông tin về việc Northern Rock đang phải sống nhờ nguồn gói tài chính khẩn cấp của Ngân hàng trung ương Anh. Vấn đề mà ngân hàng chính là phụ thuộc quá nhiều vào hoạt động kinh doanh tài chính quy mô lớn trong khi thị trường này đang đi xuống. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

17/3/2008: Giải cứu Bear Stearns
Ngân hàng đầu tư Bear Stearns cuối cùng cũng được cứu khỏi nguy cơ phá sản bởi chính đối thủ lâu năm JP Morgan Chase sau khi chính phủ Mỹ đứng ra đảm bảo cho khoản lỗ lên tới 30 tỷ USD của ngân hàng này. Tuy cho thấy tính chất nghiêm trọng của cuộc khủng hoảng tài chính nhưng sự kiên này cũng mang đến cho nhiều nhà đầu tư hy vọng về việc chính phủ Mỹ đang chuẩn bị hành động để cứu vớt nền kinh tế. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

7/9/2008: Đến lượt Fannie Mae

"Những kẻ cùng đường" tiếp theo được chính phủ Mỹ ra tay cứu vớt là hai gã khổng lồ trong lĩnh vực cho vay cầm cố là Fannie Mae và Freddie Mac. Hai công ty này tạm thời được chuyển thành sở hữu công sau khi được trợ giúp nhằm thoát khỏi những khoản lỗ khổng lồ. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

15/9/2008: Lehman Brothers sụp đổ
Ngân hàng đầu tư nổi tiếng của Mỹ Lehman Brothers chính thức phá sản sau khi chính phủ nước này từ chối kế hoạch giải cứu tốn kém. Cùng lúc đó Merrill Lynch được mua lại bởi Bank of America sau khi đối mặt với những khoản lỗ khổng lồ. 24 giờ sau, đại gia bảo hiểm AIG cũng phải nhờ vào khoản vay khẩn cấp 85 tỷ USD từ Bộ Tài chính Mỹ để tồn tại. AIG lâm vào cảnh khốn đốn do tham gia bảo hiểm cho các khoản vay thế chấp. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

17/9/2008: Lloyds mua lại HBOS
Ngân hàng Lloyds đồng ý mua lại Halifax Bank of Scotland (HBOS) với giá 12,2 tỷ Bảng. Ngân hàng cho vay thế chấp lớn nhất nước Anh lâm vào cảnh khó khăn sau khi cổ phiếu của HBOS mất giá mạnh do niềm tin của khách hàng. Sau khi sát nhập, ngân hàng này nắm khoảng 1/3 số tài sản được cầm cố tại Anh. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

3/9/2008: Mỹ thông qua gói cứu trợ trị giá 700 tỷ USD

Cuộc giải cứu tài chính lớn nhất trong lịch sử nước Mỹ được thông qua sau nhiều tranh cãi tại hai viện Quốc hội Mỹ. Các nghị sỹ của cả đảng Dân chủ và Cộng hòa nước này đều miễn cưỡng thông qua kế hoạch tốn kém này sau khi cuộc khủng hoảng đã gõ cửa từng gia đình Mỹ. Cả hai ứng cử viên Tổng thống vào thời điểm này đều bày tỏ sự ủng hộ đối với việc giải cứu kinh tế. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

13/10/2008: Chính phủ Anh can thiệp vào RBS và Lloyds-HBOS

Cả RBS và HBOS, hai ngân hàng hàng đầu tại Anh phải đối mặt với những vẫn đề nghiêm trọng khi thị trường tài chính sụp đổ. Sau khi sát nhập với HBOS, đến lượt Lloyds không chịu nổi những khoản nợ khổng lồ từ phía đối tác. Trong khi đó, RBS phải vật lộn trong cuộc sát nhập đầy tốn kém với ABN-AMRO. Tình cảnh đó buộc chính phủ Anh phải bơm khẩn cấp khoản tiền 37 tỷ Bảng cho cả hai ngân hàng. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

16/12/2008: FED đưa lãi suất cơ bản về sát mốc 0%

Cục dự trữ liên bang Mỹ cắt giảm tỷ lệ lãi suất xuống còn từ 0 đến 0.25% trong nỗ lực tránh suy giảm sâu cho nền kinh tế. Đây là mức lãi suất thấp nhất mà FED từng công bố trong lịch sử của mình. Cơ quan này cũng bắt đầu kế hoạch bơm tiền vào nền kinh tế, giúp việc vay tiền của cá nhân và doanh nghiệp thuận lợi hơn. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

14/2/2009: Gói kích thích kinh tế 787 tỷ USD được Mỹ thông qua

Tân Tổng thống Obama có được thành công đầu tiên khi thuyết phục quốc hội thực hiện kế hoạch mà theo ông, sẽ giúp kinh tế Mỹ phục hồi. Phần lớn khoản tiền này được sử dụng nhằm tạo việc làm mới cũng như dành cho chi tiêu công, đầu tư vào hệ thống giao thông, trường học và năng lượng xanh. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

2/4/2009: Hội nghị thượng đỉnh G20 tại London

Tại hội nghị này, nhà lãnh đạo của các nền kinh tế lớn trên thế giới đã cam kết chi thêm tổng cộng hơn 1000 tỷ USD để giúp kinh tế toàn cầu vượt dốc. Thủ tướng Anh Gordon Brown coi đây là điểm nút của cuộc khủng hoàng kinh tế thế giới. Tuy nhiên, không phải mọi khoản tiền được chi ra đều mang lại hiệu quả. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

22/4/2009: Ngân sách nước Anh thâm hụt nặng

Những khoản chi tốn kém trong thời kỳ khủng hoảng đã khiến nước Anh phải chịu mức thâm hụt ngân sách nặng nề nhất trong lịch sử, khoảng 175 tỷ Bảng. Tổng số nợ của chính phủ nước này có thể lên tới gần 1.000 tỷ Bảng vào năm 2014. Các quan chức cao cấp cho rằng, nước Anh cần 10 năm để trở về với tình trạng ngân sách trước khủng hoảng. (Ảnh: Getty Images)

đâs
Biểu đồ diễn biến chỉ số chứng khoán Dow Jones (Mỹ) và FTSE 100 (Anh) từ năm 2007 đến nay.

Nguồn: Bloomberg.

ENERGY MARKET RECAP

October Crude Oil closed down 2.66 at 69.28. This was 0.46 up from the low and 3.62 off the high.

October Heating Oil closed down 5.37 at 173.48. This was 1.80 up from the low and 7.47 off the high.

October RBOB Gasoline finished down 4.81 at 175.55, 8.07 off the high and 1.25 up from the low.

October Natural Gas finished down 0.26 at 3.00, 0.43 off the high and 0.07 up from the low.

Technical Outlook
CRUDE OIL (OCT) 09/14/2009: The market back below the 60-day moving average suggests the longer-term trend could be turning down. Momentum studies are rising from mid-range, which could accelerate a move higher if resistance levels are penetrated. The close under the 18-day moving average indicates the intermediate-term trend could be turning down. A negative signal was given by the outside day down. The market is in a bearish position with the close below the 2nd swing support number. The near-term upside objective is at 74.14. The next area of resistance is around 71.30 and 74.14, while 1st support hits today at 67.23 and below there at 65.99.

RBOB GAS (OCT) 09/14/2009: The market back below the 60-day moving average suggests
the longer-term trend could be turning down. Daily stochastics are trending lower but have declined into oversold territory. The market's short-term trend is negative as the close remains below the 9-day moving average. The swing indicator gave a moderately negative reading with the close below the 1st support number. The next downside objective is now at 167.94. The next area of resistance is around 180.21 and 186.57, while 1st support hits today at 170.89 and below there
at 167.94.

HEATING OIL (OCT) 09/14/2009: A bearish signal was triggered on a crossover down
in the daily stochastics. Momentum studies are declining, but have fallen to oversold levels. The market's close below the 9-day moving average is an indication the short-term trend remains negative. The defensive setup, with the close under the 2nd swing support, could cause some early weakness. The next downside objective is 165.63. The next area of resistance is around 178.11 and 184.16, while 1st support hits today at 168.85 and below there at 165.63.

PRECIOUS METALS RECAP

December Gold closed up 9.6 at 1006.4. This was 5 up from the low and 7.3 off the high.

December Silver finished up 0.03 at 16.7, 0.315 off the high and 0.05 up from the low.

Technical Outlook
COMEX SILVER (DEC) 09/14/2009: Momentum studies are trending higher but have entered overbought levels. The close above the 9-day moving average is a positive short-term indicator for trend. It is a mildly bullish indicator that the market closed over the pivot swing number. The near-term upside target is at 1719.2. With a reading over 70, the 9-day RSI is approaching overbought levels. The next area of resistance is around 1700.0 and 1719.2, while 1st support hits today at 1663.0 and below there at 1645.3.

COMEX GOLD (DEC) 09/14/2009: Studies are showing positive momentum but are now in overbought territory, so some caution is warranted. The market's close above the 9-day moving average suggests the short-term trend remains positive. A positive setup occurred with the close over the 1st swing resistance. The next upside objective is 1023.8. The 9-day RSI over 70 indicates the market is approaching overbought levels. The next area of resistance is around 1016.5 and 1023.8, while 1st support hits today at 999.1 and below there at 989.0.

CURRENCY MARKET RECAP

December US Dollar closed down 0.155 at 76.930. This was 0.215 up from the low and 0.160 off the high.

December Euro closed down 0.07 at 145.76. This was 0.24 up from the low and 0.59 off the high.

December Japanese Yen finished up 1.27 at 110.36, 0.56 off the high and 1.33 up from the low.

December Swiss finished up 0.12 at 96.48, 0.32 off the high and 0.24 up from the low.

December Canadian Dollar finished up 0.09 at 92.8, 0.55 off the high and 0.14 up from the low.

December British Pound closed up 0.07 at 166.69. This was 0.26 up from the low and 0.73 off the high.

Technical Outlook
JAPANESE YEN (DEC) 09/14/2009: Momentum studies are trending higher but have entered overbought levels. The market's short-term trend is positive on the close above the 9-day moving average. The market has a bullish tilt coming into today's trade with the close above the 2nd swing resistance. The near-term upside objective is at 112.07. The market is approaching overbought levels with an RSI over 70. The next area of resistance is around 111.34 and 112.07, while 1st support hits today at 109.46 and below there at 108.30.

EURO (DEC) 09/14/2009: Momentum studies are trending higher but have entered overbought levels. The market's short-term trend is positive on the close above the 9-day moving average. The daily closing price reversal down puts the market on the defensive. The market has a slightly positive tilt with the close over the swing pivot. The near-term upside objective is at 146.68. The next area of resistance is around 146.18 and 146.68, while 1st support hits today at 145.36 and below there at 145.03.

STOCK INDICES RECAP

December S&P closed up 0.1 at 1037.5. This was 4 up from the low and 6 off the high. December S&P E-Mini finished unchanged at 1037.5, 6.25 off the high and 4 up from the low.

December Dow finished down 9 at 9535, 45 off the high and 25 up from the low.


Technical Outlook

S&P 500 (DEC) 09/14/2009: Rising stochastics at overbought levels warrant some caution for bulls. The close above the 9-day moving average is a positive short-term indicator for trend. The market has a slightly positive tilt with the close over the swing pivot. The near-term upside target is at 1047.80. The 9-day RSI over 70 indicates the market is approaching overbought levels. The next area of resistance is around 1042.09 and 1047.80, while 1st support hits today at 1032.10 and below there at 1027.80.

S&P E-MINI (DEC) 09/14/2009: Momentum studies are trending higher but have entered overbought levels. The market's close above the 9-day moving average suggests the short-term trend remains positive. It is a mildly bullish indicator that the market closed over the pivot swing number. The next upside target is 1048.31. The market is approaching overbought levels with an RSI over 70. The next area of resistance is around 1042.62 and 1048.31, while 1st support hits today at 1032.38 and below there at 1027.82.

NASDAQ (DEC) 09/14/2009: Daily stochastics have risen into overbought territory which will tend to support reversal action if it occurs. The market's short-term trend is positive on the close above the 9-day moving average. With the close higher than the pivot swing number, the market is in a slightly bullish posture. The near-term upside objective is at 1697.50. The market is approaching overbought levels with an RSI over 70. The next area of resistance is around 1691.00 and 1697.50, while 1st support hits today at 1675.00 and below there at 1665.50.

DOW (DEC) 09/14/2009: A new contract high was made on the rally. Studies are showing positive momentum but are now in overbought territory, so some caution is warranted. A positive signal for trend short-term was given on a close over the 9-bar moving average. With the close higher than the pivot swing number, the market is in a slightly bullish posture. The next upside target is 9597. The next area of resistance is around 9583 and 9597, while 1st support hits today at 9543 and below there at 9516.

BOND MARKET RECAP


December Bonds finished up 0-040 at 120-160, 0-290 off the high and 0-170 up from
the low.

December 10 Yr Treasury Notes closed up 0-025 at 117-315. This was 0-075 up from the low and 0-170 off the high.

Technical Outlook
BONDS (DEC) 09/14/2009: A bullish signal was given with an upside crossover of the daily stochastics. Momentum studies are rising from mid-range, which could accelerate a move higher if resistance levels are penetrated. The market's close above the 9-day moving average suggests the short-term trend remains positive. With the close higher than the pivot swing number, the market is in a slightly bullish posture. The near-term upside objective is at 122-000. The next area of resistance is around 121-060 and 122-000, while 1st support hits today at 119-250 and below there at 119-050.

10 YR TREASURY NOTES (DEC) 09/14/2009: The daily stochastics have crossed over up which is a bullish indication. Rising stochastics at overbought levels warrant some caution for bulls. The market's short-term trend is positive on the close above the 9-day moving average. It is a mildly bullish indicator that the market closed over the pivot swing number. The next upside objective is 118-270. The next area of resistance is around 118-120 and 118-270, while 1st support hits today at 117-185 and below there at 117-075.