Posted in Banks, Credit Crunch, Harvard, Insurance, Markets, Money, Wall Street on September 22nd, 2008
It may sound strange but Harvard University bears a heavy responsibility for the credit crunch.
Last week a “flight to safety” of investors in America’s $3.5 trillion Treasury money market was only halted by Secretary Henry Paulson’s swift action in nationalising the banking sector’s bad debts.
Read The Great Harvard Sausage Scandal 2008 over at Syntagma.
Who, then, are the people that created this vastly complex set of financial instruments based on the always-temporary phenomenon of rapidly-rising asset prices? And who were their managers who let them do it?
It appears that a large number of them are alumni of the Harvard Business School, even those working in Britain and Europe. President Bush is one of them. British PM Gordon Brown has surrounded himself with such types for more than a decade.
Read the rest of the article.
Posted in Credit Crunch, Finance, Investment, LSE, Markets, Shares, Stock Exchange on September 8th, 2008
Trading on the LSE’s electronic platform was shut down this morning on one of its busiest days of the year.
The timing of the shutdown is unfortunate for the LSE, which is facing increased competition from rival trading platforms such as Turquoise, a Europe-wide platform set up by a number of the world’s biggest investment banks.
Another rival, Chi-X, claims to have taken over 15 percent of trading in FTSE 100 stocks recently.
To counteract the challenge, the LSE slashed trading fees at the start of this month in response to a partial launch of Turquoise, which is not due to start trading proper until October.
Today’s debacle was thought by the BBC’s Business Editor Robert Peston, to have serious consequences for the exchange. A great deal of money was tied up in the system, money that could not be used in a rapidly rising market.