2009

Enero

Wall Street sinks as economic woes mount
Reuters (Enero, 29)

The Bank Bailout is Broken
BusinessWeek (Enero, 29)

Taxpayers still hate the bank bailout
CNNMoney (Enero, 29)

Ford posts record loss, draws $ 10 billion in credit
Reuters (Enero, 29)

Jobless claims hit record peak, orders plummet
Reuters (Enero, 29)

Dollar gains as Fed holds rates
CNNMoney (Enero, 28)

Fed says prepared to buy debt to aid economy
Reuters (Enero, 28) 

Oil settles up - a bit
CNNMoney (Enero, 28)

Not all dividends are at risk
CNNMoney (Enero, 28)

Fed says ready to buy debt to aid economy  
Reuters (Enero, 28)

Soros urges U.S. to create "good bank" as aggregator
Reuteres (Enero, 28)

Boeing targeting 10,000 job cuts
Reuters (Enero, 28)

Bank bailout could cost $4 trillion
CNNMoney (Enero, 27)

Fin de la crisis ¿una interrogante?
El Economista (Enero, 27)

Dollar tumbles amid return to risk
CNNMoney (Enero, 26)

Home Sales Tick Up but Job Cuts Deepen Gloom
Reuters (Enero, 26)

Much of Stimulus Won't Be Spent Before 2011, CBO Says
Bloomberg (Enero, 20)

Treasury Demands Banks with TARP Funds Report Lending
Bloomberg (Enero, 20)

Credit insurers cautious as bankruptcy risk rises
Reuters  (Enero, 20)

BofA and Citi shares sink as investors fear more losses 
Reuters (Enero, 20)

Stocks battered on recession fears
CNNMoney (Enero, 20)

Oil Prices struggle on demand worries
CNNMoney (Enero, 18)

Banks get bashed again
CNNMoney (Enero, 16)

Acciones de EU se hunden por débiles cifras: papeles bancarios se desploman
El Economsta (Enero, 14)

Another bad day for the Dow
CNNMoney (Enero, 14)

US Stocks- Wall St Tumbles on bank woes, consumer gloom
Reuters (Enero, 14)

Bernanke suggests U.S. buy toxic assets from banks
Reuters (Enero, 13)

Febrero

Citigroup’s Third U.S. Rescue May Not Be Its Last, Analysts Say
Bloomberg (Febrero, 28)

World Bank, EBRD to Give East Europe $31 Billion Aid
Bloomberg (Febrero, 27) 

Citi Gets Third Rescue as U.S. Plans to Raise Stake
Bloomberg (Febrero, 27) 

U.S. Economy: GDP Shrinks 6.2%, More Than Previously Estimated
Bloomberg (Febrero, 27)

DATOS-¿Cómo se está gastando el dinero del rescate de EEUU?
Reuters (Febrero, 24)

La confianza de los consumidores de EEUU toca su mínimo histórico
Finanzas (Febrero, 24)

La ONU oide impulsar la manufactura como salida a la pobreza
Reuters (Febrero, 23)

Get ready for a wave of bank failures
CNN Money (Febrero, 20) 

BofA's investment bank "fun" may be done for good
Reuters (Febrero, 20)

Citigroup planea venta en Brasil para enfrentar la crisis
El Economista (Febrero, 20)

Highland Capital CDO Fund Is Insolvent, Wiping Out Investors
Bloomberg (Febrero, 20)

U.S. Stocks Drop on Concern Banks Will Need to Be Nationalized
Bloomberg (Febrero, 20) 

Dodd Says Short-Term Bank Takeovers May Be Necessary
Bloomberg (Febrero, 20)

Chile's economy: Stimulating
The economist (Febrero, 20) 

The collapse of manufacturing
The economist (Febrero, 20)

Acciones de Citigroup y Bank of America se hunden por temor a una nacionalización
El Economista (Febrero, 19)

El Banco Central de Inglaterra pide permiso al Gobierno para imprimir dinero
Cinco Días (Febrero, 19)

Gordon Brown se fija en Suiza en su campaña contra los paraísos fiscales
Finanzas (Febrero, 19)

6,4 millones de personas reciben pagos por desempleo en E.U.
El Tiempo (Febrero, 19)

Indice actividad fabril Fed Filadelfia cae en feb
Reuters (Febrero, 19)

Economic catastrophe looms
Asian Times (Febrero, 19)

Europe Banks to Set Up Default Swap Clearing
The Street (Febrero, 19)

Hedge Funds Pressed to Consolidate as Losses Cut Fees 
Bloomberg (Febrero, 18)

Obama Pledges $275 Billion to Stem U.S. Foreclosures 
Bloomberg (Febrero, 18)

La construcción de viviendas en EEUU cae en enero a su mínimo histórico
Finanzas (Febrero, 18)


Obama Sets $75 Billion Plan to Stem U.S. Foreclosures
Bloomberg (Febrero, 18) 

Steinbrueck Says Euro States May Bail Out Members
Bloomberg (Febrero, 17) 

S&P revisaría calificación bancos del este de Europa
Reuters (Febrero, 17)

Obama firma y convierte en ley iniciativa de estímulo fiscal
Pueblo en Linea (Febrero, 17)

Greenspan backs bank nationalisation
Bloomberg (Febrero, 17) 

Greenspan Says U.S. Crisis Response May Not Be Enough
bloomberg (Febrero, 17) 

Japan Economy Shrinks 12.7%, Steepest Drop Since 1974
Bloomberg (Febrero, 16)

Death of Corporate Bonds Is Worth Investigating
Bloomberg (Febrero, 16)

Geithner Reassures G-7 on U.S. Financial Rescue Plan
Bloomberg (Febrero, 15)

G-7 Takes ‘Back Seat’ as Crisis Pushes G-20 to Fore
Bloomberg (Febrero, 15)

The Great Crash, 2008
Foreing Affairs (Febrero, 15)


Ailing Banks May Require More Aid to Keep Solvent
The New York Times (Febrero, 12)

Nationalized Banks Are "Only Answer," Economist Stiglitz Says
Deutsche Welle (Febrero, 6)

France to call for hedge fund crackdown
Financial Times (Febrero, 12)

Federal Reserve is prepared to expand term Asset-Baked Securities Loan Facility (TALF)
Fed (Febrero, 10)

Fed in Talks to Add Primary Dealers as Sales Surge
Bloomberg (Febrero, 12)

EE.UU.: Rescates podrían sumar hasta dos billones de dólares
El Clarín (Febrero, 11)

China Needs U.S. Guarantees for Treasuries, Yu Says 
Bloomberg (Febrero, 10) 

IMF Chief Says Nations in 'Depression'
By BOB DAVIS and ELFFIE CHEW
Wall Street Journal 9 de febrero

International Monetary Fund chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn said the world's advanced economies -- the U.S., Western Europe and Japan -- are "already in depression," and that the IMF could slash its global growth forecasts further. The "worst cannot be ruled out," he said.
The IMF managing director's comments to reporters after a speech in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, represent the most dire estimate thus far of the state of the global economy by a major political figure, and were far more pessimistic than forecasts released by the IMF as recently Jan. 28.
Political figures generally avoid using the word depression because of the association with the Great Depression of the 1930s, when unemployment hit 25% in the U.S. and economic output fell even more steeply. Last week, when British Prime Minister Gordon Brown used the word "depression" to describe the global economy, his aides quickly said it was a slip of the tongue.
In the U.S., chief White House economic adviser Lawrence Summers said that while the economic situation was serious, it wasn't as bad as Mr. Strauss-Kahn seemed to suggest.
"We were really in a very different situation than" the Great Depression, he said on ABC television's "This Week with George Stephanopoulos."
Since the events of the 1930s, there hasn't been a widely accepted definition of economic depression.
Former IMF Chief Economist Simon Johnson, a professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management, said the term refers to a significant contraction that lasts around five years. Under that definition, he said, Japan during the 1990s could have been classified as having been trapped in a depression.
Whatever the definition, by using the word "depression," Mr. Strauss-Kahn, a 59-year-old former French finance minister who has worked for decades on economic issues, has achieved shock value.
That could increase political pressure on national leaders on at least two fronts, Mr. Johnson and several IMF officials said.
The IMF has been campaigning for months to get governments in many countries to boost fiscal spending by about two percentage points to fight the global downturn. It has recently pressed governments again to repair their banking systems, even at a steep cost.
But it has been frustrated by what it feels is an inadequate response, especially in Europe, where governments worry that additional spending will lead to unmanageable inflation. U.S. plans have brought more applause by IMF officials.
The IMF also has also begun to campaign to double its lending war chest to $500 billion, from $250 billion. The declaration of a depression could help Mr. Strauss-Kahn pressure reluctant IMF board members to pitch in and fund that plan. The IMF is close to finalizing a deal with Japan for a $100 billion loan that could be tapped in emergencies, and plans to call on other countries with large reserves, such as China and Saudi Arabia, to make emergency loans available too.
In addition, the IMF is considering issuing bonds for the first time in its history. It's likely that such bonds would be sold only to governments or central banks; in that way, they would become part of those nations' official reserves. The holders of the bonds could sell them to other nations, though probably not on the open market. That would make the bonds a more liquid version of loans to the IMF.
Issuing bonds is seen as a more controversial measure by some IMF members, especially the U.S., Germany and the Netherlands, which prefer to keep the IMF on a tighter leash by limiting its ability to lend.

Our lethargic leaders must work together on the crisis
New York Times (Febrero, 8)

On the Edge
New York Times (Febrero, 8) 

China’s Blackstone Pain Is Good News for Treasuries
Bloomberg (Febrero, 9)

Goldman’s Blankfein Says Banks Shouldn’t Abandon Mark-to-Market
Bloomberg (Febrero, 9)

U.S. Taxpayers Risk $9.7 Trillion on Bailouts as Senate Votes
Bloomberg (Febrero, 9)

GM, Chrysler May Face Bankruptcy to Protect U.S. Debt
Bloomberg (Febrero, 9)

Geithner Plans to Bring in Private Investment for Toxic Assets
Bloomberg (Febrero, 9)

Triple trouble. Are AAA ratings bad for firms’ health?
The economist (Febrero, 5)

598,000 Jobs Lost in January
BusinessWeek (Febrero, 6)

Bank of America or THE Bank of America?
CNNMoney (Febrero, 6)

Stocks jump despite job cuts
CNNMoney (Febrero, 6)

Oil falls below $40 as U.S. job losses mount
Reuters (Febrero, 6)

U.S job losses accelerate
Reuters (Febrero, 6)

Stocks in a struggle
CNNMoney (Febrero, 4)

Citigroup deploys $36.5 billion, eyes exit on mets
Reuters (Febrero, 3)

Auto sales hit 27-year low
Reuters (Febrero, 3)

Oil rises as OPEC cuts production
CNNMoney (Febrero, 3) del 2009

Big opportunities for small banks
CNNMoney (Febrero, 3)

Marzo

Global Mutual Funds Buy U.S. as Risks Rise
The Street (Marzo, 30)

BID sufre pérdidas en su cartera de inversiones
El Economista (Marzo, 30)

Contracción economía zona OCDE sería de 4,3 pct 2009
Reuters (Marzo, 30) 

BID aumenta en 1.265 millones los préstamos sin garantía soberana
Terra (Marzo, 30)

Obama afirma que General Motors puede ir la bancarrota para reestructurarse
Expansión (Marzo, 30)

Bernanke Treasury Plan Drives Pimco to Mortgage
Bloomberg (Marzo, 30)

G-20 Targets Hedge Funds as Leaders Near Consensus
Bloomberg (Marzo, 30)

Fed Buys Fewer Bonds Than Some Traders Anticipated
Bloomber (Marzo, 30)

Nobel de Economía Stiglitz aboga por nuevo sistema monetario globalo
Xin Hua (Marzo, 25)

El dólar no está amenazado: Strauss-Kahn
El Economista (Marzo, 27)

China Urges New Money Reserve to Replace Dollar
New York Times (Marzo, 23)

¿Hacia una nueva divisa mundial?
Deutsche Welle (Marzo, 26)

World Bank Launches Its Largest-Ever Bond Issuance
World Bank (Marzo, 26)

AIG Subpoenaed on Credit Default Swaps
The Street (Marzo, 27)

ECB Eyes a New Tactic: Buying Corporate Bonds
Wall Street Journal (Marzo, 27)

Fed de NY compra bonos del tesoro de EU por US7,541 millones
El Economista (Marzo, 27)

Treasuries Rise as Traders Prepare for Tomorrow's Fed Purchases
Bloomberg (Marzo, 26)

SEC pledges to strengthen oversight
Financial Times (Marzo, 26)

The purple panda principle of financial regulation
Financial Times (Marzo, 26)

Geithner Calls for ‘New Rules of the Game' in Finance
Bloomberg (Marzo, 26)

Geithner Relies on Investors for $1 Trillion Plan
Bloomberg (Marzo, 23)

Treasurys sink on stocks' rally
CNN Money (Marzo, 23)

Plan de "activos tóxicos", destinado a fracasar: Krugman
El Economista (Marzo, 23)

La Fed y los bonos
Expansión (Marzo, 23)

Sharing the pain
The Economist (Marzo, 20)

Fed debt foray aims to get mortgages moving
Financial Times (Marzo, 20)

EU prevé déficit en presupuesto por más de US1.8 billones
El Economista (Marzo, 20)

FDIC Revises Quarterly Banking Profile
The Street (Marzo, 20)

Correa enfrenta en Ecuador duro dilema sobre el dólar
Reuters América Latina (Marzo, 20)

Obama y el final de los paraísos fiscales
El país (Marzo, 18)

Citigroup venderá 2.300 millones en bonos respaldados por tarjetas de crédito
El País (Marzo, 19)

La compra de bonos por parte de EE UU eleva el precio de la deuda europea
El País (Marzo, 19)

Hedge Funds Buy Stocks for First Time Since October
Bloomberg (Marzo, 19)

Fed Plans to Inject Another $1 Trillion to Aid the Economy
New York Times (Marzo, 19)

Forex: a la espera de la decisión de la FED
Finanzas (Marzo, 18)

Jefe AIG defiende pago bonos, crece la furia política
Reuters (Marzo, 18)

La inflación aumenta en EEUU un 0,4 por ciento, su mayor ritmo en 7 meses
Finanzas (Marzo, 18)

Hedge Funds Can't Save Themselves With Lower Fees: Matthew Lynn
Bloomberg (Marzo, 18)

Treasuries Advance as Traders Pare Bets Before Fed Statement
Bloomberg (Marzo, 18)

China teme por su inversión en EE.UU.
BBC (Marzo, 13)

China's Leader Says He Is ‘Worried' Over U.S. Treasuries
The New York Times (Marzo, 13)

Treasurys sink on supply, stock rally
CNN Money (Marzo, 10)

Cards Raise ‘Canary in Coal Mine' Alert in Canada
Bloomberg (Marzo, 10)

Islandia Nacionaliza el último de sus grandes bancos
El País (Marzo, 9)

Japón, con déficit récord en su cuenta corriente en enero
Reuters (Marzo, 9)

Buffet dice economía en precipicio, teme inflación
Reuters (Marzo, 9)

Treasuries Fall as U.S. May Announce $60 Billion of Debt Sales 
Bloomberg (Marzo, 3)

JPMorgan Said to Reap $5 Billion Derivatives Profit 
Bloomberg (Marzo, 3)

Hidden Pension Fiasco May Foment Another $1 Trillion Bailout
Bloomberg (Marzo, 3)

AIG warns on ratings, collateral calls, solvency
Market Watch (Marzo, 2)

U.S. Economy: Manufacturing Slump Persists as Sales, Jobs Sink
Bloomberg (Marzo, 2)

AIG Gets More Aid After Record $61.7 Billion Loss
Bloomberg (Marzo, 2)

AIG anuncia pérdidas récord de 99.289 millones de dólares en 2008
Finanzas (Marzo, 2)

La crisis bancaria sacude a HSBC y AIG y las bolsas se desploman
AFP (Marzo, 2)

Agosto

Central bankers stuck in a hole

Asía Times On Line (Agosto, 31)

As Big Banks Repay Bailout Money, U.S. Sees a Profit
The New York Times (Agosto, 31)

Recuperan capitalización bursátil los 15 mayores bancos del mundo

El Economista (Agosto, 31)

Citi, AIG, CIT: Financial Winners and Losers

The Street (Agosto, 29)

U.S. GDP declines 1 percent, optimism returns

The Miami Herald (Agosto, 28)

Banks' insurance fund falls to $10.4B

The Miami Herald (Agosto, 28)

US ‘problem' bank list hits 15-year high

Financial Times (Agosto, 27)

Banks in the deep South: Sweaty days

Economist (Agosto, 27)

U.S. regulators prep defenses to survive bank crisis

Reuters (Agosto, 25)

Banking on blame

Financial Times (Agosto, 25)

El 2009 deja 81 bancos quebrados en EU

El Economista (Agosto, 24)

 

Septiembre

Octubre

Vers la fin du dollar comme monnaie d'échange

Atlas alternatif (Octubre 16)

¿Socialismo en Estados Unidos?

Después del rescate de emergencia del sistema hipotecario (Fannie Mae, Freddy e Indy Mac) el longevo ex presidente de la Reserva Federal (por 18 años, hasta el 2006) Alan Greenspan vaticinóhace ya tres semanas que más bancos terminarían siendo rescatados de la quiebraantes de que la crisis crediticia termine (F. Times del 4 de agosto del 2008).

Pero no solo Greenspan prevé que las autoridades de los EEUU deberán nuevamente intervenir a instituciones para salvarlas de la insolvencia por sus depreciados patrimonios y sus negros estimados de ganancias.

Por ello, los bancos y, desde la venta de emergencia del Bear Stearns en marzo 08, también los bancos de inversión, acuden a las ventanillas de emergencia que ofertan los mayores bancos centrales, precisamente para evitar una crisis sistémica. En el caso de Bear, la Reserva Federal (FED) y el Tesoro actuaron con tal celeridad porque se enteraron que dicho banco iba a aplicar a uno de los Capítulos de quiebras, el Capitulo 11 y al hacerlo, admitir legalmente su insolvencia.

El literalmente dramático rescate del Bear Stearns implicó después su posterior remate (a un precio irrisorio por acción) al JP Morgan y en condiciones consideradas (por un Senador Demócrata)lesivas para el Estado. Y, por supuesto, para el contribuyente, pensionista o mediano inversionista. Ni siquiera durante la gran depresión el Estado había rescatado a un banco de inversión.

Esta situación no va a mejorar pronto en la ardua pelea de los bancos por el "des-palacamiento" financiero y por salir de sus bonos basura (fuga hacia títulos de calidad) y de buscar "paraísos seguros" (como los bonos del tesoro, que ya no son tan seguros) o paraísos financieros en alguna isla del Pacífico.

Lo que resulta paradójico es que no obstante las diversas medidas de emergencia adoptadas por elFED y el Tesoro, mientras los bancos disponen de abundante liquidez, sus clientes quiebran a tasas crecientes

En Inglaterra, el Northern Rock, sí es un banco que recibe depósitos del publico (por ello hubieron colas de ahorristas para retirar sus fondos y en el Bear fueron mas bien los accionistas los que vendieron ansiosamente) el Estado lo que hizo fue nacionalizarlo, como hace H.Chávez en Venezuela.

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Tema de investigación: 
Crisis económica