Friday, Jun 26, 2009
O Rly?
Telegraph: British banks highly vulnerable to future shocks, Bank of England warns
The report revealed that the funding gap – the shortfall between what banks have in deposits and what they lend out to customers – has further widened in the past year to more than £800bn. The increase underlines the scale of adjustment that they will have to undergo before life returns to relative normality. The report also pointed out that the amount banks have in liquid assets remains low, while the leverage ratios remain high, saying: "As long as these balance sheet vulnerabilities persist, there is a risk to the banking system from further adverse economic or financial sector developments, which could in turn affect lending and economic recovery."
5 Comments
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1. Imminent_plunge said...
It really is time to force higher interest rates AND dry up new mortgage approvals by savers withdrawing cash from UK banks now!
2. inbreda said...
"the shortfall between what banks have in deposits ..."
well that's a shame, cos I'm removing a shedload of cash from the banks soon. It's safer stuffed down my pants, and although inflation will rob me, it's not like the savings interest offered by banks is covering real inflation anyway. So F-'em. They can offer decent rates or go out of business.
Vote with your feet peeps!
3. Imminent_plunge said...
It's time for UK savers to force interest rates up and crucify mortgage approval figures by withdrawing savings from UK banks.
4. last_days_of_disco said...
But I thought QE and all that was supposed to solve this problem?
Guess not.
5. Oseame said...
British banks are the only solid long term investment right now - take your money out of your bank account and use it to buy shares in your bank