Q: - “Why is British banking in crisis?” Provide reasons and suggest possible solutions?

Abstract

The report investigates of why the British banking sectors is faced with crisis and what are the reasons behind these crisis and where they originated from.

Introduction

The sub-prime mortgages crisis that started in summer 2007 were the creation of a long housing boom enjoyed by people, which were been fuelled by low interest rates and excess liquidity. During the boom period mortgages brokers enticed by big commission, let people with poor rating into accepting housing mortgages with little or no down payment and without proper tax documentation or credit checks. The groundwork was established for the coming mortgage meltdown.

The mortgages were bought by banks and packaged together on Wall Street with other similar debts. That was then moved on to the Wall Street and where it then became “Structured Investment Vehicle”. Investors bought these mortgages and didn’t keep the loans for very long and sold them to investment, insurance firms etc world wide, who really looked at these mortgages as a way to make some serious money. The diagram below shows the difference between the two models of mortgages: -

http://news.bbc.co.uk/nol/shared/spl/hi/uk/07/subprime_mortgage_market/img/subprime_tog1b_416.gif

Many companies wanted in on this as they saw it as profitable so it became a big circus. The problem with this was that some investors weren’t aware of what was going on so they did not know who they owed money to and when they needed to pay anymore.

It was made so attractive because the credit rating agencies, such as Standard & Poor's, Moody's, and Fitch, give ratings to every type of bond according to its risk. Letter grades mark the safety of the investments like AAA is given to the safest ones, for example US government bonds. The problem with these high rating is that agencies used the wrong data to estimate the risk. Looking back historically, what they saw was a very low rate of defaulting, a very low foreclosure rate. However, the current situation was different - with new qualification requirements, new mortgages given to people who would never have been granted them before. This speculative housing was eventually going to burst. These mortgages were unlike the conventional mortgages that have a fixed-rate 15- or 30-year mortgages, but theses ARMs were offered at low interest rates that increased after a period of time.

 

Once the interest rate is no longer fixed, it becomes variable, usually resetting once a year for the remaining life of the loan. Variable interest rates are connected to Federal Interest rates, which are adjusted by the Federal Reserve Board. As federal rates increase or decrease, homeowners' variable mortgage interest rates also increase or decrease. As the chart below shows that in 2004 interest rates were very low and in 2006 the rates reached 5%, that meant people payment went up as they mortgages were linked to Federal Interest rate. It resulted sub-prime mortgages began to re-set that lead to foreclosures. As these loans and CDO’s that had 100 of sub-prime mortgages, were distributed worldwide, it started to have a rifle effect on all financial system caused mayhem in the markets

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http://money.cnn.com/2007/09/18/news/economy/fed_rates/index.htm

As the Andrew Capon, Editor-in-Chief, State Street Global Markets points out  “Market participants don’t know whether to buy on the rumour and sell on the news, do the opposite, do both, or do nothing, depending on which way the wind is blowing”. The show’s the situation that was faced by investor and seller.

Investors began to have doubts about the safety of their investment in the American sub-prime mortgage market and got worried that there is not a good chance that people will be able to pay the loans. This sent the world financial market down as ...

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