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Leaked memo 'could ruin Northern takeover'



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Published Date: 14 November 2007
NORTHERN Rock said today information in a confidential memo leaked to the press could jeopardise future takeover bids.
The crisis-hit Newcastle-based bank hit out after the contents of the internal memo to its advisers Blackstone, was leaked. The memo suggests the Government could be saddled with the company's crippling debts until the end of the decade.

One esti
mate contained in the leaked document said Northern Rock could still owe the Bank of England as much as £5.9 billion in 2010, contrary to Chancellor Alistair Darling's claims that public support for the beleaguered bank would only last months.

In a statement, Northern said: "The company believes further speculative reporting based on the illustrative information in the memorandum may jeopardise the complex discussions and negotiations taking place in connection with its strategic review."

The memo also says in a best-case scenario, the bank could be making annual profits of more than £500m within the next three years.

The leak came as the British Bankers Association said the government's systems of dealing with financial crises needed to be overhauled. In a statement to the Treasury Select Committee, the BBA warned fallout from the Northern Rock crisis risked "permanently damaging the UK's reputation as a leading financial centre".

And the London Stock Exchange has warned the frenzy of dealing in Northern shares has left many traders "hanging in mid-air" and urged all investors to settle transactions urgently.



The full article contains 244 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 14 November 2007 10:59 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

A Friend of Fernando Poo,

Newington 14/11/2007 16:24:06

This vast excercise in socialism for bankers has cost every taxpayer 2000 quid and counting to make loans which capitalists had already refused to buy and which only socialists with the ability to pick the taxpayer pocket would even consider.

The very minute Brown and Darling overrode King's natural inclination to let Northern Rock go down pour encourager les autres, I wrote to my MEP asking that he find out whether this state aid might be illegal under EU law.

He's confirmed that he's made enquiries of the appropriate authorities and it seems that if state aid continues beyond February, it may indeed be illegal.

These bankers would have in May supported me in saying that politicians should stay out of banking and let free markets do their work. Like most dilettentes, the minute a bet goes wrong, they have their hands out and clamour like socialists to get on the government tit. Predictably, the flow of taxpayer milk is expected to be never-ending.

What's worse, one of the experts who created the derivatives causing these problems was asked if we're in the third innings of the crisis. He replied that we're just starting the national anthem in a game destined to go into extra time. Undoubtedly there will be more banks in trouble and seeing that one has a bailout, they'll all want the same treatment.

It's time to call a halt to this largesse. I'm sure we can all think of better things to do with a few grand. You can contact your MEP and ask that they pull the plug on state aid for speculators by using:

http://www.writetothem.com/


 

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