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Updated
Sep 30, 2008
Bailout plan rejected
  • US lawmakers vote down US$700 billion bailout plan
  • Stocks fall, investors rush to gold and govt bonds
  • Central banks inject liquidity as US recession fears mount
  • Regulators increase curbs on short-selling in Asia
  • PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

    HONG KONG - RECESSION fears mounted and investors raced for safe havens after US lawmakers unexpectedly rejected a US$700 billion (S$1 trillion) bailout plan for the financial industry, but Asian stocks trimmed deep early losses after Wall Street's biggest fall since the crash of 1987.

    A week that started badly with the rescue of three banks in Europe and the distressed sale of big US lender Wachovia to Citigroup grew worse after the US Congress was unable to agree on a rescue package.

    'It's hard to imagine what's going to happen. It's kind of scary,' said Masayoshi Okamoto, head of dealing at Jujiya Securities in Tokyo.

    'In particular, European banks were putting up a front that nothing was wrong, but now they're falling one after another.'

    Shares in Asia recovered from early lows but were still down about 3 per cent.

    Uncertainty about what comes next, and whether Washington can come up with compromise legislation to relieve the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression sent investors into gold and US Treasuries.

    Oil fell on fears of further economic slowdown, and the Japanese yen hit a 4-month high.

    Investors worried that a collapse in financial markets would tip the United States economy into a painful recession that drags the rest of the world down with it.

    'We do not rule out a US recession b ing deep and long and having a severe global impact,' said Gerard Lyons, chief economist at Standard Chartered in London.

    However, Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank President Thomas Hoenig said that despite a sense that 'the sky is falling', the US economy is resilient and will emerge stronger from the current credit crisis.

    'We need to take a deep breath and think about what is happening,' Mr Hoenig said at a Kansas City Fed economic forum in Gering, Nebraska.

    US President George W. Bush was scheduled to make a statement on the rescue package at 1245 GMT (8.45pm Singapore time) on Tuesday after meeting on Monday with economic advisers including Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke to consider the administration's next move.

    'I was disappointed in the vote that the United States Congress (had) on the economic rescue plan,' Mr Bush told reporters in Washington.

    'Our strategy is to continue to address this economic situation head-on and we'll be working to develop a strategy that will enable us to continue to move forward.'

    Both supporters and opponents complained about the way the administration presented the proposal as an urgent demand, accompanied by warnings of potential economic collapse, after years of sky-rocketing Wall Street bonuses, abusive mortgage lending, and regulatory neglect by the administration.

    Global central banks scrambled to relieve a severe squeeze in money markets by more than doubling the amount of dollar funding to US$620 billion as banks hoarded cash, bracing for more trouble ahead in the worsening credit crisis.

    In moves to arrest market slides, regulators in South Korea banned short-selling of stocks and Taiwan said it would place tighter limits on short-selling, while Hong Kong said it was ready to take aggressive measures against abusive short sellers.

    Banks totter
    The ongoing shakeup in the financial landscape spread to Europe over the weekend as the governments of Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg partly nationalised Belgian-Dutch group Fortis NV, and Germany's Hypo Real Estate Holding AG secured a government credit line.

    British mortgage lender Bradford & Bingley was brought under the government's wing shares of French bank Dexia tumbled on a report that it might need emergency capital, and bank rescue deals also emerged in Iceland, Russia and Denmark.

    US regional banking heavyweight Wachovia agreed to sell most of its assets to Citigroup in a deal brokered by regulators.

    'It just seems that there are only going to be two types of banks in existence now: the ones that survive and get market share or the ones that get gobbled up and have to be euthanised,' said Matt McCormick, portfolio manager and banking analyst at Bahl & Gaynor in Cincinnati, Ohio.

    Market Meltdown
    The Dow Jones industrial average posted its largest point decline ever while the benchmark S&P 500 had its worst day since the 1987 crash with an 8.8 per cent drop. Latin American stocks tumbled 13 per cent, their biggest decline in more than a decade.

    The House of Representatives voted 228-205 against a compromise bailout plan that would have allowed the Treasury Department to buy up toxic assets from struggling banks.

    House Republicans, in particular, balked at spending so much taxpayer money just before the Nov 4 US elections.

    'I can't believe they weren't able to come together and come up with a solution. Complete disaster was predicted if it didn't pass,' said Stephen Berte, senior equity trader at Standard Life in Boston.

    'I can't see what the upside is right now.' 'We need a plan that works,' said US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, the Bush administration's point man on the bailout since the first plan was announced over a week ago.

    'We need it as soon as possible, and we're just committed to working with congressional leaders to get it done.'

    World stocks, as measured by the MSCI's world index lost about US$1.7 trillion on Monday.

    Bailout prospects uncertain
    In Washington, the failure of the bailout bill after more than a week of high-pressure talks aimed at hammering out a compromise plan brought new uncertainty about the response of the US government to the worst financial crisis in a generation.

    Republican House members voted against the rescue package by a more than 2-to-1 margin. A majority of Democrats voted in favour.

    Both parties blamed each other for the failure of the closely watched bill after hours of closed-door negotiations.

    US presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain had both offered qualified support for the bailout proposal, which now dominates the election with just over a month before the vote.

    Mr Obama, a Democrat, said he believed lawmakers would regroup to pass a financial rescue plan.

    'I'm confident we're going to get there,' he said as he campaigned in Colorado. 'It's going to be a little rocky.'

    Mr McCain, a Republican who suspended his campaign last week in a failed attempt to broker a bailout deal, called on lawmakers to go back to work. 'Now is the time for all members of Congress to go back to the drawing board,' he said.

    The Senate returns on Wednesday and the House on Thursday after a break for the Jewish New Year holiday of Rosh Hashanah.

    No laws can be passed in their absence but their staffs could work on a revised plan. -- REUTERS

    Read also:
    World reacts to failed bailout bid 
    Asian markets plummet 
    Bailout fails, Wall St falls  
    Oil prices tumble  
    Disbelief as bailout is rejected  
    US cannot abandon rescue
    McCain attacks Obama

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