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Strategies & Market Trends : Ride the Tiger with CD

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To: Zincman who wrote (130060)9/5/2008 3:42:22 PM
From: Rocket Red  Read Replies (1) of 313031
 
Yup I agree ////World financial system in state of dysfunction: RBC's Nixon

LAUREN KRUGEL
Friday, September 05, 2008

CALGARY — The global financial system has been “pushed to the brink” in its most severe downturn since the Great Depression, although the actions of American policy makers have averted disaster, the head of Canada's largest bank said Friday

“Not since the (Second World War) has the financial system itself been in such a state of dysfunction,” said Royal Bank chief executive Gordon Nixon told a roundtable of prominent business leaders.

However, “decisive actions” such as the bailout of investment bank Bear Stearns, which was bought by JPMorgan in a deal orchestrated by the U.S. central bank, prevented a potentially disastrous ripple effect from taking place.

Scotiabank CEO Richard Waugh said regulators in Canada have also played an important role in stemming the effects of the credit crisis.

Because regulators set such a high bar for bank capitalization ahead of the unravelling of credit markets, Canadian banks went into the storm in relatively good shape, Mr. Waugh said.

But there are some things that the financial institutions themselves can do better in the future, he added.

“We are accountable and we've got to do something about it,” Mr. Waugh said.

For instance, he said “terrible things happen” when liquidity is not priced properly — in other words, when it's too easy to borrow money at low interest rates or sell equity at high prices.

The chair of Deutsche Bank said there is reason to be optimistic in the current economic gloom.

While financial markets remain “volatile and fragile,” the underlying economic environment is “relatively benign,” Deutsche Bank's Josef Ackermann said.

Bank writedowns related to the credit crunch are continuing but investment and clients are beginning to return to the industry, he said.

While challenges remain, the “market is not dead.”

© Copyright The Globe and Mail

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