I suppose we should be relieved; the Dunfermline BS failure will cost the taxpapers just ₤1.6 billion. This is peanuts compared to other recent UK financial disasters.
Alistair Darling's comments on the Dunfermline were priceless:
"This is a building society that, unfortunately, took out over £650million in loans in commercial property. In the last couple of years, it bought some mortgages from an American company that had gone bad. It's had to write off some of its IT systems because of difficulties it's had and it needed between £60 million and £100 million to keep it going. When you bear in mind that the society has never made more than about £5 million or £6 million a year in the recent past, it couldn't even service that sort of loan, let alone repay it.”
Meanwhile, the Scottish Nationalist Party accused the government in London of undermining a Scottish financial institution. Is there anything stopping the SNP from pumping in a couple of billion from the Scottish budget to prop up the Dunfermline?
This is one occasion where I would be happy to see greater independence from our North British sisters and brothers.
Monday, March 30, 2009
A sigh of relief - the Dunfermline will cost us just ₤1.6 billion
Labels:
crash,
finance,
inflation,
money,
UK,
UK banking,
UK economy,
UK house prices,
UK housing
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