www.nytimes.comThough Europe's officials appeared to be paying lip service to the need for working together, they continued to make key announcements on deposits on a go-it-alone basis.
France, which holds the rotating leadership of the European Union, said its
Germany's Finance Minister Peer Steinbrueck made clear his government's opposition to the idea that the euro zone's single largest economy should put up money to prop up institutions outside his country.
He said Monday that he and Chancellor Angela Merkel were considering creating a "shield" that would protect the country's entire financial sector, and that a Europe-wide shield or bailout was out of the question. "The chancellor and I reject a European shield because we as Germans do not want to pay into a big pot where we do not have control and do not know where German money might be used," he said in a separate interview with WDR
Germany deepened the sense that events were beginning to run out of control when Merkel said on Sunday that her government would guarantee all private bank savings and CDs held in Germany. "We want to tell people that their savings are safe," she said.
Iceland and Denmark followed Monday with a deposit guarantee, in the former's case only once share dealings in six of its banks had been suspended.
Markets responded to the disarray by sinking rapidly, following selloffs in Asia. Russia shut down both its stock markets after they fell more than
At the close, Germany's DAX was down
Wall Street took its cue from Europe, and the Dow Jones industrials closed down
Meanwhile, the euro slid around
Waning confidence in the financial system, undermined by a series of bank bailouts, was forcing officials’ hands, analysts said, since a failure to match the guarantees of varying clarity by Ireland, France, Greece, and Sweden could risk a massive funds outflow from their countries' coffers.
Yet the cascading guarantees themselves raised questions about their potential impact on government finances, and showed that European governments were still unable to find on a unified approach despite a weekend summit where they agreed to do just that.
"Even if bank guarantees are not made explicit, it seems very unlikely that any European government would stand by and allow private depositors to lose their savings," said Jennifer McKeown, an economist at Capital Economics.
"Whether they bail out banks as and when they fail or act
pre-emptively to boost bank capital, as has been suggested in Britain, the pressure on government finances will be severe," she added.
The crisis engulfing Europe and its markets has fueled talk of coordinated interest rate cuts from the world's leading central banks, possibly as early as Monday.
Analysts said they wouldn't be surprised if the US Federal Reserve, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England instigate the first joint action on interest rates since the Sept.
"I think at this point (a coordinated cut is) quite likely with the current spread of problems at full strength on the European financial system," said Luca Cazzulani, a strategist with UniCredit in Milan.
So far, the banks have held off pressing the interest rate
button and continue to flood the money markets with additional liquidity. On Monday, the ECB injected another US$
Additionally, the Fed said that
EU finance ministers have an opportunity to discuss the crisis sweeping the continent as they sit down for two days of talks in Luxembourg.
"This is a very serious situation and one that needs to be addressed...but it's true that there is not one single magic bullet that will solve this," said EU spokesman Johannes Laitenberger.
The latest attempt at finding a common response came after the weekend commitment by Europe's four leading economic powers, Germany, France, Britain and Italy, to work in a coordinated manner to address the crisis.
That commitment was blown apart by Merkel's announcement Sunday that all -
"The EU is liable to be exposed as a fair weather construction, lacking the means of swift response and the hold over its citizens' loyalties to survive really adverse conditions," said Stephen Lewis, an analyst at Monument Securities.
In response to the German move, the Danish Economy Ministry said commercial lenders had agreed to contribute up to
That was followed this afternoon by Iceland's guarantee of all deposits after trading was halted in six bank stocks. Icelandic banks' assets dwarf the rest of its economy and its currency has fallen sharply in the past week.