UK: Bank Bail-Outs to be Kept Secret

April 28th, 2008

Off the rails.

Via: ThisIsMoney:

The Bank of England has imposed a permanent news blackout on its £50bn-plus plan to ease the credit crunch.

Ferocious and unprecedented secrecy means taxpayers will never know the names of the banks that have been supported through the special liquidity scheme, which was unveiled by Bank Governor Mervyn King last week.

Requests under the Freedom of Information Act are to be denied. Details will be kept secret even after 30 years – the period after which all but the most sensitive state documents are released.

Any Bank of England employee leaking the names of institutions involved will face court action for breach of contract.

Even a figure for the overall amount advanced will not be published until October. Meanwhile the Bank is expected to issue at least £50bn of Treasury bills to banks in exchange for their mortgages – entirely in secret.

This hypersensitive official stance is thought to be a response to the events of last year when a huge stigma was attached to any lender suspected of going to the Bank for cash help.

The scheme is intended to steady the markets, but it is feared that reports of banks making widespread use of the facility could trigger further instability.

Barclays and HBoS have both confirmed they will use the Bank of England scheme. ‘We welcome the Bank facility and we will participate in it,’ confirmed Andy Hornby, chief executive of HBoS.

Other banks declined to comment, but it is expected that this week all of the leading banks, with the exception of Lloyds TSB, will tender some of their mortgages to the Bank of England.

HBoS confirmed last week it had packaged up £9bn of mortgages ready either for securitisation – in effect, selling them on in the wholesale financial markets – or to be offered to the Bank in return for Treasury bills.

The scheme, drawn up by King and approved by Chancellor Alistair Darling, aims to improve banks’ liquidity by temporarily swapping bundles of mortgages and credit card debt for Treasury bills, which are short-dated Government debt that matures within nine months.

The scheme will run for three years so these bills will be replaced by new ones when required.

Under the plan, bills will be exchanged only for securities rated triple-A – the highest possible grade of security – by at least two of the three big ratings agencies, Fitch, Moody’s and Standard & Poor’s.

It would not normally be considered acceptable for big companies to arrange billions of pounds of financial support without telling their shareholders.

Posted in Economy | Top Of Page

One Response to “UK: Bank Bail-Outs to be Kept Secret”

  1. Eileen says:

    I can FEEL the CONFINDENCE in the Bank of England just soaring on the wings, of deception.
    FRAUD.
    I wonder which banking system will collapse first.
    Uk or Us.
    What is it with these freaks? “It would not normally be considered acceptable for big companies to arrange billions of pounds of financial support without telling their shareholders.”
    Well, that’s a shock.
    Doing the “not normal” with your custumers funds is also not normally accepted.
    Hah. An English “Tea Party” is probably going to take on a whole new meaning.
    Think Customers might rebel?
    Ya, I do.
    Things really are looking ugly in the financial world aren’t they?

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.