Robert D;317549 wrote:Newbie;317541 wrote:
My casing point - let it fall !
Then customers regulators and normal people can go through the courts after the likes of Adam Applegarth AND if there is a public outcry, then the government can set up courts and go after all the directors and key people setting an example and a message to the city that this what you can expect if you act recklessly.
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Maybe they should have let it go bankrupt in the case of NR. The problem is the domino effect and the other banks start to fall one by one.
It's not generally realised how close the UK came to meltdown in 2008. RBS and HBOS were within hours of a liquidity shortfall on October 6 and 7, according to Bank of England governor Mervyn King.
“Two of our major banks, which had had difficulty in obtaining funding, could raise money only for one week, then only for one day, and then, on that Monday and Tuesday, it was not possible even for those two banks really to be confident they could get to the end of the day, ”he said
Again, are you seriously suggesting the Brown government should have let them fail?
If the bloody world could see that our two major banks were a pile of excrement, then what does it say about the government which could not ?
Governments are not there to prop up institutions unless they are publicly owned !
If they wanted to help they could have nationalised it fully and helped out those who had a mortgage with said institutions and covered them with FSCS limits. Shareholders could get stuffed and employees who acted recklessly could also be sent a clear warning.
Ordinary hard working people would have been saved years of agony in the form of austerity !
Instead Brown just gave the bankers a wad of money to carry on at the casinos, bars, and gentlemans clubs. The city was flush with money, drinks flowed, staff partied and the frenzy went on.
In fact senior bankers were telling staff to get the wealthy clients to maximise on their lending facilities ie you have a mortgage of £300k but your facility is for £750k - take it and both, you as clients have cheap money to invest, and and I as a banker get my bonus - that is the reality for the wealthy - contrast that to the hardworking poor whose mortgage had come up for renewal - sorry we cannot lend to you as you do not meet the criteria set by the government !
So which is the greater evil, the government which opened to doors for abuse or the bank which has been given guidelines around the manner in which to carry out the abuse.