Credit crunch could end up costing $1 trillion!
Entering second year banks, brokerages announce
results of painful quarter
NEW YORK - June
18, 2008 - There are new signs that the worst of the global credit crisis is
yet to come, and that banks and brokerages caught up in the market turmoil may
lose $1 trillion by the time it has passed.
Major U.S.
investment banks this week announced yet another painful quarter amid the
implosion of mortgage-backed securities and risky credit investments. Regional
banks have scrambled to secure fresh capital to stay in business, and by
Wednesday there was new talk that embattled investment bank Lehman Brothers
might be forced into a sale.
With each
passing quarter, Wall Street's top bankers have indicated that the worst of the
market turmoil was over - only to face more pain months later. The uncertainty
has caused already battered investors to lose confidence in financial
companies, and expectations have increased that more layoffs, asset sales and
capital raising will be needed in the weeks ahead.
"We thought this was going to be the kitchen-sink
quarter, and we're finding out that CEOs and CFOs still don't have a handle on
the credit crisis," said William Rutherford, a former state treasurer of
Oregon who now runs Rutherford Investment Management. "We haven't disinterred
all the dead bodies. What else is out there?"