Saturday, September 10

Lehman Part Deux: The Dexia Domino and Belgium’s Caretaker Government

The fear that Dexia, a Brussels-based money center bank, may become the 'another Lehman' thought to be lurking somewhere in Europe was given further credence a few days ago when its CEO resigned suddenly. The surprise departure of a senior executive -- often a grave omen -- turned up the heat up on a stew which had already been simmering for months

While both the French and German governments should have enough reserves and borrowing capacity to backstop their banking systems following default by one or more European sovereigns, the Belgians recently broke Iraq's record for being the country unable to form a government for the longest period of time (500+ days and counting). While the political dysfunctionality appears to have been a boon for the local economy it raises questions about what will happen should Dexia need a bailout following what appears to be an imminent Greek default.

Reflecting its regional significance, the Belgian, French and Luxembourg governments injected over 6 billion euros into Dexia during the last financial crisis. But without a Belgian authority to negotiate with, and given that France's banks are coming under significant speculative attack (for good reason. More on 'slippery' accounting at French banks here), there is a very legitimate question of whether a similar regional bailout can be orchestrated again.

Continue reading the full article at SeekingAlpha here.

1 comment:

  1. Dexia board in emergency talks:

    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/fddebe40-eddb-11e0-a491-00144feab49a.html#axzz1ZkMuoI7R

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