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September 17, 2008 Wednesday Ramazan 16, 1429



More banks may close, warns IMF chief


CAIRO, Sept 16: The global financial crisis is not over and more banks could close, possibly leading to the disappearance of the independent investment houses, IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn told AFP.

“The fact that a certain number of banks in the United States are restructuring shouldn’t lead to panic,” he said in an interview in the wake of Monday’s collapse of major US investment bank Lehman Brothers.

“But these events add to the uncertainty, and financial tensions cannot be excluded in the short term,” with banks other than Lehman Brothers also in a bad position, he said.

Predicting “a narrower global financial sector,” the International Monetary Fund managing director said certain “players will disappear,” particularly in the United States, with the possible gradual disappearance of independent investment banks, like Lehman.

Lehman Brothers was seen in financial markets as one of the big four United States investment banks, along with Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch, which announced on Monday it is to be taken over by Bank of America in a 44 billion dollar deal.

“We are facing an unprecedented financial crisis,” Strauss-Kahn said, because it stems from “the heart of the system,” the United States, and not from its “periphery” and has affected the whole world simultaneously.

“Some parts of the world are more or less affected, but the slowdown is general,” he said, adding: “The entire global economy will slow down by between a half and two per cent,” including in China and Europe.

“Something new is more dangerous than something that happens repeatedly, but a difference with (the stock market crash of) 1929 is that we have instruments which don’t allow us to avoid the crisis but to soften the consequences and correct their effects,” in particular the IMF, he said.

The IMF boss said European banks, which combine several different functions, were less likely to be affected and did not risk “being brought to the ground” like their American counterparts. The IMF chief praised the European Central Bank for taking strict measures.

“Honestly, the ECB has done its work, by avoiding inflationary tensions.” He said that faced with rising prices, “it is normal that it undertakes a strict policy.” Strauss-Kahn pointed to some positive developments, including the oil price which has dropped below 100 dollars a barrel and said the IMF would predict an economic upturn in 2009 in its next forecast in October.

—AFP







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