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German bank bailed out on sub-primes
Not WoT related, but the financial situation, if it gets out of hand, is going to put a hurt on all of us, and that will make the required focus on the WoT even harder to achieve. I'm no Chicken Little like the Dhimmicrats, but a Western world in a recession isn't going to pay attention to Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Malaysia, etc.
And unfortunately a whole lot of liquidity is available from the oil ticks for the small consideration of...your soul.
In Germany, it emerged that the state-bank SachsenLB may have accumulated $80bn of exposure to risky assets through a set of Irish funds kept off balance sheet. The regional government of Saxony agreed yesterday to sell the East German bank - the biggest victim so far of the worldwide credit rout - for a token €300m (£204m) to the Landesbank Baden-Württemberg in Stuttgart (LBBW), ending a three-week saga that has revealed the extent of German involvement in the some of the most treacherous areas of US sub-prime debt.

Georg Milbrandt, prime minister of Saxony, said the sale of state-owned lender was the only viable option. "Given the market turbulence and the pressures on the bank, it could not have gone on without a partner. We want to get our ship off the high waves and into a safe port," he said.
Once again the gummint has to bail out a bunch of investors who played the market hinky and wrong. It's for our own good, of course ...
Sachsen LB, founded in 1992 after the fall of the Berlin Wall, was rescued two weeks ago in a state orchestrated bail-out. A consortium of banks agreed to provide a €17.3bn credit lifeline, but only on the understanding that it agreed to be sold to a stronger player. It allegedly used no fewer than five Irish 'conduits' (off-balance sheet vehicles) to invest in collateralised debt obligations (CDOs) and other high-risk instruments, according to German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung.

The biggest losses stemmed from structured investment vehicles (SIVs) which involve using short-term credit to buy longer-term assets, creating a mismatch in maturities.
Posted by: Steve White 2007-08-27
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=197287