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It is almost too easy, on a day like this, to paraphrase Shakespeare's old play about deceit and greed in the city of Helsinore. This time however it is not the venerable city of Helsinore which is under the spotlight but another old Danish city or more specifically the bank which carries its name.

At this point the details are naturally quite scarce but what is clear is that Roskilde Bank has requested the central bank for a liquidity guarantee.

Roskilde Bank A/S has announced to the OMX Nordic Exchange that in connection with the regular review of loans and guarantees in preparation of the semi annual report, the management of the bank has found that write-downs have to be made on a significantly larger scale than what has previously been assumed. The amount and scope of the write-downs are not known at this point but will be made public once the full amount is known.

 

As a result of discussions between the Ministry of Economic and Business Affairs, the Danish Financial Supervisory Authority, the Danish Bankers Association and Danmarks Nationalbank, Danmarks Nationalbank has decided to provide the necessary liquidity to Roskilde Bank A/S.

The Government and the financial sector have assured Danmarks Nationalbank of their support to the arrangement with a guarantee towards Danmarks Nationalbank.

At the ensuing press meeting held at 10.00 AM CET, the CEO of Roskilde Bank muttered words about a very complicated real estate portfolio which he deemed so complex that a considerable amount of months could be used to "sort it out." Now, the press meeting did not feature a buyer by name, which is a testament to the seriousness since normally in these kinds of situations a buyer would be lined up before hitting the microphones. Of course, it may also be a question of several contesting bids, but we will know soon enough.

Now, why should you care about this? Well, Roskilde Bank is Denmark's 10th largest bank and together with a number of other mid-sized banks it forms the part of the Danish banking sector that has been most aggressive in lending. Predictably these other banks are dropping like bricks at the moment; one bank (Amagerbanken) is down 20% this morning. Moreover, Denmark is in a recession and in this light these kinds of tremors come at a quite unwelcome time.

Lastly, there is obviously the question about whether Roskilde Bank could be the butterfly that flaps its wings to induce much greater market swings. Time as per usual will tell. 

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This article has 2 comments:

  •  
    i thought scandanavia for the most part would escape this mess.
    2008 Jul 12 11:48 AM | Link | Reply
  •  
    Hi,

    "i thought scandanavia for the most part would escape this mess."

    Not by a long shot I am afraid. Basically, my feeling is that Denmark may only have seen the initial shot across the bov here and that a considerable mess is about to unfold.

    The main point would be that the housing sector is in for a long and painful contraction all at the same time as the demand is simply not there to support a floor for the deflation.

    In Sweden of course they have the link with the Baltics and how this may drag down Hansabank/Swedbank or at least send significant jitters through the system.

    So, it may yet get worse but then again it might not but the risk and key components are there.

    Claus
    2008 Jul 13 04:29 AM | Link | Reply
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