Updated and enhanced news

EU Pushes for Overhaul of Post-World War II Financial System
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aOb4n0deWmNU&refer=home

Oct. 16 (Bloomberg) -- European Union leaders pressed for an overhaul
of the global financial system to prevent a repeat of the credit
crunch that sparked the biggest stock-market selloff since the Great
Depression.

EU leaders called for a global summit as soon as next month to rewrite
the 1944 Bretton Woods accord that paved the way for Europe's post-
World War II reconstruction and set up the institutions that oversee
the world economy today.

``We had the emerging market crisis, we had the Internet bubble, now
we have this massive crisis,'' French President Nicolas Sarkozy told
reporters after chairing the first session of an EU summit late
yesterday in Brussels. Europe insists on the ``re-foundation of the
international financial system.''

The European initiative is likely to face headwinds from the U.S.,
which has used its dominance of international financial institutions
to promote a brand of capitalism that has come into at least temporary
disrepute.

``The U.S. got what it wanted in 1944 and, I suspect, will do so again
simply because the Europeans won't be able to decide what they want,''
said Martin Weale, director of the National Institute of Economic and
Social Research in London.

President George W. Bush ``definitely'' favors holding a Group of
Eight meeting before the end of the year, White House spokesman Tony
Fratto said in Washington. European governments pressed for a wider
summit, including leaders of developing economies such as China,
India, Brazil and South Africa.

EU Presidency

To jumpstart that process, Sarkozy, holder of the EU's six- month
presidency, will travel with European Commission President Jose
Barroso to the U.S. on Oct. 18 to meet Bush.

Separately, concern mounted that the banking crisis will drag down the
broader European economy, where business and consumer sentiment had
already slumped to the lowest level since the September 2001 terrorist
attacks in the U.S.

``This financial crisis is starting to have an impact on consumers and
companies,'' Barroso said.

While stressing a global approach to regulation, European governments
are split over how to go about it, with leading countries --including
Britain -- traditionally opposed to handing over business regulation
to outside authorities. Calls for a single financial supervisor in
Europe continued to get little traction.

Proposals for stiffer regulation floated by EU leaders yesterday
included more international supervision for cross-border banks, a
global ``early warning'' system for crises, a revamp of the
International Monetary Fund, tougher regulations on hedge funds, new
rules for credit rating companies, limits on executive pay and
punishments for excessive risk-taking.

EU leaders will set up a financial crisis taskforce to improve
coordination among the bloc's 27 governments, and endorsed an end of
``mark-to-market'' accounting to maintain a level playing field with
the U.S.

Gordon Brown

U.K. Prime Minister Gordon Brown, author of the British bank- bailout
plan that was copied across Europe and in the U.S., called for an end-
of-year deadline to place each of the world's top 30 banks under the
supervision of a panel of regulators from the countries where it is
active.

``We now have global financial markets, but what we do not have is
anything other than national and regional regulation and
supervision,'' Brown said.

Treatment of tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Monaco may be
overhauled as part of any new global financial framework, Sarkozy
said.

``It will be part of discussions Saturday in Washington,'' the French
leader said. ``Will we continue to work with tax havens? It's a valid
question. We've passed into a new era. It's a question we'll put on
the table and immediately.''

EU governments initially reacted to the crisis in a ``piecemeal and ad
hoc'' fashion, ``creating an impression of disorder and sending
confused signals to financial markets,'' aides to Barroso said in a
paper prepared last week and released yesterday.

European Leaders

In the meantime, European leaders have committed as much as $2
trillion to guarantee interbank lending and buy stakes in banks, to
prevent hobbled credit markets from tipping the broader economy into
recession.

The U.S. followed suit, announcing an unprecedented $250 billion
government investment in banks, starting with nine institutions deemed
critical to the survival of the system.

Growing doubts that the bailout will keep the U.S. out of recession
hammered U.S. stocks, leading to the steepest plunge since the crash
of 1987.

``There needs to be a new Bretton Woods,'' Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi said. ``The consensus is very strong and it keeps
growing stronger.''

(Once this has been posted, enough for today).

:)

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

On Oct 16, 1:23 am, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For further information see this thread:
>
> China wants a new currency 
> standard.http://groups.google.com/group/world-thread/browse_thread/thread/487d...
>
> My comment: Things are moving ahead. We will hear a lot about banking
> and financial issues, nothing about monetary issues. The monetary
> issues are the best hidden secrets in the world as trillions are to
> make or to lose. But things are moving ahead.
>
> EU Presses for Revamp of Bretton Woods Global Financial 
> Systemhttp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aJa1elVRv1tY&refe...
>
> Oct. 15 (Bloomberg) -- European Union leaders pressed for an overhaul
> of the global financial system to prevent a repeat of the credit
> crunch that sparked the biggest stock-market selloff since the Great
> Depression.
>
> EU leaders called for a global summit as soon as next month to rewrite
> the 1944 Bretton Woods accord that paved the way for Europe's post-
> World War II reconstruction and set up the institutions that oversee
> the world economy today.
>
> ``We had the emerging market crisis, we had the Internet bubble, now
> we have this massive crisis,'' French President Nicolas Sarkozy told
> reporters after chairing the first session of an EU summit tonight in
> Brussels. Europe is united in calling for the ``re-foundation of the
> international financial system.''
>
> While stressing a global approach, European governments are split over
> how to go about it, with leading countries -- including Britain --
> traditionally opposed to handing over business regulation to outside
> authorities.
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