RPT-UPDATE 1-Crisis-hit Iceland's top bank gets help from Sweden
(Repeats to remove repeated story at foot) (Adds Glitnir takeover, Swedish central banker comments)
By Niklas Pollard and Omar Valdimarsson
STOCKHOLM/REYKJAVIK, Oct 8 (Reuters) - Iceland's biggest bank received an emergency loan from Sweden on Wednesday as the country's financial crisis showed no sign of abating.
Iceland has been forced to prop up its ailing currency, take over the country's second-biggest bank and ask Russia for a loan of 4 billion euros ($5.4 billion) as the country's financial system has been plunged into chaos.
Iceland's financial regulator, which has been granted sweeping powers to dictate banking operations in the country, moved to shore up the battered sector by taking over the operations of Glitnir GLB.IC.
Iceland's government was due to send a delegation to Moscow to negotiate terms of a 4 billion euro lifeline from Russia, funds the country desperately needs to bolster its foreign exchange reserves.
Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin has said Moscow viewed the request positively. It was unclear whether Icelandic officials had already left for Russia by Wednesday .
The Swedish central bank said it would grant liquidity assistance to the Swedish arm of Icelandic bank Kaupthing KAUP.IC with a loan of up to 5 billion crowns ($702 million). The central bank said it had judged the unit, Kaupthing Bank Sverige, was solvent, but conditions in the Icelandic banking industry made it difficult for it to meet its payment obligations.
"In the situation that has arisen there is an imminent risk that the bank may suffer liquidity problems," the central bank said in a statement.
The Riksbank said it was acting to safeguard Sweden's financial stability -- an indication of how interconnected a small country such as Iceland has become -- and ensure the smooth functioning of financial markets.
Riksbank Governor Stefan Ingves told a news conference that the central bank and Swedish financial regulator both believed Kaupthing in Sweden and in Iceland were solvent.
EMERGE FROM CRISIS
The head of Iceland's central bank said late on Tuesday the country would emerge in strong shape but he also raised the possibility that the once third-largest bank Glitnir would not survive.
"As soon as the ratings firms and foreign lenders realise that we will not indebt the nation, the standing of Iceland will turn around, the currency will strengthen," Central Bank Governor David Oddsson said in a television interview.
But with asset values around the world plunging, markets remain worried that Iceland could suffer what its prime minister has called a national bankruptcy. Continued...


