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Britain nationalizes Bradford & Bingley bank

LONDON
Mon Sep 29, 2008 8:53am EDT

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LONDON (Reuters) - Britain nationalized Bradford & Bingley on Monday, making the buy-to-let mortgage lender the second UK bank to be taken into public ownership this year as a deepening financial crisis claims victims around the world. After intense weekend talks failed to find an outright buyer for Britain's ninth-biggest mortgage lender, the Treasury said it would take over B&B's 50 billion pounds ($90.12 billion) mortgage portfolio and sell its deposits and branches to Spanish bank Santander.

Deals  |  Crisis in Credit

"The stability of the system comes first," Prime Minister Gordon Brown told BBC Television. "We will work night and day to make sure that Britain can come through this downturn which started in America and it is now affecting the whole system."

The FTSE 100 index of leading shares fell 2.6 percent by 8:45 a.m. EDT on Monday, and is down nearly 12 percent this month on deepening worries about the UK banking sector. The pound fell more than 2 percent against the dollar.

The opposition Conservatives branded the move as another example of Brown's economic mismanagement but the Labour government in turn accused them of having no policies in place to tackle the market turmoil hitting the world.

"To pretend that somehow there was some other solution, unnamed, unspecified -- it seems to me to be clutching at straws. You needed to take decisive action. That's what we've done," said finance minister Alistair Darling.

The bank crisis has so far overshadowed the Conservatives' annual conference in Birmingham, central England, and recent opinion polls show Brown's jibe last week that it was no time for a novice to be in charge may be starting to stick.

After months of polls showing Labour on course for a humiliating defeat at the next election, due by mid-2010, four polls in the last week have shown a bounce for Brown, who was finance minister for a decade, as the market crisis worsened.

A Sunday Telegraph poll even put Brown and Darling ahead when people were asked who they trusted to run the economy after this month's government-brokered rescue of the country's biggest mortgage lender HBOS and laws curbing stock market speculation.

The Conservatives, however, remain well ahead overall despite their poll lead of some 20 points having halved. Many voters appear fed up with Labour who have been in power for 11 years as the economy faces its first recession since 1992.

GOVERNMENT SHIFTS RISK

B&B, with its heavy exposure to the slumping British housing market, is one of the latest victims of a global banking crisis that has felled some of the world' largest financial institutions in the last few weeks.

Benelux financial group Fortis also underwent a part-nationalization on Sunday. In the United States, the administration is putting together a $700 billion bailout package to buy up banks' toxic assets to prevent more failures.

Some analysts said B&B might be the last British bank to show particular vulnerability to the credit crisis, because of its over-reliance on wholesale markets to fund loans.

"All UK banks with less than 65 percent of loans funded by deposits have now been nationalized or sold," Alex Potter, banks analyst at Collins Stewart, said.

While the public takeover puts even more risky assets on to the government's books only seven months after the nationalization of Northern Rock bank, Darling said the risk would be borne by the banking industry through a compensation scheme.

He also assured depositors their money was safe and B&B was open for business as normal.

Not everyone agreed.

"I just thought I don't want to have my money there and I am just going to put it where I can be sure that it is safe," said Denise Christou, 45, who closed her B&B account.

For more on the bailout, click on

For the latest on the global financial crisis, click on

(Additional reporting by Matt Falloon, Kate Kelland, Myles Nelligan and Georgina Cooper; Writing by Sumeet Desai; editing by Paul Bolding and Sue Thomas)



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