Housing, banking crisis piles pressure on Bush

Sun Jul 13, 2008 2:25pm EDT
 
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By Stella Dawson, Treasury Editor - Analysis

LONDON (Reuters) - The housing crisis in the United States is fast spilling into a banking and financial debacle that could destabilize the world economy and put mounting pressure on the Bush administration to act.

So far the White House and U.S. Treasury have signaled they plan no dramatic steps to shore up the U.S. housing agencies, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, whose financing underpins about half of all U.S. mortgages.

But a savaging of their stock on Friday over worries they are short of capital convulsed Wall Street and wiped out about 50 percent of their equity value. Federal regulators then seized mortgage lender IndyMac Bancorp Inc. in the third largest bank failure in U.S. history.

These twin events highlighted the fragility of housing finance in the United States, still reeling after a year of subprime mortgage losses. It also pinpoints how easily fear can spread in financial markets that already are in bear territory.

A severe U.S. market downturn and a sharp economic recession cannot leave a globalize economy unscathed.

To stop the rot, investment bank and housing analysts in research notes this weekend said the federal government may well have to take more aggressive action to bolster Fannie and Freddie -- if only to keep credit lines in a weakened U.S. economy open.

"We see little sign of a bottoming in the financial crisis, especially as applied to the fixed income market," said Deutsche Bank.

CREDIT CHANNELS STOPPERED  Continued...

 
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