As German leaders and bankers worked feverishly to rescue a lender considered too big to fail, the government announced Sunday that it would guarantee all private savings accounts in Germany – worth about €500 billion – in an effort to reinforce increasingly shaky confidence in the financial system.

Officials in Berlin were frantically trying to salvage a €35 billion, or $48 billion, bailout devised just a week ago for Hypo Real Estate, a major German property lender based in Munich and member of the benchmark stock index, after commercial banks withdrew their support, fearing greater losses.

Much of the weekend activity was undertaken with a view toward having solutions in place by the time financial markets opened Monday in Asia, a trigger point that officials around the world have come to view warily.

With memories of how the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers put the crisis into high gear three weeks ago, officials fear letting investors wake up to a festering problem. That could easily provoke new losses in stock markets and test the limits of tight credit markets, the core of the crisis.

Worried that the continued turmoil at Hypo Real Estate would lead to a depositors’ panic at other German banks, Chancellor Angela Merkel and Finance Minister Peer Steinbrück made a rare Sunday appearance before television cameras in Berlin on the steps of the Chancellery to assure a jittery public about the safety of their savings.

The EU is trying to shut down Ireland from doing the same thing – relying upon pettifoggery regulations they say the Irish are violating.

Of course, they dare not try to smack down Germany – the strongest industrial engine in the whole EU – or they might just pull back a stub.




  1. hah hah says:

    Hypo Real Estate got an injection of liquidity which temporarily ceased its credit-withdrawal symptoms.

  2. Zybch says:

    I guess if the German system gets as screwed up they could all just take another vacation into Poland like last time…

  3. zebulon says:

    #2 This joke is mean and stupid.

  4. astro4554 says:

    The monetary system as we know it is finished, we must protect the people, put to bankruptcy the swindlers and money makers. Re-invest in real physical economy where real work is done. An economy must be based on physical infrastructure not on toxic paper.

    Please look at this video
    http://ca.youtube.com/watch?v=h9-tBGxVU6o

  5. amodedoma says:

    #4
    Yeah sure, and everybody’s gonna be good and play fair and this time they’ll get it right! Sounds like you’d throw out the baby with the dirty bath water. The financial system isn’t a total wreck yet and I don’t see a viable alternative either. In the US the problems a lot clearer. Lobbyists have too much influence, they need to be strictly controlled, just like politicians and bankers. It’s all about the money and there are those that would sell their mothers. Lobbyists take the money from powerful and unscroupulus persons to change the legislation to something that they find favorable. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac had William E. Timmons Sr, now this guys a case for study. Makes HUGE amounts of cash protecting the ‘interests’ of some very rich institutions. If you have enough money you can buy anything you want, US politicians and judges included.
    Capitalism is good, gives growth to human ambition, however, human ambition is infinite and needs restriction. It’s about time the government goes back to – of the people for the people instead of – of the poor people for the rich people.

  6. BigCarbonFoot says:

    It’s at least good to see an actual demonstration that the rest of the world depends on America. We go down, ya’ll go down and that’s as it should be.


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