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More banking woes hit US shares | More banking woes hit US shares |
(about 4 hours later) | |
The main US share indexes fell sharply on Friday, hit by ongoing concerns about the impact of the US mortgage debt crisis on leading banks. | The main US share indexes fell sharply on Friday, hit by ongoing concerns about the impact of the US mortgage debt crisis on leading banks. |
Fourth largest lender Wachovia sparked the latest share falls after it said its losses on bad mortgage debt would total $1.1bn (£525m) for October alone. | Fourth largest lender Wachovia sparked the latest share falls after it said its losses on bad mortgage debt would total $1.1bn (£525m) for October alone. |
Its admission, just the latest from a major US bank, saw the Dow Jones index end down 224 points or 1.7% to 13,042. | |
The Nasdaq index also fell heavily, down 68 points or 2.6% to 2,628. | |
Dominated by technology companies, sentiment on the Nasdaq was further hit by weak results from wireless telecoms firm Qualcomm. | Dominated by technology companies, sentiment on the Nasdaq was further hit by weak results from wireless telecoms firm Qualcomm. |
Sub-prime spark | Sub-prime spark |
The bad debt crisis centres on sub-prime home loans. | The bad debt crisis centres on sub-prime home loans. |
The problem right now... is the belief that the market is going to be stuck with these write-down announcements from the banking sector for some time Patrick O'Hare of Briefing.com Barclays denies bad debt | The problem right now... is the belief that the market is going to be stuck with these write-down announcements from the banking sector for some time Patrick O'Hare of Briefing.com Barclays denies bad debt |
As US mortgage rates have risen sharply over the past year, the sub-prime sector, which specialises in loans to people with poor credit histories or those on low incomes, has seen record levels of loan defaults. | As US mortgage rates have risen sharply over the past year, the sub-prime sector, which specialises in loans to people with poor credit histories or those on low incomes, has seen record levels of loan defaults. |
The losses US banks have had to swallow are twofold. | The losses US banks have had to swallow are twofold. |
Firstly, their direct exposure to bad sub-prime debt, and secondly, the knock-on fall in the value of all mortgage debt. | Firstly, their direct exposure to bad sub-prime debt, and secondly, the knock-on fall in the value of all mortgage debt. |
This situation has been exacerbated by the fact the banks have, in recent years, increasingly packaged their sub-prime debt into wider debt packages called collateralised debt obligations (CDOs), which are then sold on to investors. | This situation has been exacerbated by the fact the banks have, in recent years, increasingly packaged their sub-prime debt into wider debt packages called collateralised debt obligations (CDOs), which are then sold on to investors. |
Yet with investor confidence at rock bottom, banks have struggled to find buyers for these CDOs, which have thus fallen in value. | Yet with investor confidence at rock bottom, banks have struggled to find buyers for these CDOs, which have thus fallen in value. |
This has sparked the wider credit crisis as banks and other lenders have been less willing to lend to each other. | This has sparked the wider credit crisis as banks and other lenders have been less willing to lend to each other. |
"The problem right now isn't so much the size of the write-down at Wachovia, as it is the belief that the market is going to be stuck with these write-down announcements from the sector for some time," said analyst Patrick O'Hare of Briefing.com. | "The problem right now isn't so much the size of the write-down at Wachovia, as it is the belief that the market is going to be stuck with these write-down announcements from the sector for some time," said analyst Patrick O'Hare of Briefing.com. |
The Standard & Poor's 500 index ended down 23 points, or 1.5% to 1,452.12. | The Standard & Poor's 500 index ended down 23 points, or 1.5% to 1,452.12. |