Posted on 14 July 2009
Tags: agricultural products, Asia, Asian Financial Crisis, bank, Bank Accounts, bank deposits, bank savings, bank shares, Bert Ely, BFM FHLMC Mortgsecurities Fund, Brazil, British government, Business_Finance, central bank, Central Banking Corp., Chairman, Channel Islands, China, congress, Dow 30, Dutch government, Economic history of the United States, economics, Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, Enron, Enron Creditors Recovery Corp., Europe, Fannie Mae, Federal Government, Federal Reserve System, Financial crises, freddie Mac, GBP, Great Britain, Inc., Indonesia, industrial infrastructure, insurance fund, International Monetary Fund, Internet startups, Japan, JP Morgan, JPMorgan Chase & Co, Latin America, Martin Upton, MCI, MCI Worldcom, Mexico, Microsoft, Microsoft Corporation, Netherlands, Northern Rock, Northern Rock Plc, oil, oil prices, Real Estate, real estate prices, real estate values, Russian government, senior management, social and municipal services, South Korea, speculative real estate bubble, Stock market crashes, Stock Markets, supervision agencies, Sweden, Thailand, Thailand’s government, The Bank of England, The Netherlands, the United States, Tokyo, Tripartite Authority, Turkey, united states, United States housing bubble
If we look into history of different countries we will find that different countries faced the financial crises at different times. As the world is facing now financial crisis now also, the question comes in mind that who are those who run this finance horse, what are the reasons which leads to financial crises? Or is there is someone who is holding all the strings and keep them pulling? So many questions come in mind when mind starts thinking about it.
Well I had searched about this and compiled these ten nasty crises. Check out these ten dramatic crises.
1 – Argentine economic crisis (1999 – 2002)
Argentinean economy was destabilized in 1980s when Latin American Crisis struck it. Argentine was an import dependent country where people usually convert their peso into dollars to feel secure. The high inflation rate leads its currency to lose the confidence and adding oil to fire the government that time spent generously on itself while ignoring the country’s crumbling industrial infrastructure.
Mexico and Brazil were the major trade partners of the Argentine in 1980s both countries suffered the economic crises which spread out in Latin America. Brazil’s currency was devalued in 1999 that damaged a lot Argentinean exports and adding fuel to fire the dollar was revalued giving a harsh blow to Argentinean Peso.
Till 1999 the country was having 3rd consistent year of economic decline but the government haven’t devalued the peso, which made the crisis worse. In such conditions the investors ran on banks for dollars to send abroad for safety. Meanwhile the government freezes everyone’s bank accounts. This step of the government raised violence amongst citizens and protests through out country were started. The government was collapsed in 2001. While in crisis the people were bartering for goods because lack of cash, many people eked out a living by scavenging cardboard for recycling plants.

The new government 1st tried to setup a third currency between dollar and peso but that failed. Then it instructed the banks to convert all dollars into pesos. That step worked and peso was lead to diminish in value. Because of that exports got higher and in meanwhile the government tightened its tax policies, improves social welfare, encourages business growth and put the reserve dollars up for sale in market. The country got the surplus trade because of its agricultural products anyhow its still struggling with inflation.
Lesson
Freezing bank accounts leads the crises to get worst. It can’t be a smart step to tackle the crisis.
2 – Russian Financial Crisis (1998)
The Russian government in 1993 introduced inflation-free short-term treasury bills known as GKOs to finance the country’s deficit. GKOs were traded on currency exchanges. Most of it was state owning while only 1/3 of funding came from foreign speculators who were attracted by high interest rates. Like a classic Ponzi scheme the government used proceeds from sales of new GKOs to payoff interest on matured bills.
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Posted on 06 July 2009
Tags: commodity, commodity linked stocks, crude oil, crude oil prices down, Dow Jones, dow jones-USB commodity index, hang seng index fell, hong kong, Nikkei, Recession, stock market, Stock Markets, stock prices down, Tokyo, US economy, US Stocks weak, usb
On Monday morning there has been a slump in the energy sector and so the worries about the upcoming earnings season weighed on U.S. stocks.
Along with the stock market the commodity had been putting in solid gains, which is helped by an influx of speculative bets by those traders who are willing to take on risk. But during the recent sessions, this has been hurt by the investor’s worries about the weakness in demand due to the global recession, which now probably looks like that it will last longer than what is expected by many traders expected. 
In New York recently crude futures were down $2.54 to $64.19 a barrel, which leads to a broad decline in raw materials. The Dow Jones-UBS Commodity Index was off 2.9%.
One relatively encouraging thing however come from the relatively low-bar set by the year-ago period taken as a comparison to the forthcoming numbers. It has been said by veteran traders and analysts that it’s getting much easier for companies to beat analysts’ earnings expectations with each passing quarter since the U.S. economy has now been in recession for more than a year and a half.
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Posted on 27 October 2008
Tags: Currency, Currency Market, Forex, Forex Fundamentals, Forex Market, Forex Terms, FX Market, Guide, Hedge Funds, Introduction, learn forex, London, Major, Major Currencies, Major Players, Singapore, Tokyo, Trading Centers, Trading Volumes
I have started my journey into world of Forex. It is a learning experience and I will share it with you as I stated in this post on my Forex Blog. I will be posting as I learn and discover. here is an excerpt of what I wrote today.
Foreign Exchange Market is known with many names; Currency Market, Forex Market or FX Market. Obviously it is a market where people exchange currencies from different countries. Transactions are simple. People purchase a block of one currency by paying with a block of another currency. Naturally it is the most liquid market in the world. The daily volume of trade currently exceeds USD $5 trillion.
Major Players in the Market are:
- Large Banks
- State/Federal Banks
- Currency Speculators
- Large Corporations
- Governments
- Financial Institutions (Hedge Funds, Investment Firms, Brokers)
Major Forex Trading Centers
- London
- Newyork
- Tokyo
- HongKong
- Singapore
The Trading virtually goes on forever as the Asian trading session ends, the European session begins, followed by the North American session and then back to the Asian session. This 24/7 nature of market is only disrupted by weekends. So we can safely say that Forex Markets remain open from 5pm EST on Sunday until 4pm EST Friday.
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