If this can happen to UK...can this happen to US?
What will be the consequences ?
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Brown ‘Terribly Fragile’ After Bond Auction Flops
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid= ... refer=homeMarch 26 (Bloomberg) -- The first failed British bond auction in more than seven years leaves Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s reputation for economic competence even more tarnished as he battles recession and a rising tide of voter anger.
Brown, who had the backing of 30 percent of the electorate in a ComRes Ltd. poll last week, must now cope with what amounts to a vote of no confidence by investors in his ability to end the recession. Bank of England Governor Mervyn King, his ally for much of the past decade, warned a day earlier that there’s no more money for further spending.
“The notion that Brown is leading us to the promised land is laughable,†said Ruth Lea, economic adviser to the Arbuthnot Banking Group Plc in Solihull, England. “He cannot get to grips with how other people see this country now, as the sick man of Europe.â€
Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling brushed aside concerns about the gilt auction, noting that a sale of bonds today was fully covered.
“You always have to be careful about reading too much into one particular auction,†Darling said in response to a question in Parliament in London today.
Record on Economy
Brown, 58, succeeded Tony Blair in 2007 on the strength of his record as finance minister during a decade of uninterrupted growth. That reputation is deserting him little more than a year before he must call an election, Brown’s first as leader and the Labour Party’s third in office.
The Treasury yesterday tried to sell 1.75 billion pounds ($2.6 billion) of 40-year gilts and got 1.63 billion pounds of bids, a sign that investors are reluctant to finance his record borrowing.
“Brown’s strategy now looks terribly fragile,†said Mark Wickham-Jones, a professor of politics at Bristol University. “His situation is economically extremely uncertain, politically risky and this auction again highlights how we are now in un- chartered territory.â€
The auction failure couldn’t have come at a worse time for Brown, who set off on a five-day tour this week to win support for his economic-reform plans before a summit of leaders from the Group of 20 nations he’s hosting in London on April 2. He’s in Brasilia today and due to visit Chile after speaking in New York yesterday.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel has resisted Brown’s push for a new fiscal stimulus, saying her country already has committed to a boost worth 4.7 percent of gross domestic product.
German Opposition
“If we want to increase the effectiveness of such a stimulus package, then we first have to implement it, so to speak, and not to begin speaking of the next measure when the first one isn’t through,†Merkel told after meeting Brown in London on March 14. “We’ve already taken a huge step.â€
The government says the G-20 will focus on stabilizing financial markets, reforming global financial institutions and helping people get through the recession. Brown wants them to agree on a fiscal stimulus to support growth, something King warned might not be affordable.
(802: G20 meeting is next week. This is going to be crucial.)
“Given how big these deficits are, I think it would be sensible to be cautious about going further in using discretionary measures to expand the size of those deficits,†King said in Parliament on March 24.
Brown’s Position
Brown’s spokesman Tom Hoskin said yesterday the prime minister wasn’t troubled by the auction failure. “There have been other auctions that have been uncovered in other countries,†he told reporters in London. “The underlying strength of the market in gilts is there.â€
While issues of inflation-protected bonds went unfilled in 2002 and 1999, it’s the first failure of non-indexed bonds since 1995.
For his part, Brown didn’t mention the gilts auction during an appearance in New York and said he had “consensus, not a disagreement†with King.
Britain’s economic outlook is looking increasingly gloomy. The economy will shrink 2.8 percent this year, the biggest contraction among the Group of Seven nations, according to the International Monetary Fund. That compares with declines of 2.6 percent in Japan, 2 percent in the euro area, 1.6 percent in the U.S. and 1.2 percent in Canada.
The European Commission this week forecast Britain’s budget deficit would touch 9.6 percent of gross domestic product in the year ending March 2010, triple the EU limit.
John Major Analogy
When the 1995 gilt auction failed, investors were concerned that John Major’s Conservative government was on course to lose the general election and was about to announce tax cuts it couldn’t afford. Now, it’s gild yields that are to blame, according to Robert Stheeman, the head of the Debt Management Office, which manages sales of the securities for the Treasury.
The Bank of England cut its benchmark lending rate to 0.5 percent this month, the lowest ever, and started a program to boost the money supply.
“Yields at these levels are not at all attractive,†Stheeman said yesterday. Opposition lawmakers seized on the comments from Stheeman and King to suggest Brown’s reputation for smooth handling of the economy is in tatters.
The Conservatives said the auction was the latest signal of a collapse in confidence in the government. “The Brown rescue model is broken,†said Michael Fallon, an opposition Conservative lawmaker and deputy chairman of Parliament’s Treasury Committee. “The governor made a hole in it, now it looks as if sterling can’t stand it.â€
Outside Parliament, government rescues of Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc and Lloyds Banking Group Plc have failed to shore up confidence.
House-Price Collapse
House prices have fallen 20.6 percent since peaking at 186,044 pounds in October 2007 and stood at 147,746 pounds in February, according to Nationwide Building Society. Banks approved 31,000 mortgages in January, less than a third of the monthly average in 2007, Bank of England data show.
A British Chambers of Commerce survey in February found nine out of 10 respondents unaware their banks were offering access to government-support programs. A 1 billion pound program to guarantee mortgage-interest payments for homeowners who suffer a drop in income, announced in December, has yet to materialize.
“Businesses are still experiencing difficulties accessing credit,†said John Cridland, deputy director-general of the Confederation of British Industry, the biggest business lobby group. “The government has taken the right steps to get credit moving, but this has yet to feed through.â€
Brown has trailed the Conservatives in every poll since January 2008. Labour had the support of 30 percent of voters compared with 41 percent for the opposition, according to the ComRes poll conducted March 18 and March 19. No margin of error was given.