G7 pledges urgent action as markets reel

Sat Oct 11, 2008 12:17am BST
 
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By Emily Kaiser and Claudia Parsons

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Finance chiefs of the world's major economies pledged on Friday to prevent big banks from collapse and to work together to stem the financial crisis after another day of gut-wrenching drops on world markets.

"The current situation calls for urgent and exceptional action," finance officials of the Group of Seven major industrialized nations said following their meeting in Washington. They pledged to use "all available tools," but did not announce specific measures.

Reeling from the loss of trillions of dollars of wealth, investors worldwide had pinned their hopes on decisive action from the G7. U.S. stocks pared massive losses in a late recovery after a day of sharp moves.

"We commit to continue working together to stabilise financial markets and restore the flow of credit, to support global economic growth," officials of the G7, which includes the United States, Canada, Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Japan, said in a statement.

They said that would include using all available tools to prevent systemically important financial institutions from failure and ensuring that banks can raise capital from public and private sources.

Investors, however, were not immediately convinced of the G7's effectiveness.

"The markets wanted maybe more assurance that there would be a unified global backstopping of the banks, and it doesn't sound like that's in there," said Kim Rupert, managing director of global fixed income analysis at Action Economics LLC in San Franciso. "This week has been absolutely brutal. ... If this is the extent of it from G7, then we could be in for more trouble on Monday."

Enrique Alvarez, head of Latin America debt strategy at Ideaglobal in New York, said he was disappointed by the G7 statement. "I think they had to come with a much stronger commitment in order to tackle the freeze in the credit market and the absolute lack of confidence in the G7 government leadership by the markets, equities in particular.  Continued...

 
A pedestrian passes a Vodafone store on Oxford Street in central London, November 10, 2009. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
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