Pining for and Churchill and Roosevelt to calm credit mess
By Emily Kaiser - Analysis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The credit crunch has become a crisis of confidence and investors have little faith in the current group of world leaders to solve the problems when few of them have political capital left to spend.
The world's central banks pulled off the broadest coordinated interest rate cut on record this week, and still stocks fell. Governments backstopped banks and guaranteed deposits, and still stocks fell. U.S. President George W. Bush appealed for calm, saying Washington was working to resolve the crisis, and still stocks fell.
"There's a lack of confidence in not only the global economy but in the leaders as well," said Matt McCall, president of Penn Financial Group in Ridgewood, New Jersey.
Finance leaders from the Group of Seven rich nations are meeting on Friday under intense pressure to come up with some cohesive plan to recapitalize banks and restore order to credit markets frozen by fear of who holds how much bad debt.
Bush is scheduled to join G7 finance ministers and central bankers at a news conference on Saturday. Leaders of euro zone countries plan to meet in Paris on Sunday.
Marc Chandler, global head of currency strategy at Brown Brothers Harriman, said part of the reason why no one has managed to reassure markets is that there is little stability among the top G7 leadership.
Bush's presidency ends in January. Canada is holding an election next week and Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said he may lose. Japan is on its third prime minister in a year. Britain's Gordon Brown has seen his popularity slip as the economy slips perilously close to recession.
"It scares me that there's a vacuum of strong political leaders right now," Chandler said. "It's not like we have a Franklin Roosevelt and a (Winston) Churchill. This vacuum is going to make it harder to solve these problems." Continued...
Can I have one for Christmas?
The hottest toy in the U.S. this Christmas is an interactive hamster. It does not come from one of the major toy brands or from a movie but a small, seven-year-old company from Missouri. Full Coverage

UK
US