Bad-debt torpedo approaching
2009-11-23
If you're in a fast boat and a torpedo is fired at you from an
enemy vessel, whether you can outrun the approaching missile
is a matter of arithmetic. But unless you know all the pertinent
values, such as the speed and fuel capacity of the torpedo,
praying might be your best option. Czech banks are being
pursued by a fast-paced torpedo in the form of non-performing
loans. The banks don't know all the pertinent values and are
hoping the economy will pick up speed before the bad loans
sink them. Results of a recent survey of Final Word readers by
Donath-Burson-Marsteller (in English or Czech) found that
Czech bankers are even more pessimistic about bad loans than
managers in general. If a separate report by Merrill Lynch on
German banks is at all indicative for the Czech economy, it could
be because Czech bankers know that this bad-debt torpedo still
has a lot of fuel left in it.
[Czech Republic Bad Bank Germany Der Spiegel]
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