Subprime Christmas
2007-11-12
It's understandable that lenders and retailers wouldn't want to
spook Czech consumers during the all-important Christmas
shopping season. This is one reason why almost no one in the
CR is sounding the alarm about the mounting subprime
problems in the U.S., even as one global bank after another
reports billion-dollar write-downs. The standard line is that
Czech banks don't invest in such risky instruments. True, but
the crisis has reached the point where confidence in the financial
system as a whole is being tested, and that has implications for
all aspects of the global economy. On the Czech level, the stock
market is showing its first signs of weakness, economic data
confirms that industry is at or near its peak, energy prices are
wreaking havoc, and more people are speaking about an
overpriced housing market. It's worrisome, but with a little luck
it can still be a peaceful Christmas.
[Czech Republic Prague Stock Exchange mortgages fuel]
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