Northern Rock Watch: Adding The Numbers In Today’s Media
NORTHERN ROCK is nationalised. It is now as Safe as the Bank of England.
Hereunder is a round-up of Northern Rock facts in today’s media.
Northern Rock money is now your money, so it’s good for journalists to be precise:
DAILY EXPRESS (front page): “NORTHERN ROCK: NOW IT’S A TAXPAYERS’ NIGHTMARE”
This time last year, the bank was worth around £5.3 billion. It is now worth just £375 million.
DAILY MAIL (front page): “£100m GAMBLE WITH YOUR CASH”
The move severely dented Labour’s reputation for economic competence and leaves taxpayers responsible for the crippled bank’s £100billion in mortgage debts – just as the housing market has entered a downturn.
Facts:
The Conservatives claimed the decision meant every family in Britain was effectively being saddled with a “second mortgage” of £4,000…
The Government now faces the prospect of being blamed for the repossession of the homes of defaulting Northern Rock mortgage-holders and for job losses from the bank’s 6,500-strong workforce in Labour’s North-Eastern heartland…
There is also likely to be a drawn-out legal battle with the 180,000 shareholders who face getting nothing back from their investment.
DAILY MIRROR (front page): “WHAT IT MEANS FOR YOU”
At the moment, taxpayers are propping up the Rock with £55billion in loans and guarantees. The bank, worth £5.3billion this time last year, is now worth just £375million
THE SUN: “Crisis Rock To Be Nationalised”
But Chancellor Alistair Darling said it was the only way to safeguard the £26billion of taxpayers’ cash that had kept the bank from going under…
An independent panel will decide the amount of compensation for the bank’s shareholders — at least 150,000 of whom are small investors
THE TIMES (front page): “Rock takeover brings back nationalisation”
“Gordon Brown signed off the decision to mount the first national-isation in modern times of a major high-street bank yesterday afternoon, adding a £90 billion liability to the Government’s balance sheet… The mortgage lender already owes taxpayers £25 billion, but its total liabilities have been assessed at £91 billion, for which the Government is responsible…”
The bank employs “more than 6,000 people”
THE GUARDIAN (front page): “Darling under fire as Northern Rock is nationalised”
Since it emerged five months ago that Northern Rock had sought help from the Bank of England, it has relied on £55bn of taxpayers’ guarantees to stay in business
Later:
Martin Jacques: The economic and political consequences will be of such a scale that they are impossible to comprehend. The present crisis has been long in the making, even if it has been obscured by the US spending over a decade in denial, as illustrated by the absurd post-9/11 neoconservative hubris about America becoming a latter-day Rome and the failure to address the growing imbalances between the US as a huge over-spender and East Asia as a massive saver.
DAILY TELEGRAPH (front page): “NORTHERN ROCK NATIONALISED”
The unexpected move left the taxpayer liable for close to £100 billion and led to a furious reaction from shareholders, who threatened legal action… Investors in Northern Rock, which has about 144,000 small shareholders, are likely to take legal action.
THE SCOTSMAN (front page): “Humiliated chancellor takes Rock public”
Says Shdow Chancellor George Osborne:
“Gordon Brown has dithered his way to the disaster of nationalisation. Now the taxpayer will bear the full risk of lending £100 billion of mortgages in an uncertain housing market. We will not back nationalisation. We will not help Gordon Brown take this country back to the 1970s.”
What’s a few billion between friends…

February 18th, 2008 at 9:44 am
We are living in a virtual world, with virtual money. It has never been easier to scam money than it is now.
February 18th, 2008 at 10:01 am
We keep hearing that the housing market is going to crash…..
that will maybe mean a return to the nineties with record debts and repossessions, homelessness and bankruptcies. I remember the nineties crisis, I got caught in it… if it happend again then how can Northern Rock survive even with nationalisation?
If the shareholders aren’t going to get anything and jobs are going to be lost, why not let it go under? (have to confess I’m not a financial person. 2 + 2 makes what?)
never mind, they can always put up income tax. Again…..
________________
M and A
And interest rates, have you seen the price of fuel too, £1.09.9 a litre for deisel, food is going up twofold cost of transportation and the effects of the drenching last summer, and again this winter for the winter harvest. Huge golden handshakes for the ex directors of NR. Its reckoned that NR debts is the same as the National Debt in 1945, and look how long that took to resolve
February 18th, 2008 at 10:01 am
What i don’t understand is what has happened to the process of tarring and feathering.
Our leaders don’t ever have to suffer the consequences of bad management and really worse decisions.
And sorry virtual tarring and feathering is not going to work, I want to smell the acrid smoke and get feathers up me nostrils. Back to the good old public market place hangings I say.
February 18th, 2008 at 10:25 am
A quote from this morning’s Telegraph online
SRM Capital founder John Wood said: “We will wait to see the details of the nationalisation bill and after that we will pursue all legal and non-legal actions available to us to secure value for the shareholders.”
I wonder what the non-legal actions will be? A gunfighter?
February 18th, 2008 at 10:52 am
Some years ago a friend of mine and myself bought shares in Football clubs for a bit of a laugh. The fact that we chose QPR, Notts Forest and Leeds perhaps reflects our knowledge and a certain serves yourselves right opinion.
I don’t have to hand previous correspondence regarding the other two, but today I received a leeter concerning our Notts F. holdings.
RE your holding of 285 Nottingham Forest plc ordinary shares….blah,blah…
cash distribution has been calculated at 0.004 pence per share. They are now worth £0.11
As far as I know the club still plays in the football league (allegedly )
February 18th, 2008 at 11:45 am
I forgot to mention that I no longer have the shares, this was a compulsory purchase.
February 18th, 2008 at 12:55 pm
Can someone explain what economics are, what money is, how money is valued, who values the worth of money as opposed to the Gold standard. And what is moneys worth to society.I ask only because, my nephew an official of the BOE, says he has never met a banker, who knows the answers. His description of banks being, shops that sell money.
February 18th, 2008 at 1:44 pm
Don”t know what”s going on, I made the first post but it” s disappeared. It was
very critical so maybe Mods & admin withdrew it.
Northern Rock is yet another indication of Capitalism gone bad. Greedy Banks
lending over 100% of the value of a property without a thought of the Mortgage
holder”s ability to repay. Inflationary House prices, too many Buy to Let,
the British obsession with owning their own homes because Rent is too high. Too
few new properties available.
I”ts always Joe Public who pays the price, higher tax, less investment by the
Government, more misery for Home owners, the list is endless.
————-
Mods and Admin
Val, have had a look but can’t find it (if we pull a post we comment as to our reason on it)
February 18th, 2008 at 3:37 pm
Re-reading the papers I found a little snippet that I’d missed…….
If a house that is mortgaged with Northern Rock is repossessed after nationalisation, the government will own the house.
After all the previous talk about forcibly taking over vacant properties after a certain amount of time, I did wonder if they will now use the repossessed properties in the same way?