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Reuters UK – Thames River Capital is hoping to launch two investment grade credit strategies later this year and is looking at how best to target the U.S. institutional market, chief executive Charlie Porter told Reuters.
The independent fund house, which manages $11.5 billion (6.9 billion pounds) in traditional long-only and hedge-fund-style products, has been adding to its investment team to support new products, and hopes to scoop up rivals weighed down by the financial crisis.
"Whenever you have periods of turmoil and tumult, interesting opportunities are thrown up," Porter said in an interview.
Washington Post – That is the technical economic term that best sums up a day in which the House of Representatives refuses to pass a $700 billion rescue plan pushed by the White House and congressional leaders from both parties, Wachovia is taken over in a deal that will have the government potentially owning 10 percent of Citigroup, a few European banks fail, the Federal Reserve and other central banks are forced to inject an additional $300 billion into the global banking system, the Dow Jones industrial average plunges 778 points, and investors everywhere rush to the safety of gold and short-term Treasury bills.
The basic problem here is that too many people don’t understand the seriousness of the situation.
Americans fail to understand that they are facing the real prospect of a decade of little or no economic growth because of the bursting of a credit bubble that they helped create and that now threatens to bring down the global financial system.
New York Post – The next issue for concern in the battered economy is whether there are going to be buyers for the nation’s billions in debt, Mayor Bloomberg said yesterday.
Speaking to students at Georgetown University, Bloomberg pointed out that Wall Street convulsions are being felt around the globe.
"Who’s buying our debt? It’s these overseas funds, these sovereign-wealth funds, these overseas hedge funds. They are in trouble now. So it’s not clear who is going to be buying" US Treasury bills, he said.
Bloomberg was planning to have breakfast in Washington today with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson – whom he described as an old friend – and Christopher Cox, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Meanwhile, city Comptroller Bill Thompson warned that many high-paying jobs on Wall Street may be gone for good.