By Reporting Massive Losses, Big Danish Bank Calls the Bluff of Competitors

24 Oct 2007

October 24, 2007 (LPAC)--At a time when no banker wants to reveal the real worth of the mountains of worthless commercial paper upon which they are sitting, the third-largest Danish bank, Jyske Bank, pulled a no-no which is sure to upset the whole Danish (and international) banking sector. Amidst speculation that it had exposure to the subprime crises, it moved announcing their quarterly earnings report forward one week. Presenting its earnings two days ago, the bank stated losses of 30 million euros from the latest crisis. But it then proceeded to reveal a long listing of its exposure, with a stated price for all of the bad paper, something everybody wants to avoid.

The biggest Danish bank, Dansk Bank, is now under pressure to do the same, when it publishes its quarterly earnings in a week. Dansk Bank has been doing off-balance-sheet dealings, something that is not allowed under Danish laws, through their American daughter company regulated by American law.

Although one might consider the Danish banking sector conservative by U.S. or British standards, it is headed for big hits like everywhere else. One financial source told EIR news service that Denmark still has some conservative regulations that have prevented some of the worse excesses; Nonetheless the Danish stock market is pumped up by the banks getting ordinary people to take geared investment credits with only the increased value of their house as collateral. That might turn into big trouble soon. Denmark has one of the most overvalued home-mortgage bubbles in the world.