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What happened at Northern Rock last month
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Monday, 01 October 2007
By Tom Dyson
Everyone knows, to have any chance of getting their money back, they have to be at the front of the line when the bank opens its doors for business. So they rush over. As word spreads, it turns into a stampede pretty fast.
That's what happened at Northern Rock last month
. It had to ask the central bank for emergency funds to meet withdrawals. According to the British newspapers, the panic got so bad that people started fighting each other to get to teller windows, police had to calm down angry customers and organized queues of people turned into rugby scrums.

"The bank's phone lines were jammed for most of the day, its website crashed and the company's 72 branches were besieged by worried customers after it admitted being forced to ask the Bank of England for emergency funding," reported the London Telegraph.
It turned out to be a false alarm. The Bank of England stepped in and let everyone know it would honor its deposits. The stampede died down, but Northern Rock lost 4 billion pounds in deposits and its share price has now dropped 90%. Otherwise, the system held together just fine.
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Here's the thing: Even though nothing happened and everyone got their money out, it gave people a glimpse of what could happen. It stoked the public's fears.

An elderly lady standing in line outside Northern Rock expressed it best: "They say don't panic, but it will be too late if things go wrong. I know that you need to keep level-headed about these things, be we are not youngsters who can afford to lose this money."

Meantime, the gold price has risen $75 in the month of September, reaching a new 27-year high. I bet much of the recent demand for gold came from nervous Brits... people like my Mum and the elderly lady... looking for a safe place to stash their life savings. When people lose confidence in the banking sector, they only want one thing – gold.

Where there's smoke there's fire, runs the cliché. Northern Rock can't be the only bank in trouble. The world of finance is so integrated – everyone owes money to everyone else – this is probably the pinnacle of a much larger problem. Remember New Century Financial? It was the pinnacle of the subprime catastrophe in America. But the major shellacking didn't happen for at least four months after New Century went bankrupt. So even though the dust is settling at Northern Rock, the worst could still be to come...

And that means more fireworks in the gold market. My mother maybe a great contrarian indicator, but this time I don't recommend betting against her...

Good investing,

Tom
Source Excerpted from : Daily Wealth
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1. Written by Stephen, on 09-10-2007 10:56
For instance, China dominates the list of most overvalued CEFs. The China Fund (CHN:NYSE) is the most overvalued fund in the world with a 55% premium. The Jardine Fleming China Region Fund (JFC:NYSE) and the Greater China Fund (GCH:NYSE) have 29% and 12% premium, respectively. 
 
Clearly, investors are willing to pay quite a bit of cash just to get into China. It’s usually a very ominous sign when they’re willing to pay $1.55 for $1 worth of Chinese securities.
2. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it , on 03-10-2007 09:00
great article by Tom Dyson of DailyWealth.DailyWealth

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