Great Recession/Timelines

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A timeline (or several) relating to Great Recession.

The 1980s

1990 - 2003

  • Progressive discount rate cuts by the Federal Reserve (from 7% in 1990 t0 0.75% in 2003 [4].
  • The United States housing boom begins (prices rise by 8% between 2002 and 2003)

2003 - 2006

  • The Federal Reserve makes a series of discount rate increases (from 0.75% to 6.25% in 2006).
  • The US housing boom continues [5] (Average 2006 house price about 70% above 2000 level)

2007

The year of the subprime mortgage crisis

June

August

  • 6 The American Home Mortgage Corporation becomes bankrupt [7].
  • 9 The French bank BNP Paribas freezes its funds because it is unable to value their mortgage-backed assets. [8]
  • 13 BBC's Robert Peston reports that the Northern Rock bank was seeking help from the Bank of England.

     The Northern Rock bank suffers a bank run [9]

2008

The year of the crash of 2008

January

  • Distress sale of US mortgage lender Countrywide the to Bank of America bank (after its share price had dropped by 48% [10].)

February

  • The British Northern Rock bank is "nationalised [11].

March

  • The US Bear Stearns bank is rescued from bankruptcy following losses relating to mortgage-related assets by its hedge funds. [12]

April

  • The Bank of England announces its Special Liquidity Scheme to allow banks to swap some of their illiquid assets for liquid Treasury Bills for up to three years [13].

June

  • US house prices fall to 20% below their 2006 peak [14].

August

September

October

  • Govermnents act to support their banking systems> The UK's Gordon Brown offers unlimited support to all UK banks by capital support, equity purchase and lending guarantees [18] [19], and similar action is agreed by European Union leaders [20] and the US President[21].
  • Iceland suffers an economic crisis [28].

November

December

2009

The year of the recession of 2009

January.

  • 19 UK Fiscal and monetary stimulus [36]
  • 19 UK Asset Protection Scheme [37] protection against credit losses in return for a fee.

February.

  • 9 The US Financial Stability Plan[38] - including stress tests and capital assistance for major banks, a $500-1000 billion Public-Private Investment Fund[39], consumer and business lending and housing support.
  • 13. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act(H.R. 1) [40]) - a $839 fiscal stimulus package including $288 billion in tax cuts and benefits, $224 billion in increased education and health spending, and a $275 billion for contracts, grants and loans.

March.

  • 3 The US Term Asset-backed Loan Facility [41].
  • The US Making Home Affordable Program [42] (provides public money to lenders to reduce a borrower’s monthly payments)

April.

  • The G20 summit agrees to increase IMF funding to $750 billion; an increase in countries’ access to special drawing rights and $250 billion-worth of new global-trade guarantees.

May.

  • The European Central Bank cut its main policy interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point, to 1%
  • The Bank of England increases quantitative easing by raising central-bank reserves from £75 billion ($113 billion) to £125 billion.

June.

  • The European Central Bank lent €3 billion ($4.2 billion) to Sweden’s central bank
  • US banks repay $68 billion in loans they had received under the Troubled Asset Relief Program (including Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and American Express).
  • 27 The European Central Bank provides a €442 billion loan to the euro area’s banking system through an offer of unlimited one-year funds at 1% interest.

July

August

September

October.

  • The Reserve Bank of Australia raised its main interest rate by 25 basis points, to 3.25%,

November

December.

2010