Rocks and hard places
The Federal Reserve, America’s central bank, was born out of a crisis. The banking panic of 1907 was the biggest US financial crisis up to that point, and only ended when John Pierpoint Morgan, founder of the eponymous bank, pulled together rival bankers to stabilise things.
It worked, but also illustrated the need for a central bank to step in as lender of last resort when individual banks or the system as a whole need liquidity and stability. The Fed was therefore set up in 1913 as a system of regional reserve banks, with the New York branch taking the lead in financial market interventions.
We are again experiencing such a moment of panic. Authorities on both sides of the Atlantic had to step in and calm markets and support banks. Success so far has been mixed, with renewed fears resurfacing on Friday, this time over the future of Deutsche Bank.
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