ICELAND: This volcanic island
near the Arctic Circle is on the brink of becoming the first "national
bankruptcy" of the global financial meltdown.
Home to just 320,000
people on a territory the size of Kentucky, Iceland has formidable international
reach because of an outsized banking sector that set out with Viking confidence
to conquer swaths of the British economy - from fashion retailers to top soccer
teams.
The strategy gave Icelanders one of the world's highest per
capita incomes. But now they are watching helplessly as their economy implodes -
their currency losing almost half its value, and their heavily exposed banks
collapsing under the weight of debts incurred by lending in the boom times.
"Everything is closed. We couldn't sell our stock or take money from
the bank," said Johann Sigurdsson as he left a branch of Landsbanki in downtown
Reykjavik.
The government had earlier announced it had nationalized
the bank under emergency laws enacted to deal with the crisis.
"We
have been forced to take decisive action to save the country," Prime Minister
Geir H. Haarde said of those sweeping new powers that allow the government to
take over companies, limit the authority of boards, and call shareholder
meetings.
A full-blown collapse of Iceland's financial system would
send shock waves across Europe, given the heavy investment by Icelandic banks
and companies across the continent.
One of Iceland's biggest
companies, retailing investment group Baugur, owns or has stakes in dozens of
major European retailers - including enough to make it the largest private
company in Britain, where it owns a handful of stores such as the famous toy
store Hamley's.
Kaupthing, Iceland's largest bank and one of those
whose share trading was suspended last week to stop a huge sell-off, has also
invested in European retail groups.
Thousands of Britons have
accounts with Icesave, the online arm of Landsbanki that regulators said was
likely to file for bankruptcy after it stopped permitting customers to withdraw
money from their accounts Tuesday.
To try to wrest control of the
spiraling situation, the government also loaned $680m to Kaupthing to tide it
over and said it was negotiating a $5.4bn loan from Russia to shore up the
nation's finances.
The speed of Iceland's downfall in the week since
it announced it was nationalizing Glitnir bank, the country's third largest,
caught many by surprise despite warnings that it was the "canary in the coal
mine" of the global credit squeeze.
Famous for its cod fishing
industry, geysers, moonscape and the Blue Lagoon, Iceland was the site of the
Cold War showdown in which Bobby Fischer of the United States defeated Boris
Spassky of the Soviet Union in 1972 for the world chess championship. Last year,
Iceland won the UN's "best country to live in" poll, with its residents deemed
the most contented in the world.
Despite sunny skies on Tuesday
after three days of unseasonably cold weather, Reykjavik's mood remained grim -
cafes were half-empty, real estate agents sat idle, and retailers reported few
sales.