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Antrim Energy Inc. ATGYF

"Antrim Energy Inc was incorporated on September 29, 1999 in Canada. The Company is engaged in the business of oil and natural gas acquisition, exploration, development and production in international locations. The Company, through its subsidiaries, conducts exploration activities in the United Kingdom and Ireland."


OTCPK:ATGYF - Post by User

Bullboard Posts
Comment by zorgon1on Feb 06, 2009 2:15pm
460 Views
Post# 15759041

RE: New Survey Predicts N/S slowdown

RE: New Survey Predicts N/S slowdown Some positive news related to the same issue Cohoe

DAVID MILLIKEN AND FIONA SHAIKH
Reuters
February 6, 2009 at 11:06 AM EST
LONDON The Bank of England will launch a scheme next week that allows it to bypass banks and effectively lend direct to companies in its latest efforts to reverse the effects of the credit crunch on the British economy.

The Bank of England said Friday that under its £50-billion ($73-billion U.S.) Asset Purchase Scheme, it would buy investment-grade sterling paper issued directly by big British companies as well as from banks via the secondary market.

“This could channel funds directly to parts of the corporate sector whilst also underpinning secondary market activity ... and so removing obstacles to corporate access to capital markets,” the BoE said.

The scheme will launch Feb. 13, and short sterling futures jumped on the news as traders priced in a reduction of the cost of interbank funding.

Bank of England Governor Mervyn King
“It's one of the first measures we've seen during the crisis which in essence bypasses the banks (and) allows corporates to borrow directly from the Bank of England,” said Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics.

“So in that sense you could possibly see it as a first admission that banks are not going to get back to normal conditions in the foreseeable future.”

BoE Governor Mervyn King has said that banks' failure to lend to businesses and consumers poses the single biggest threat to the British economy as it faces its sharpest downturn in decades.

The central bank has slashed rates by four percentage points since October, but lending conditions remain tough and firms are struggling to raise alternative financing from capital markets.

The BoE said it wanted to start buying corporate bonds which have maturities measured in years as well as the shorter-term commercial paper “as soon as possible,” and was consulting dealers.

But in this case it was only considering buying “modest” quantities to facilitate market-making rather than subscribing directly to corporate debt issues.

The BoE said it would consult one extending the scheme to include syndicated loans and asset-backed securities with viable securitization structures, as well as how it should help the market for bank debt covered by the government's Credit Guarantee Scheme.

“The Bank will keep under review whether there is a case for proposing to the Chancellor (Alistair Darling) that the list of eligible assets or currencies could usefully be expanded,” the BoE said in the statement.

The BoE asset purchase scheme, which was announced last month, does not increase the money supply as the central bank will sell treasury bills to banks to fund it, soaking up the money that it gives out in return for the commercial paper.

The scheme lays the groundwork for a policy of so-called “quantitative easing” if policymakers deem this necessary should interest rates approach zero.

The BoE would need permission from Mr.Darling to stop selling treasury bills to fund asset purchases, meaning the scheme would boost the money supply.

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