Source : AsiaOne News, Sep 17, 2007
SINGAPORE (AP) -- Singapore's exposure to U.S. subprime mortgage markets is small and contained, officials said Monday, but warned that a resulting slowdown in major economies will affect the city-state's growth.
Singapore's central bank is "closely monitoring our financial institutions' exposure to sub-prime and other structured credit markets, at both the domestic and global levels," S. Iswaran, minister of state for trade and industry, said in Parliament.
"Our exposure remains small and contained at this stage," Iswaran said, adding the central bank remained vigilant and was ready to inject liquidity into the banking system if needed.
Iswaran also said, however, that a loss of confidence and a general credit squeeze resulting from uncertainty in financial markets could impact the trade-dependent country.
"Strong growth in the region and the diversity of our export markets will provide us some buffer, but we are not immune to a slowdown in the major industrial economies," Iswaran said.
Iswaran said Singapore's economic growth forecast of 7-8 percent this year remained unchanged.
Singapore's local financial institutions do not offer mortgages to subprime customers, but have investments in collateralized debt obligations - complex bundles of debt repackaged as securities - 25 percent of which contain U.S. subprime mortgages, Second Minister for Finance Tharman Shanmugaratnam also told lawmakers.
The total investment in CDOs by local banks amount to 2.6 billion Singapore dollars (US$1.71 billion; €1.24 billion), making up just 1 percent of the banks' capital base, Tharman said.
The global credit crisis was sparked by a sharp rise in defaults on subprime loans, or loans given to people will poor credit. Many of those debts were repackaged as asset-backed securities like CDOS and sold to banks that did not know or understand the potential losses they were taking on.
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