*Recap:*

Barclays Bank (UK)  to China and Singapore
Bear Stearns  to China
Citigroup to Abu Dhabi
Morgan Stanley to China
UBS (Swiss) to Saudi Arabia
Fortis (Belgo-Dutch) to China
Merrill Lynch to Singapore

Lihat siapa yang paling untung pada kasus subprime. Mereka yang dapat barang
murah!

Yang satu kekurangan likuiditas (duit), yang yang satu kelebihan duit.

Ini baru namanya permainan Super Bozz. Yang jelas skenarionya sukses besar.


Regards,
DE




http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/merrill-lynch-may-get-5/story.aspx?guid=F3906A10-1437-4193-BB1F-428A4053A0C8&dist=SecEditorsPicks
*
*  *Merrill Lynch may get $5 billion Temasek injection*
  By Chris 
Oliver<http://www.marketwatch.com/news/mailto.asp?x=99+111+108+105+118+101+114&y=Chris+Oliver&z=marketwatch.com&guid=%7Bf3906a10-1437-4193-bb1f-428a4053a0c8%7D&siteid=mktw>,
MarketWatch
Last update: 11:34 a.m. EST Dec. 21, 2007

    *HONG KONG (MarketWatch) -- Merrill Lynch is bullish on Singapore.

*
 According to a published report, the largest US brokerage Merrill Lynch &
Co., Inc is set to be the latest Wall Street titan to sell a portion of
itself to a foreign government, as it is reportedly near a deal that would
secure $5 billion in new capital from Singapore's state-run investment
company Temasek Holdings Ltd. Singapore's potential investment in Merrill
marks the latest acquisition spree by state-controlled investment funds in
Asia and the Middle East since the subprime meltdown in August.

 Talks between the organizations are at an advanced stage, The Wall Street
Journal reported in its online edition, citing a person with knowledge of
the matter.

Merrill shares rose 2.2%, to $55.66 in Friday trading. The Journal report
said Temasek's board had given preliminary approval to the investment,
although terms on how the multi-billion-dollar investment would be
structured as well as timing and regulatory issues were still under
negotiation.

 A spokesman for Merrill Lynch  in Hong Kong declined to comment Friday. A
media representative for Temasek in Singapore also declined to comment.
Talks between Temasek and Merrill are ongoing at a time analysts speculate
the New York investment bank may book mortgage-related write downs of up to
$8 billion in the fourth quarter, the Journal reported. A write down of that
amount would reportedly lift Merrill's mortgage losses to $15.9 billion in
the second half of 2007, propelling it to the top of charts in terms of
having absorbed the most mortgage-asset losses among Wall Street banks.

Analysts reportedly said a capital injection alone or in conjunction with an
asset sale could help Merrill soften the impact of the write-offs on its
capital base.

 Analysts in Hong Kong said capital flows from Asia and other emerging
markets are a growing trend as nations seek to recycle surplus cash to
productive investments. "Asia with its growing pool of investable money and
growing demographic push is going to need to invest more and put money
elsewhere, and now that various companies and countries are in trouble, this
is a great time to go swooping in and picking some of those things up," said
Chris Lobello, a risk and trading strategist at CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets in
Hong Kong.

 "In short there's a greater pool of cash, and a greater interest in getting
this cash invested." Earlier in December the city-state's sovereign wealth
fund Government of Singapore Investment Corporation invested nearly $10
billion to help recapitalize UBS along with additional funds from an
unidentified investor.

The Financial Times reported Friday the unidentified Middle Eastern investor
channeling $1.73 billion into Swiss bank UBS is from Saudi Arabia. The
report citing an unidentified figure with knowledge of the negotiations said
investors could include the Saudi royal family, with Price Sultan, the
nation's defense minister, involved in the deal.

In the past week, Morgan Stanley announced it would sell about $5 billion in
equity units convertible into common stocks, equivalent to a 9.9% stake, to
China's sovereign wealth fund China Investment Corp. The investment was the
second foray by China's sovereign wealth fund into the U.S. since paying $3
billion for a 9.3% stake in the initial public offering of Blackstone Group
LP

 In November Citigroup received a $7.5 billion investment from the Abu Dhabi
Investment Authority. Also that month China's second-largest life insurer
Ping An Insurance paid $2.7 billion for a 4.2% stake in Belgo-Dutch banking
and insurance group Fortis, a move that made it the largest single
shareholder.

Earlier in the autumn, China's largest listed brokerage Citic Securities
stuck a cross investment alliance with Bear Stearns that saw the Chinese
firm take a 6% stake in the Wall Street firm with an option to increase that
stake to 9.9%. Under the deal, Bear Stearns received a 2% stake in the
Chinese firm and has the option to lift its stake by a further three
percentage points.

In July U.K banking group Barclays agreed to sell a stake to Temasek and
China's state-controlled China Development Bank.

 *Chris Oliver is MarketWatch's Asia bureau chief, based in Hong Kong.*

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