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anyuser
14-10-2008, 12:08 AM
Icelandic Shoppers Empty Store Shelves

Icelandic Shoppers Splurge as Currency Woes Reduce Food Imports http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aVFtDRGwcc50

Oct. 13 (Bloomberg) -- After a four-year spending spree, Icelanders are flooding the supermarkets one last time, stocking up on food as the collapse of the banking system threatens to cut the island off from imports.

``We have had crazy days for a week now,'' said Johannes Smari Oluffsson, manager of the Bonus discount grocery store in Reykjavik's main shopping center. ``Sales have doubled.''

Bonus, a nationwide chain, has stock at its warehouse for about two weeks. After that, the shelves will start emptying unless it can get access to foreign currency, the 22-year-old manager said, standing in a walk-in fridge filled with meat products, among the few goods on sale produced locally.

Iceland's foreign currency market has seized up after the three largest banks collapsed and the government abandoned an attempt to peg the exchange rate. Many banks won't trade the krona and suppliers from abroad are demanding payment in advance. The government has asked banks to prioritize foreign currency transactions for essentials such as food, drugs and oil.

The crisis is already hitting clothing retailers. A short walk from Bonus in the capital's Kringlan shopping center, Ragnhildur Anna Jonsdottir, 38, owner of the Next Plc clothing store, said she can't get any foreign currency to pay for incoming shipments and, even if she could, the exchange rate would be prohibitively high.

``We aren't getting new shipments in, as we normally do once a week,'' Jonsdottir said. ``This is the third week that we haven't had any shipments.''

Bankrupt

Iceland's 320,000 inhabitants have enjoyed four years of economic growth in excess of 4 percent as banks and businesses expanded abroad, buying up companies from brokerages to West Ham United soccer club. Now, the three biggest banks, Kaupthing Bank hf, Landsbanki Island hf and Glitnir Bank hf have collapsed under the weight of about $61 billion in debts, 12 times the size of the economy, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The central bank, or Sedlabanki, ditched its attempt to peg the krona to a basket of currencies on Oct. 9, after just two days, citing ``insufficient support'' in the market. Nordea Bank AB, the biggest Scandinavian lender, said the same day that the krona hadn't been traded on the spot market, while the last quoted price was 340 per euro, compared with 122 a month ago.

``There is absolutely no currency in the country today to import,'' said Andres Magnusson, chief executive officer of the Icelandic Federation of Trade and Services in Reykjavik. ``The only way we can solve this problem is to get the IMF into the country.''

Imports Dependency

The International Monetary Fund sent a delegation to the island last week. Prime Minister Geir Haarde said on Oct. 9 his country may ask it for money after failing to get ``the response that we felt that we should be able to get'' from European governments and central banks. The state will also start talks with Russia over a possible 4 billion-euro ($5.5 billion) loan.

Iceland's rugged, treeless terrain, a barren stretch of volcanic rock, geysers and moss, means the country imports most food, other than meat, fish and dairy products.

Magnusson said last week that one of Iceland's largest supermarket chains was unable to get any foreign currency to make purchases abroad and another retailer's electronic payment didn't go through. Iceland will begin to see shortages of ``regular goods'' by the end of the week if nothing changes, he said.

``We are struggling to make the economy survive from hour to hour,'' Magnusson said. ``There is an enormous amount of capital that wants to get out of the country.''

Sedlabanki told lenders on Oct. 10 that residents who want foreign currency should first prove they need the money for traveling by providing documentation for their trip.

Essential Goods

Wholesalers are demanding that importers pay before any goods are shipped, said Knutur Signarsson, head of the Reykjavik-based Federation of Icelandic Trade. Under normal circumstances, wholesalers abroad would extend credit for 30 to 90 days, he said.

``Many of them ask us to pay cash before they send the goods to Iceland,'' Signarsson said. ``Because of the situation, Iceland has become a country that no one trusts any longer.''

Bogi Thor Siguroddsson, owner of Johan Roenning, an import and retail business which has about 7 billion krona ($71 million) in annual sales, says he's instructed his purchasing managers to only import the core goods, including light bulbs, lamps and electrical cables, they need to serve their customers.

``It's enough to have the credit crisis,'' he said. ``Then you have the currency crash. Unfortunately, we have shown that we can't handle it ourselves.''

Food Inflation

Icelanders, whose per capita gross domestic product is the fifth highest in the world, according to the United Nations 2007/2008 Human Development Index, will have to tighten their belts.

Shoppers are paying more for the goods they do get. The cost of fruits and vegetables, nearly all of which are imported, have gone up about 50 percent in recent months, said Steinunn Kristinsdottir, a 33-year-old Reykjavik resident who was leaving the Bonus store with her cart full.

``This situation really has been a bit troubling for people,'' she said. ``They don't know what's going to happen.''

To contact the reporter on this story: Chad Thomas in Reykjavik, Iceland, via the Helsinki newsroom at cthomas16@bloomberg.net.
Last Updated: October 13, 2008 01:47 EDT

fortysixandtwo
14-10-2008, 12:10 AM
I wonder if this is the start of things to come.

breezinreezin
14-10-2008, 12:27 AM
320,000 of them. I'd say they're going to need to spread out and start learning to fish. It's going to be hard for them in the winter months, that's for sure. It could be a lot worse though, it could be the sardine can that is the UK. X Million, splintered, antagonistic population and bare supermarkets shelves. Let the party begin.

guuna
14-10-2008, 12:35 AM
I fear that scenes like this could soon be coming to the UK.

1694
14-10-2008, 10:41 AM
Fuck.....

drhemp
14-10-2008, 11:24 AM
I'm sure they are being punished for not being in the EU. Switzerland and Norway are too powerful to do this to, but the Icelanders are probably easy pickings for the globalists.

sickleblade
14-10-2008, 12:02 PM
I'm sure they are being punished for not being in the EU. Switzerland and Norway are too powerful to do this to, but the Icelanders are probably easy pickings for the globalists.

Indeed.

godspeed
14-10-2008, 12:03 PM
isolated and then starve them out....how un-origianal....who's next :eek:

drhemp
14-10-2008, 12:09 PM
We should all send a message of solidarity to our Icelandic brothers and sisters :)

lightworks
14-10-2008, 12:10 PM
the reptilian race do not have as much power as you all would seem to bvelive....p[ower is inside you...and not outside of yourself...perhaps all these planetary goings on are a stark reminder and indeed part of an ongoing lesson in slef empowerment and waking up rather quickly.....

tracker
14-10-2008, 12:13 PM
I wonder if this is the start of things to come.

lets hope so hoooooooooooooorrrrayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy !

maybe it can be over and done with and then we all get on with our tiny lives again .:cool:

konnster
15-10-2008, 07:19 AM
We should all send a message of solidarity to our Icelandic brothers and sisters :)

Thank you, I will get that out ;:)

But to be truthful the situation in my country is really not that bad as the media portray´s, its a festival for journalists in reality:p. The country has a vast food production of its own from a variety of any essentials you need to eat and be good and healthy. I don´t think this crisis is going to take long and the government has already taken over the banks today....(and by that I don´t mean that the credit crunch is going to stop today or tomorrow it alway´s has been going on and never stopped, we are just experiencing a BIG wave and an operation in effect by the brotherhood to gain more wealth and control) 'Banks' are still open and are still circulating money on demand plus interest of course as usual.

The most terrified once are the real money and stock owners in the country that are losing everything, alot of them are the few guys who tried to own everything in a very short time.
Personally I don´t feel that much difference in my life because of all this shit that is going on.. its a matter of sense of reality, you just have to turn off the TV and Radio and take a ride out off town or go for a walk in the lovely nature to not be affected by all this crap in the media and news, what the government is doing in there sometimes bewilderment and stupidity etc, but as we all know of course... ITS ALL coordinated in the end.


Its very good to be free from all the emotions that this attack on Icelandic finance is suppose to produce in us and it just proofs that controllers have only control over your emotions and actions when you allow them too....YOU must be the change you wish to see in the world quote by Gandhi is a very good phrase to describe what I mean.:D

The real problem is - Are the globalists going to force the change on the country even more? Why is Russia lending Iceland Money? Who gains and benefits from all of this? Why is the IFM wanting to lend Iceland money? What is REALLY going on behind all this and what is to come is what I will ask..

I just simply hope my country and its people tries to stay out of the European Union like it has been doing in the past, and also that is kind of uneasy to think about because what means will then be used against the country to 'Punish' it even more if it does not conform and Icelandic Illuminati agents do not deliver? :confused:

1694
15-10-2008, 10:56 AM
I hear where you are comming form mate, but get ready for taxing to the eyeballs. Habe you seen the latest Irish budget.

1% "supertax" on everyone. No tax free allowance it is applied to all incomes, essentiall before existing income tax is then piled on. 2% for "higher" earners.

Plus tobacco, petrol and airline tickets all up a substantial amount.

checkmate
15-10-2008, 11:05 AM
Maybe people should start shipping canned food to them in exchange for a minor service or barter of some sort. It would certainly be appreciated and you might just make some good friends.:)

homebrew1973
15-10-2008, 11:36 AM
I fear that scenes like this could soon be coming to the UK.
They did if you remember back in 2000 during that petrol "crisis", watching people in supermarkets practically fighting over the last pack of toilet paper etc on the shelves made my heart sink :( And don`t get me started on those mobile caterers that buy loads of loaves etc who don`t want anyone else to have any, such greedy selfish people have got no consideration for anyone else :mad:

ketwah
15-10-2008, 11:37 AM
I just simply hope my country and its people tries to stay out of the European Union like it has been doing in the past, and also that is kind of uneasy to think about because what means will then be used against the country to 'Punish' it even more if it does not conform and Icelandic Illuminati agents do not deliver? :confused:

Was just reading in a Norwegian newspaper, that "Thórólfur Matthiasson" a professor in economics at the iceland university. Saying that the iceland central bank has lost it's credibility and as he see it there are two possible solutions to the problem. One is to become a member of EU and another one is to get in to a currency union with Norway.

Personally i think if the Norwegian government had any decency they would help out if or when it is needed, Iceland and Norway have a long history together that should be enough as i see it.