In November 2008, the German government presented a package of measures worth EUR 40 billion, the British government one worth GBP 20 billion, the European Commission one worth EUR 200 billion. In April 2010, the European Commission and the EU Member States announced that they would lend Greece €80 billion, together with the IMF, to curb the Greek public finance crisis. In April 2009, Bloomberg went to court again. On 10 April 2010, this was expanded to a general package totaling €500 billion (see European sovereign debt crisis). The Bank of England announced in March 2009 its intention to buy GBP 75 billion worth of government bonds, which was expanded to GBP 125 billion in May 2009, and later to GBP 175 billion. On Friday 3 October, the Dutch State announced the acquisition of all Dutch activities of Fortis, including the part of ABN AMRO owned by Fortis, for an amount of €16.8 billion. The Chinese government announced a package worth 4 trillion yuan.
On November 5, 2009, the Bank of England increased the budget to GBP 200 billion. From August 2011, after a pause of several months, the ECB started buying Italian and, to a lesser extent, Spanish and Portuguese government bonds on a previously unprecedented scale: €183 billion had been bought by mid-November. 850 billion in other loans. In February 2009, the World Bank, the European Investment Bank and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development jointly provided loans of €24.5 billion to banks in Central and Eastern Europe. He is an important player and he will continue to be so. The credit crisis made itself felt very clearly in the Netherlands and Belgium with the problems that bank-insurer Fortis experienced in obtaining sufficient capital to finance the purchase amount it owed for ABN AMRO. On January 22, 2009, Fortis Bank (Belgium) reported a net loss of €14.1 billion for the first three quarters of 2008; a loss of € 4 to € 5 billion was expected for the fourth quarter. Hungary's request for a €180 billion joint European bailout was rejected on March 1. In August 2009, the court granted this request: the Federal Reserve was required to provide details of the various bailouts, in particular the identities of government aid recipients and the collateral taken, but a few days later granted the Fed a delay of up to 30 September 2009 to appeal.
On March 31, 2011, the Federal Reserve released a large number of documents detailing banks' use of the discount window facility in 2007 and 2008, following a Supreme Court order. By early 2010, the Federal Reserve's short-term support programs had mostly been phased out or withdrawn after little use. On August 25, 2010, the Federal Reserve asked the appellate court to suspend for 90 days the obligation to disclose the names of the banks involved in the above aid, as this could lead to a loss of confidence, which could lead to bank runs and bankruptcies. The Federal Reserve's request followed a rejection, on August 20, of a request to re-evaluate Bloomberg's original request (which was granted on appeal). Although this can partly be seen as a "classic" counter-cyclical policy, in a number of cases the difficulty in obtaining credit was cited as the reason for such a measure or request. It was not until December 2010 that the Rederal Reserve released details of a number of transactions from December 2007 to July 2010.
They also wanted to raise expectations about future inflation: this would encourage consumers to consume more. On October 25, 2010, Bloomberg complained that the information provided by the US government was inadequate: 560 pages of printed emails had all details of actual transactions obscured. In January 2010, the Federal Reserve applied to the appellate court requesting that the August 24, 2009, ruling be set aside. In the second round, Morocco was placed in a group with Guinea, Guinea-Bissau and Sudan on January 21, 2020. In the fall of 2010, more and more signals were received that the Federal Reserve would start a new round of quantitative easing from November 2010. Southend United did reach the quarter-finals of the League Cup that season by surprisingly winning against title holder Manchester United in the previous round, a historic victory in club history. In December 2010, the United States Coast Guard announced that even stricter penalties would be imposed on offenders. Despite this, Wrexham did win the 2004–05 Football League Trophy by beating Southend United 2–0 after extra time. Consolation prize that year was a new UEFA Cup victory.