Brendan Burgess
Founder
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I have not been able to find the answer to this anywhere and before I spend a lot of time on it, I wonder can anyone point to a link on the topic?
As this is a factual forum, please don't discuss whether this is a good idea or not. Just stick to the facts. Based on the facts,we can have a more informed discussion on the merits of the strategy.
unguaranteed subordinated bonds| €x billion
unguaranteed senior bonds issued before the gurantee|€y billion
Senior bonds issued with a government guarantee during 2010|€z billion
Total bonds|€6.9 billion
What is the status of the goverment's promissory notes?
The government is committed to paying €25 billion into Anglo over the next 10 years. If Anglo is closed down, I understand that the promissory notes are payable immediately. So the government has to put €25 billiion into Anglo immediately. (Is this correct?)
What is the order of preference for Anglo's creditors?
I guess it's something like the following:
What status has the government's 2009 investment?
The government put in €4 billion in 2009. Was this as preference shares? If so, I presume it ranks after the subordinated debt.
The mechanics of burning the bondholders
Appoint a liquidator to Anglo
The unguaranteed bonds lose everything
The government pays out on the guaranteed deposits and guaranteed bondholders
Who owns the bonds?
The main question here is whether they are Irish owned or foreign owned.
Are we burning Irish pension funds or American hedge funds?
What is the current market value of these bonds?
I seem to recall that the subordinated debt is trading at 30% while the unguaranteed debt is trading at 70%.
What is the maturity date of these bonds?
The earliest maturity date for the subordinated bonds is June 2014
The senior debt has 40 different maturity dates between now and 2018. €350m matures on 2nd March 2011 and €1 billion matures on 2nd November 2011.
In total, €1.72 billion will mature this year.
As this is a factual forum, please don't discuss whether this is a good idea or not. Just stick to the facts. Based on the facts,we can have a more informed discussion on the merits of the strategy.
unguaranteed senior bonds issued before the gurantee|€y billion
Senior bonds issued with a government guarantee during 2010|€z billion
Total bonds|€6.9 billion
I don't understand these figures. During 2010, Anglo issued €6 billion in bonds with the benefit of a government guarantee. This must not be included in the €6.9 billion figure above.We know that €750 million matured at 31 January 2011. So it's down to €6 billion
Source:
Debt securities in issue at 31 December 2010 were €6.9bn compared with €15.1bn at 31 December 2009.
What is the status of the goverment's promissory notes?
The government is committed to paying €25 billion into Anglo over the next 10 years. If Anglo is closed down, I understand that the promissory notes are payable immediately. So the government has to put €25 billiion into Anglo immediately. (Is this correct?)
What is the order of preference for Anglo's creditors?
I guess it's something like the following:
- securitised bonds (Does Anglo have any?)
- Owed to the Central Bank (as it's secured on the loan book)
- Depositors and senior bondholders (they rank parri passu)
- subordinated debt
- the government's promissory note
- shareholders.
What status has the government's 2009 investment?
The government put in €4 billion in 2009. Was this as preference shares? If so, I presume it ranks after the subordinated debt.
The mechanics of burning the bondholders
Appoint a liquidator to Anglo
The unguaranteed bonds lose everything
The government pays out on the guaranteed deposits and guaranteed bondholders
Who owns the bonds?
The main question here is whether they are Irish owned or foreign owned.
Are we burning Irish pension funds or American hedge funds?
What is the current market value of these bonds?
I seem to recall that the subordinated debt is trading at 30% while the unguaranteed debt is trading at 70%.
What is the maturity date of these bonds?
The earliest maturity date for the subordinated bonds is June 2014
The senior debt has 40 different maturity dates between now and 2018. €350m matures on 2nd March 2011 and €1 billion matures on 2nd November 2011.
In total, €1.72 billion will mature this year.