The November 2010 Central Bank of Ireland stats which were discussed in this thread revealed a massive flight in deposits from the Irish banks in November 2010. A massive 70 billion EUR has left the 6 Irish banks from January 2010 to November 2010 to go abroad, and even more if you include deposit moves to foreign banks based in Ireland.
But then the IMF arrived. So what happened next?
The IMF arrival seemed to make some depositor's think that deposits in the 6 Irish banks were now safer. Others, and there are many threads here, were still pulling deposits from Irish banks post IMF arrival.
Today, we have the [broken link removed], from the Central Bank of Ireland, as to what happened after the IMF arrived. The deposit flight from the 6 Irish banks continued, as they appear, based on the statistics, to have lost more deposits.
The CBI had to advance an extra 6.1 billion EUR in liquidity to the 6 Irish banks in December 2010 alone bringing the total to 51 billion EUR in support plus 100 billion EUR+ from the ECB. It appears that this CBI support is via so-called promissory notes to back up exiting depositor's.
These stats are in line with other evidence pointing to what happened in December, like KBC saying their deposit based soared 50% to December 31st 2010 and the IMF suggesting revising the loan to deposit ratio's at the Irish banks post bailout.
More here:
http://namawinelake.wordpress.com/2...stics-indicate-no-slowdown-in-deposit-flight/
Is CBI "promissory note" liquidity assistance, 'backing up' lost deposits, infinite? or will a future cash call pose problems? or have we moved a step closer to ensuring that the CBI and ECB are the only creditors left in the 6 Irish banks? or what could cause a turn around if at all possible?
But then the IMF arrived. So what happened next?
The IMF arrival seemed to make some depositor's think that deposits in the 6 Irish banks were now safer. Others, and there are many threads here, were still pulling deposits from Irish banks post IMF arrival.
Today, we have the [broken link removed], from the Central Bank of Ireland, as to what happened after the IMF arrived. The deposit flight from the 6 Irish banks continued, as they appear, based on the statistics, to have lost more deposits.
The CBI had to advance an extra 6.1 billion EUR in liquidity to the 6 Irish banks in December 2010 alone bringing the total to 51 billion EUR in support plus 100 billion EUR+ from the ECB. It appears that this CBI support is via so-called promissory notes to back up exiting depositor's.
These stats are in line with other evidence pointing to what happened in December, like KBC saying their deposit based soared 50% to December 31st 2010 and the IMF suggesting revising the loan to deposit ratio's at the Irish banks post bailout.
More here:
http://namawinelake.wordpress.com/2...stics-indicate-no-slowdown-in-deposit-flight/
Today the Central Bank of Ireland released some information on our banks for the end of December 2010. And it appears that the CBI advanced an additional €6.4bn to the banking system in special liquidity measures (up to a balance of €51.094bn at the end of December 2010 from a balance of €44.674bn at the end of November). Reuters and the Wall Street Journal are claiming the CBI also released information today on ECB Emergency Liquidity Assistance to the end of December 2010 and both claim that ELA dropped from €136bn to €132bn but the CBI apparently did not provide a breakdown in ELA between the 20-odd domestic banks (which include the six embattled State-guaranteed banks) and the 430-odd banks in the IFSC which don’t service the Irish economy. This looks troubling because (a) the ELA totalled €138.199bn at the end of November 2010, not €136bn and (b) given the concerns over deposit flight from domestic banks, you would have thought the CBI would have gone out of its way to provide ELA figures for the domestic banks.
There was an entry here last week which tried to examine how a continuing deposit flight would eventually undermine the banking system (both central bank and other). The conclusion was that although there wasn’t a theoretical limit to the support that could be given because ultimately the six State-guaranteed banks have only €150-200m in deposits. And although that’s a huge sum, it could theoretically be substituted by funding from the ECB. However practically that is not likely to be the case. So have the figures today confirmed that we have moved a step further to default, deposit controls and/or deposit writedown?
Is CBI "promissory note" liquidity assistance, 'backing up' lost deposits, infinite? or will a future cash call pose problems? or have we moved a step closer to ensuring that the CBI and ECB are the only creditors left in the 6 Irish banks? or what could cause a turn around if at all possible?