Its not about "would anyone put deposits into or lend to a bank with €5m of share capital".
Quite the contrary.
We need a bank that can lend and this is the minimum amount you need to set up a bank, according to a link I visited last night.
Feel free to contradict this figure, but its lending from I'm talking about, not depositing in or lending to it.
Apart from the initial capitalisation, of course.
ONQ
Being dismissive of any enterprise is not appropriate at this time.
And I apparently misinterpreted it...I am suggesting (badly) that lending to sme's is suffering because the overall risk of lending into this country, regardless of sector, is now high (mainly caused by reckless lending, not necessarily to the SME sector) and until this stabalises I cant see a new or existing institution starting to lend to any significant extent unless it is government funded.
I accept that it was badly written and open to misinterpretation.
Let's leave it a 1 billion fund for SME's with the initial money put in by the govenment.I was interested in the idea, last year, of a gov sme bond, set up along the lines of the ssia's where Joe Average could save in a fixed rate fixed period bond and the money would be loaned to the sme sector through the Credit Union system. A 1 billion fund for sme's administered via the cu set up. Could this not have the same effect as what you are suggesting but not have the same issues of ratio attached.
Hi Onq
You asked a question and we tried to answer it.
You were told to go off and set up a bank by Brian Lucey. But you don't want deposits? I would prefer to deposit in it than invest in it.
I understand that you are trying genuinely to help. Rather than trying to set up a bank, could you get involved in your local Credit Union and push their commercial lending?
Brendan
The function of the bank would be to lend money to businesses to allow them to continue to trade where they are viable.
That was my stated intent and I also intended to make money on the loans and the transactions, but leave the deposits in other banks alone because they still haven't reached their capital lending ratio requirements and I understand that money on deposit affects this.
Credit Unions may be the way forward for all of us and the pressure to led may in fact turn them into large banking institutions in time.
At the moment their ability to lend is very limited accordingly to Lucey.
But again according to my own logic, anything is better than nothing so I will pursue this option. Thanks for suggesting it, Brendan.
People with money might prefer to deposit in the proposed bank, but I get the feeling that people looking to deposit money are in short supply nationwide right now.
It would be useful of course if we had a census done showing the numbers of people in difficulty and due to what reasons so we could have an informed debate ant not one that relies totally on anecdotal evidence, whether from accountants or RTE researchers or the apparent lack of rebuttal from government spokespersons.
People whose businesses are going under because they are owned money yet cannot take people to court to get it - even when they aren't dealing with straw men - I think they'd like a loan.
ONQ.
And where do you get the money to lend? You might want to read up more on how banks work. Banks are leveraged institutions and you wouldn't get the leverage on €5m share capital to make it work. Halifax and Postbank were too small to make it work during this crisis and they had a lot than €5m.
By the way I know one person who looked into getting a banking licence during the crisis and he had a lot more than €5m. It was a non-runner for numerous reasons.
But where do you find the money to lend? Sorry, but I am really confused! You want to lend but you don't want to borrow?
Setting up a bank to help SME's to the extent that you are suggesting would require billions of euro of shareholders equity.
You can refer to Brendan's reply above also, but the issue isn't what the extension is for.
I'm tot suggesting any "extent" - are you Brian Lucey in disguide?
I'm offering some bread to starving people.
Iwon't be able to feed them all, but I'll feed who I can.
And yes discernment will have to play a part in who to lend to.
The hard part.
ONQ.
<snip>
There is huge oversupply in many industries - the legal profession, architecture, hotels etc. They have to be allowed to contract to a size appropriate to the economy. If the taxpayer props up the weaker ones, the whole sector is weakened. If they let them go, then the remaining ones will be more viable long-term.
<snip>
I love how you apply this Darwinian logic to everyone else but the banks.
You comments here - read as they are by thousand daily (!) will only serve to prove to laypeople that there is one rule for us and one rule for the Banks..
Dobson: Is it not unthinkable that an Irish government or any government would allow a retail bank, a major retail bank with all these branches and with all these customers to go under?
Me: I don’t think it’s inconceivable at all. The Government regulates Irish banks but the government does not and should not guarantee Irish banks and that is a very , very important distinction.
If banks behave badly in their lending or if they are reckless in their management or whatever, they should be allowed to go to the wall and that is a fact of economic life.
It would have an effect on the economy but giving some sort of soft guarantee to a badly managed banks would be irresponsible and very bad news for the long term
As Canice no doubt well remembers what I have already said on this topic on the RTE News to the astonishment of many:
http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showpost.php?p=1009452&postcount=15
I did think that Anglo and Irish Nationwide should have been allowed fail.
It's a fair point. We're still propping up Anglo Irish Bank which has already swallowed €4 billion of our money and now still has a loss of €12 billion. The bank was nothing more than a piggy bank for politically-linked developers, and the wider world wouldn't give a toss it was shut down tomorrow.
<snip>You cannot have a situation where privately-run concerns are of so-called "systemic" importance.<snip>
Everyone knows looking at this that there is something intrinsically wrong with the boom-and-bust free market capitalist system.
Simple answer .... if I needed a loan and the rates were good I'd take out the loan so in essence I'd be supporting a new lending bank.
My answer - yes I would.
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