L
Hi,
am still scrambling to change euros in Irish banks to other currencies.
What does that mean? € deposits in a French bank? Or a pile of these?'French' euro
Couldn't be done by nationality. It'd have to be done by residency. And what date would they use to determine residency? Perhaps the date of the conversion itself. But what about corporate accounts? And why punish the saver and save the borrower? Whatever way this plays out, best to have a top financial advisor on speed dial.Someone spoke about this to me only last week as it happens and they suggest that what may happen is that all monies may be "repatriated" to the currency of their "owner's" nationality.
Where has this been stated?So, in the event of a break-up, the currency would be converted to the national currency of wherever your IBAN falls.
Hi ClubMan, sorry for the confusion. Neither, necessarily. A bank with French IBANs, i.e. HSBC aren't French but they have French IBANs. Rabo aren't Irish but they have Irish IBANs. So, in the event of a break-up, the currency would be converted to the national currency of wherever your IBAN falls. When I say 'French' euro, I mean EUR in a French bank a/c but it doesn't have to be a French bank.
Where has this been stated?
Where is a bank account domiciled? What is that based on?That said, I think the most likely course of action is that deposits will be converted based on where the bank a/c is domiciled.
Where is a bank account domiciled? What is that based on?
If your bank a/c's IBAN begins with IE, for example, that would be converted to the new currency of Ireland. If your IBAN begins with FR, that would be converted to France's new currency and so on.
Yes, I agree with your point, tracking back transactions to a point of origin would be a bizarre, costly and ultimately unworkable course of action. Any conversion that takes place has to be at a specific point-in-time.
Not that protecting your wealth isn't a legitimate reason for transferring money to a different state's banking system but there are many legitimate reasons why people and corporations move money across borders. The concept of tracing that money back to where it's 'supposed to be' and then converting it to that country's currency is just nonsensical.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?