Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Morning
Small point. A week before the general bank guarantee, the limit for the ordinary deposit guarantee was raised from 20k to 100k per depositor. This was applied to 100% of each individual deposit in the banks covered by the scheme.
SM
Err, shouldn't you apply these haircuts to the bondholders of these institutes first before you apply them to the depositors? That's what would have happened if those banks had failed.
Yup, guaranteed bank run for all amounts over the €20k. This is certainly what I would do if I had any money left in the country.
Brendan, I always thoughts your posts had credibility - until now. You sound like Michael O'Leary trying to stir things up.
How did the depositors gain anything? The banks gained as the money remained in Ireland instead of moving abroad. Are you seriously trying to suggest if somebody had 50k in a bank that the Government can just take 3k? These are the people who did NOT borrow during the so called Celtic Tiger. Not everybody who have deposits gained through property price increases - some people were simply careful.
Am I missing something here? Please explain.
Hi Ceist
I am proposing that those who had their savings retrospectively guaranteed by the Irish government should contribute to the cost.
At the moment, all taxpayers and citizens are paying for the cost of guaranteeing the amounts over €20,000. Most people who have in excess of €20,000 on deposit are better off. So you have the poor subsidising the rich. It's crazy.
If the government had not upped the €20k guarantee, those who had money on deposit in September 2008 in Anglo and Irish Nationwide would have lost everything in excess of €20,000.
People say we "we bailed out the banks" but this is a meaningless expression. We bailed out the depositors and bondholders who would have lost out if there was no guaranteed. A lot of people are saying that we should not have bailed out the bondholders, but rarely say we should not have bailed out the depositors.
Brendan, By that rationale, as the guarantee is now 100k does this mean that those with deposits > 100k have lost everything > 100K?
I certainly hope that I did not rubbish this? I have said it a lot, but people don't seem to want to face up to it. If you look at some of the earlier posts on this thread, two posters have seriously suggested that the guarantee hasn't benefited the depositors. It's very strange.I made this point a few months ago and it was rubbished. I still think it's the case.
The devil is in the detail here. The second the Irish government announces that all depositors will have to pay a percentage of their deposit to ensure their money is guaranteed, you should start writing the country's epitaph. I can't think of a quicker way to bleed the country dry. Ridiculous.
@Howitzer - Agreed, it's the bondholders who benefited most because they'd come before depositors when losses on defaults are being absorbed.
@Chris - The banks are already charged a rate for the deposit guarantee, i.e. CDS prices pushing up their borrowing rates. If CDS prices weren't being held because of EU/ECB funding for these banks (as aristotle said) you're right, they wouldn't be able to pay the rates that their actual position demands.
Hi Ceist
I am proposing that those who had their savings retrospectively guaranteed by the Irish government should contribute to the cost.
At the moment, all taxpayers and citizens are paying for the cost of guaranteeing the amounts over €20,000. Most people who have in excess of €20,000 on deposit are better off.
I certainly hope that I did not rubbish this?
So you're basically saying that those who were wise and didn't buy should now pay for those who did.
They have not only lost money on the value of their homes but now they have to subsidise you as well.
Most people who have in excess of €20,000 on deposit are better off. So you have the poor subsidising the rich. It's crazy.
It is a matter of opinion, you see the mortgage holders as the victims, others see them as the idiots that caused this mess by spending more than they could afford on property with inflated prices.
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