Brendan Burgess
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With likely losses of this magnitude, the Government's proposed investment of €1.5 billion will vaporise in months, forcing it either to continue pouring good money after bad, or to repudiate Anglo Irish's liabilities. For all it will achieve, the money might as well be piled up in St Stephen's Green and incinerated.
I must say that it was a terrible piece of writing.
I am surprised that the Irish Times published it.
Brendan
Thank you dewdrop. That was my original question when I started this particular thread and no-one as yet has attempted to answer it.as a retired and obviously naive bank official will someone explain to me what mr. kelly means when he speaks ab out Senior Managers looting the assets which find their way into their brief cases etc.
The government cannot repudiate Anglo's liabilities. It's liabilities are its deposits and interbank loans which we have guaranteed.
It is nonsense to write:
"the money might as well be ...incinerated"
As far as I am concerned, there is no point in listening to any arguments from someone who writes such rubbish.
While I accept that he did not write the headline, this is the actual quotation taken from the article. As you see the headline reflects it accurately:
The government cannot repudiate Anglo's liabilities. It's liabilities are its deposits and interbank loans which we have guaranteed.
It is nonsense to write:
"the money might as well be ...incinerated"
As far as I am concerned, there is no point in listening to any arguments from someone who writes such rubbish.
It's a total waste of money, but hopefully that €1.5 billion will be enough to see Anglo through the next 20 months when the government guarantee runs out. At that stage Anglo can go bust and private bondholders (like Mr S Fitzpatrick) and shareholders can wear it instead of the Irish taxpayer.
I would support extending the government guarantee for depositors only.
Why? I have no monopoly on the correct answers or opinions. Few others seem to be loath to disagree with me.I'm loath to disagree with Brendan
Giving the Government the benefit of the doubt maybe they want to keep Anglo's loan book alive for another two years until the state guarantee runs out in the hope that the world and Irish economy will be recovering by then.
If that doesn't happen they could let the guarantee expire for Anglo to avoid paying out the remaining €13.5 billion guessed by Morgan Kelly as the potential final liability.
More sensational stuff from Morgan Kelly in yesterday's Irish Times:
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