5 Months - EBS - 3.64%
1 Year - Irish Nationwide and Anglo Irish Bank - 3.50% or Permanent TSB - 3.46%
1 Year 3 months - EBS - 3.50%
Apart from the slight hassle of having to find a new home for your money there should not be any cost involved. The winding down of Anglo would surely take a simialr form as what happened with Halifax.
Disagree, it will not be as simple as the Halifax closure. There are 24 billion in deposits on the Anglo balance sheet that have to be paid back by the state if Anglo do a 'halifax style' closure.
There is not a corresponding 24 billion in liquid cash form on the Anglo balance sheet. The government simply can't pay this back to deposit holders in the morning. The NTMA does not have the funds to do this.
Hence, a good/bad bank split or a gradual closure of their deposit base, as they sell their assets, is more likely.
Either way, Anglo is far from the safest option for your deposits nor do they offer the highest rates for most EUR deposit products.
Sure, agreed, the state does not want to hit depositor's. My point is regarding the Anglo deposit exit strategy.
Specifically, my point is simply that the state does not have 24 billion to repay all the Anglo depositor's. There is nothing left in Anglo to repo out to the ECB, there isn't 24 billion in liquid assets on the Anglo balance sheet and the NTMA does not have 24 billion in reserves.
The state might be able to borrow another 24 billion on a 5.7% coupon from international investor's. But this is not a practical option.
The state cannot adopt a Halifax style 'get your money out of the bank by X date' strategy. The state will have to adopt a 'let's keep as many depositor's as possible' via some good/bad bank split strategy or 'existing customer deposits only' strategy or some other strategy that prevents the immediate exit of 24 billion in deposits.
From reading the paper's today, it seems that a good/bad bank split is not going to happen. It is going to be am Anglo wind down over 7-10 years.
So what will happen to Anglo's depositor's?
1) Halifax style deposit exit --> Not possible, as discussed above.
2) Service existing deposit customers only for X years and stop new deposits ???
3) Allow Anglo to continue to take new deposits for X years then stop ???
4) As mentioned above, a sale of Anglo's deposit book. This will be difficult. The Anglo deposit book is full of deposits at unsustainable rates. Particularly, their Isle of Man deposit book has some of the highest USD and GBP deposit rates in the world. Who would want to acquire a bunch of fickle rate chasing deposit holders who are been paid unsustainable rates?
As for fickle rate chasing deposit holders I blame those comparison websites with their fancy best buys and the people who use them....oh wait!
Right now I'd say most deposits with Irish banks are sensative to bad news.
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