Brendan Burgess
Founder
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Anglo can be wound up cheaply -- here's how. Sell the €28bn deposit book.
This is a regular event in banking, and even if it has to take a discount of 25pc that would yield €21bn.
The transfer of the retail deposit book has been backed by cash from HM Treasury and the Financial Services Compensation Scheme. Further details about these arrangements are set out below.
Under the Transfer Order, the FSCS has paid out approximately £14bn to enable retail deposits held in Bradford & Bingley and covered by the FSCS to be transferred to Abbey. The Treasury has made a payment to Abbey for retail deposit amounts not covered by the FSCS, amounting to approximately £4bn. In return, the FSCS and the Treasury have acquired rights in respects of the proceeds of the wind-down and realisation of the assets of the remaining business of Bradford & Bingley in public ownership.
sorry to go on about the price of deposit books again, but I would like an explanation of the figures in the BL Indo article today…its the easter weekend and I will spend a lot of time with the arm chair experts whiling away the hours drinking pints….these experts quote their newspapers like encyclopedias….now all the experts will have the answer to the Anglo problem and when I disagree, they will hit me (literally) with today’s paper…..
Isnt it funny how when someone TRIES to think of a solution it can be crowdsourced and improved? Imagine…And we could have let the “anglo closure will cost us 100b (that was our taoiseach, talking about a bank with a liability level of 85b….) and more” go unchecked. Now its a pity that more people , such as market participants and others who do this for a living (note - us guys have day jobs as well as trying to save the state from the black hole of anglo) couldnt put their minds to it.
As I said on another thread, im mostly offline for the next two weeks. Debate on….
Brian, why does the Independent article read as if the Anglo deposit book is an asset worth 21bn when it is a liability of 27.2bn? Is this a misprint?
Deposits are a liability of anglo, you cannot sell them! Very rudimentary mistake by BL which undermines the whole argument.
No expert on banking but I think you can sell the deposit book.
Your own helpful summary tells us that 15 of these are retail and 12 are corporate including 7.5 from Irish Life. .
I was waiting for your take, Sunny. I have to pinch myself every time that I think of that article. The really frightening aspect is that people like John McManus and the Sunday Times are taking up the theme. Even the fact that Alan Dukes didn't eat him alive on Newstalk. I ask myself, if I was in Alan Dukes place would I have immediately spotted that the prof was talking through his hat?That is the most bizarre article I have read in a long time. There are so many errors in there, I am not going to even begin going through how it is complete and utter rubbish. If it wasn't an April fools, TCD should seriously examine what this guy is teaching...
I was waiting for your take, Sunny. I have to pinch myself every time that I think of that article. The really frightening aspect is that people like John McManus and the Sunday Times are taking up the theme. Even the fact that Alan Dukes didn't eat him alive on Newstalk. I ask myself, if I was in Alan Dukes place would I have immediately spotted that the prof was talking through his hat?
Thanks for that. I can see why Alan Dukes didn't devour him. In the heat of that debate Alan thought that the professor was using shorthand for selling off the deposit book i.e. selling the deposits accompanied by the backing assets. And that is what I would have thought he meant. But, beyond all belief, the professor actually meant that we would sell the deposit liabilities and get assets in return, this is absolutely clear from his April Idiot's article in the Indo as Brendan has so clearly spotted. UnbelievableThis is not an April fools joke. He repeated his idea to 'sell the deposit book' on newstalk on monday:
It calls the credibility of the whole public debate into question if somebody can make such a ludicrous suggestion without anyone contradicting him.
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