Brendan Burgess
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Bit of a sore brainer. But listening to news at one and Colm McCarthy in particular it seems that these bonds will be essentially six month floating rate loans, SVR if you like.Hi Firefly
I suspect that the government might need to do sums on this as well.
At the moment the effective interest rate on the Promissory Notes is either 0% or 0.75%. (Fiona Reddan has a good article explaining how they work in today's [broken link removed].)
If this is replaced with a 3% bond, we will end up paying a lot more.
I am concerned that the government will in effect surrender a 10 year cheap tracker for a 27 year SVR mortgage.
They may not form part of our official debt figures. But we still owe the money.NAMA bonds don’t form part of our debt
Again, these savings are a complete mirage. The effective rate on the Promissory Notes is 0.75%.on the estimated €10bn, we will pay €400m interest compared with about €1.8bn this year for the promissory note.
To quote Seamus Coffey (From the Nama Wine Lake Blog) on the net effect of this transaction, we do appear to be in line for a net benefit.
There should be no change in the debt. It is the correct that the NAMA bonds don’t effect the debt, but the NAMA bonds are being used to “buy” the IBRC loans. The NAMA bonds are not replacing any government debt so the debt ratio will not fall. Something will be created to replace the Promissory Notes and the net impact of that change in the debt ratio will be nil.
There is no chance that this move will reduce the amount of budgetary adjustments to be introduced over the next few years. The adjustment amounts will be maintained and instead the deficit targets will be revised.
We are not going to gain twice from this. There will be funding gains in the medium term, possible NPV gains in the long term but the deficit reduction programme will not be altered. This is supposed to make our debt more “sustainable”. Reacting to this by running higher primary deficits would not achieve that.
I'm not sure how close this mirrors what actually happened but Karl Whelan had a piece in Forbes late last year that spelled out some large benefits from this
http://www.forbes.com/sites/karlwhe...g-the-promissory-notes-with-a-long-term-bond/
- The net effect will reduce our annual budget deficit,
My understanding is that the capital element of the PNs i.e. 30Bn, or whatever, was recognised in the 2010 deficit. So each year the capital element of the 3.1bn is ignored in the budgetary arithmetic (already counted in 2010) but the interest element of c.1.9bn is new deficit. In this sense the rate of interest on the PNs is relevant.A lot of people are saying this. Apparently the capital repayment element of the €3.1 billion payment is treated as part of our current budget deficit. I don't understand why this would be. But it has really no impact on our total borrowing.
The average interest rate on the new bonds will begin at just over 3%, compared with an interest rate of well over 8% on the Promissory Notes.
the interest element of c.1.9bn is new deficit. In this sense the rate of interest on the PNs is relevant.
OK, I get it now. This artificial figure is used instead of the true cost to the state which is around €250 million (€31 billion @0.75%)
The Promissory Notes were a great deal. This new one looks terrible.
Can you explain where/how/why the two figures, 0.75% and 8%, come from?
Consolidating everything, the only interest cost associated with the outstanding ELA debts stem from the fact that the Central Bank incurred a large Intra-Eurosystem liability via the TARGET2 system when the IBRC depositors and bond investors were paid off and moved their money abroad. Sourcing funds from abroad to pay off the ELA would have the effect of reducing this liability. However, the Central Bank only pays interest on this liability at the Main Refinancing Operation (MRO) rate, which is currently only 0.75%.
I would drop the "very". Good deal yes. Kenny is completely misrepresenting the situation when comparing the 8% to 3%.Conor Brophy has explained on RTE that the Central Bank will hold the bond. Therefore the interest will be paid by government to the Central Bank. So again, the real interest rate is 0.75%
So this is a very good deal.
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