Brendan Burgess
Founder
- Messages
- 54,684
I have not seen this explained and I can't see the reason.
It makes NAMA much bigger than it needs to be.
This makes it more complex to manage.
It also increases government borrowing.
NAMA will find it hard to get the quality and quantity of staff it needs.
Customers might not want their loans moved to NAMA.
The only advantage I can see is that the good loans will be profitable. But if they are transferred at fair value, then they will be of no benefit to NAMA.
It makes NAMA much bigger than it needs to be.
This makes it more complex to manage.
It also increases government borrowing.
NAMA will find it hard to get the quality and quantity of staff it needs.
Customers might not want their loans moved to NAMA.
The only advantage I can see is that the good loans will be profitable. But if they are transferred at fair value, then they will be of no benefit to NAMA.