Brendan Burgess
Founder
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from the Transaction Overview
Philip Lane has reported on the Press Conference
I am trying to figure this out.
The Central Bank owns a €100 bond issued by the government which is paying 3.5 % variable .
If the yield on Irish bonds at that stage is 5%, then the buyer will pay only around €57 for the bond.
Does this not entail a loss for the ICB, and therefore, the state?
The weighted average life of the above structure is 34–35 years in comparison to the weighted average life of the Promissory Notes of 7-8 years
The Central Bank of Ireland will sell the bonds but only where such a sale is not disruptive to financial stability. They have however undertaken that minimum of bonds will be sold in accordance with the following schedule: to end 2014 (€0.5bn), 2015-2018 (€0.5bn p.a.), 2019-2023 (€1bn p.a.), 2024 and after (€2bn p.a.)
Philip Lane has reported on the Press Conference
Central Bank expected to hold the government bonds for a weighted average of 15 years
I am trying to figure this out.
The Central Bank owns a €100 bond issued by the government which is paying 3.5 % variable .
If the yield on Irish bonds at that stage is 5%, then the buyer will pay only around €57 for the bond.
Does this not entail a loss for the ICB, and therefore, the state?