If the decision to nationalise was based on dishonesty (or worse), then all bets are off. The Govt is not obliged to continue to provide funding or to fulfil the guarantee which was obtained fraudulently.Once the uniformed decision to nationalise had been made (uninformed because of the incompetence and dishonesty of a small group) the only question was how long we could hold on to the funding from depositors and bondholders.
I dont get the connection between selling a loan and a collapse in the property market?
Forgive my naievity, but are there not tight accounting rules in place about reporting and recognising bad debts?Transparency.
Banks tend to bury their heads in the sand regarding non-performing loans. They might be happy to take the losses on the drip over a number of years.
Selling on the loans capitalises the loss upfront, meaning bust customers being suddenly outed.
Forgive my naievity, but are there not tight accounting rules in place about reporting and recognising bad debts?
IRISH BANKS will require up to €22 billion to cover losses on property loans moving to the National Asset Management Agency (Nama) and higher future losses on other loans as they meet strict new rules set by the Financial Regulator, The Irish Times has learned.
Csirl excuse my looseness of language. Under a liquidation Anglo would have to turn its assets (loans) into CASH. No point turning to NAMA, it doesn't do cash, it only deals in long term paper. Nobody is going to buy the loans, so only way to raise cash is to pursue the borrrowers i.e. repossesss and sell etc. etc.
The Quinn plot thickens;See [broken link removed] for what may be one of the real reasons for not shutting down Anglo.
I am dissappointed that he said it would cost €70Bn, that implies a complete wipe out of the asset base, I feel there must be a bit of exaggeration there.
We're talking here another €20Bn into Anglo which Lenny himself agrees we would all prefer to see "obliterated".
Recalling my earlier metaphor, the "financial war crimes" commited at Anglo are now at least twice has heinous as we thought yesterday.
This is based on the assumption that the guarantee holds. Given that it was based on a tissue of lies, we should walk away from the guarantee.My read of Lenny's speech is that winding down Anglo would cost €70Bn.
This is based on the assumption that the guarantee holds. Given that it was based on a tissue of lies, we should walk away from the guarantee.
The problem is that the depositors, bondholders, ECB etc. didn't tell lies. Those who told lies should be pursued for "financial war crimes" but the creditors are innocent civilians.This is based on the assumption that the guarantee holds. Given that it was based on a tissue of lies, we should walk away from the guarantee.
The problem is that the depositors, bondholders, ECB etc. didn't tell lies. Those who told lies should be pursued for "financial war crimes" but the creditors are innocent civilians.
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