Showing posts with label Bank Recapitalization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bank Recapitalization. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Greek Banks Suspend Merger Talks


The New York Times
April 8, 2013
By NIKI KITSANTONIS
 ATHENS — Shares in National Bank of Greece and Eurobank plummeted 30 percent Monday after the two banks suspended merger talks because they were unable to raise the required capital.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Cyprus Bailout Details Emerge After IMF Deal


By MATINA STEVIS in Brussels and ALKMAN GRANITSAS in Athens
The Wall Street Journal
Cyprus and the International Monetary Fund reached an agreement for a €1 billion ($1.28 billion) lifeline on top of the €9 billion bailout the island will get from its euro-zone peers, the IMF said in a statement Wednesday.

Tuesday, April 2, 2013

Greece to extend bank recapitalization deadline: central bank chief


ATHENS | Mon Apr 1, 2013 6:35pm EDT
(Reuters) - Greece will extend a deadline for the recapitalization of its banks by a few weeks, possibly until the end of May, Greek central bank chief George Provopoulos said on Monday.

Greek banks, which are being recapitalized with funds from the country's latest EU/IMF bailout, have been lobbying for the terms of the recapitalization scheme to be sweetened and also sought an extension to an end-April deadline for the plan.

Saturday, March 30, 2013

Cypriots Cast Blame as Banks Open


Capital is Surprisingly Orderly as Branches Restart; President Calls for Probe Into Economic Crisis
NICOSIA—Cyprus's banks reopened from a nearly two-week hiatus on Thursday with little sign of disorder among depositors, even as the country's politicians pointed fingers over who was to blame for the financial sector's meltdown.

Thursday, March 28, 2013

The Cyprus bail-out


This septic isle

Being tough on bank creditors could prove costly for northern European taxpayers
The Economist
Mar 30th 2013 |From the print edition

THE second deal to bail out Cyprus was much better than the first. For one thing, there was actually a deal: with the €10 billion ($13 billion) loan the prospect of the euro zone’s first exit has receded. An agreement among euro-zone finance ministers to wind up Laiki Bank, Cyprus’s second-biggest bank, and restructure Bank of Cyprus, the largest lender on the island, undid the worst elements of the initial botched agreement. Savers with accounts below the €100,000 deposit-guarantee threshold will be spared. Losses will hit creditors of weak banks in line with the normal hierarchy: shareholders and junior bondholders first, followed by senior bondholders and uninsured depositors.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Draghi Wins Cyprus Chicken Game in Bailouts Test Run


By Jeff Black - Mar 26, 2013 3:42 PM GMT+0200
Mario Draghi’s brinkmanship has worked -- for now.
The European Central Bank’s ultimatum to Cyprus to commit to a 10 billion-euro ($12.9 billion) rescue showed Draghi playing a harder and more public game than in any bailout before. While that’s easy enough with a country like Cyprus, officials may shirk from such tactics with bigger nations, said economists from Citigroup Inc. to ABN Amro Bank NV.

Monday, March 25, 2013

Some facts about Cyprus crisis.

25-3-2013

From the press.
  • Total deposits in banks in Cyprus ~ 68 bn Euros

Cyprus Refuses to Learn From Its Mistakes


By HUGO DIXON | REUTERS
Published: March 24, 2013
The New York Times
Cyprus will pay dearly for its sins. The Mediterranean island has committed many follies over the years — and is still making mistakes.

The Cypriots always seem to overestimate their negotiating position. In recent years, their first big mistake was to reject in 2004 the U.N. plan for uniting their island. That irritated their E.U. partners, put Cyprus in a weak strategic position vis-à-vis Turkey and left a jagged scar across the island.

There’s a Reason for Deposit Insurance


By ROGER LOWENSTEIN
Published: March 23, 2013
The New York Times
  FOR all the criticism of bailouts since the financial crisis struck, virtually no one has suggested that depositors in banks be made to suffer along with their investors, employees and customers. Until this week, when the euro zone proposed that, in return for a bailout of the failing banking system in Cyprus, depositors pay a “tax” of 6.75 percent of their deposits — 9.9 percent for deposits above 100,000 euros.

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Anxious, angry Cypriots face uncertain future


By Karolina Tagaris and Costas Pitas
NICOSIA | Sun Mar 24, 2013 2:12pm EDT
(Reuters) - Dora Giorgali says she has to go back almost 40 years, when Cyprus was at war, to recall such a feeling of anxiety.

Cyprus seeks 11th-hour deal to avert meltdown


By Michele Kambas and Karolina Tagaris
NICOSIA | Sun Mar 24, 2013 5:14am EDT
(Reuters) - Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades was expected in Brussels on Sunday to seek an 11th-hour reprieve from financial meltdown, with a bailout from the European Union and the island's place in Europe's single currency bloc hanging in the balance.

Underlining the gravity of Cyprus' position, the EU's economic affairs chief said there were now "only hard choices left" for the latest casualty of the euro zone crisis.

Saturday, March 23, 2013

Cyprus weighs big bank levy; bailout goes down to wire


By Karolina Tagaris and Laura Noonan
NICOSIA | Sat Mar 23, 2013 4:34pm EDT
(Reuters) - Cyprus conceded on Saturday to a one-off levy on deposits over 100,000 euros in a dramatic U-turn as it raced to satisfy European partners and seal an 11th-hour bailout deal to avert financial collapse.

Friday, March 22, 2013

Opinion: Why the EU is right on Cyprus


Peter Gumbel
Reuters
5:52 a.m. CDT, March 22, 2013

The reaction to this weekend's European Union bailout deal for Cyprus has gone from initial shock to rather predictable condemnation. "Europe botches another rescue," ran the headline on an editorial in the Financial Times. "It's as if the Europeans are holding up a neon sign, written in Greek and Italian, saying ‘time to stage a run on your banks,' " Paul Krugman, the economist and New York Times columnist wrote on his blog.

Cyprus lawmakers work on economy-saving plan


By MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS, Associated Press – 2 minutes ago 
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) — Cypriot authorities were putting the final touches to a plan they hope will convince international lenders to provide the money the country needs to avoid bankruptcy within days.
As well as trying to forge an overall financing package, lawmakers were meeting to decide the fate of the country's second largest lender Laiki which was hardest hit from its exposure to bad Greek debt.

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Europe sets Cyprus bailout deadline, banks face cutoff


By Michele Kambas and Lidia Kelly
NICOSIA/MOSCOW | Thu Mar 21, 2013 5:32am EDT
(Reuters) - The European Central Bank gave Cyprus until Monday to raise billions of euros to clinch an international bailout or face losing emergency funds for its crippled banks and inevitable collapse.

The warning came with the island's leaders locked in talks on a "Plan B" to raise 5.8 billion euros demanded by the EU under a 10 billion euro ($13 billion) rescue, after angry lawmakers threw out a tax on deposits as "bank robbery".

Cyprus Is Drowning in an EU Spoon


The Wall Street Journal
U.S. bank bailouts have taken a beating. They were criticized for their excess, uneven distribution and preservation of a status quo that shortchanges the little guy in favor of "stability of the financial system" or, put another way, private gains and socialized losses.
And the bailouts do look pretty awful—until you compare them with what's happening in Europe.

Friday, January 4, 2013

Clock ticking for resolution of Greece's Postbank


By George Georgiopoulos
ATHENS | Fri Jan 4, 2013 6:44am EST
Jan 4 (Reuters) - Greek banks eyeing state-controlled Hellenic Postbank (TT) are expected to express initial interest by Friday, marking the next stage of the sector's consolidation designed to help cope with the debt crisis.