Brendan Burgess
Founder
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The government guarantee runs out in September (?) 2010. Let us say that Anglo is insolvent at that stage.
1) Presumably short term depositors will have taken out their money well before the guarantee expires. As they withdraw the money, the government will have to pump in cash to repay them.
2) If someone has a long-term deposit with Anglo which cannot be cashed before the guarantee expires, they would be covered by the government €100k guarantee I presume?
3) What is the order of priority after that?
Carramore said in another thread:
Assets
Loans to customers: €72 billion
Loans to banks: €14 billion
Bonds : €8 billion
Total assets: €94 billion
Liabilities
Deposits from customers: €50 billion
Deposits from banks : €20 billion
Debt securities: €17 billion
Subordinated Liabilities : €5 billion
Where will the government's €1.5 billion rank?
It seems that the Debt securities and Subordinated Liabilities all mature beyond September 2010, so they are in effect, not guaranteed.
1) Presumably short term depositors will have taken out their money well before the guarantee expires. As they withdraw the money, the government will have to pump in cash to repay them.
2) If someone has a long-term deposit with Anglo which cannot be cashed before the guarantee expires, they would be covered by the government €100k guarantee I presume?
3) What is the order of priority after that?
Carramore said in another thread:
Here is a summary of the main items in the balance sheet as of 30th SeptemberOne alternative was to leave the bank stew, to let it burn through shareholers' funds, then to let it burn through the €4.9 billion of subordinated loans, which I understand are NOT covered by the government's guarantee scheme, and only then would the government have to put money in. In this scenario, the government would have the consolation of having the shareholders and subordinated note/ bond holders taking the pain first, before it got caught on the hook. ... If the bank were by any change to survive untill after the expiry of the guarantee period, it could then let the holders of debt securities (over €17 billion of them) go down before putting any depositors at risk.
Assets
Loans to customers: €72 billion
Loans to banks: €14 billion
Bonds : €8 billion
Total assets: €94 billion
Liabilities
Deposits from customers: €50 billion
Deposits from banks : €20 billion
Debt securities: €17 billion
Subordinated Liabilities : €5 billion
Where will the government's €1.5 billion rank?
It seems that the Debt securities and Subordinated Liabilities all mature beyond September 2010, so they are in effect, not guaranteed.