Duke of Marmalade
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Darag, I think you lost your way with this analogy. The correct analogy is that the bank are demanding back the mortgage. Maybe there is negative equity, maybe not. The value of the house is somewhat irrelevant as the person may be struggling but is fully confident of paying pack the mortgage over time.To use an analogy, what do you do with some-one who you suspect is deep in negative equity with their home and who is struggling to keep up with their mortgage payments who for some reason you cannot allow to go bankrupt? About the worst thing you could do would be to guarantee their liabilities unconditionaly allowing them to rack up extra loans and put new TVs and holidays on their credit-card.
As the parent of this person you have no problem telling the bank to back off and that you will guarantee the mortgage. The alternative is to see your son and grandchildren thrown out on the street. Chances are the guarantee will cost you nothing, bit of a no brainer to me. Of course you make absolutely sure your son does not abuse this lifeline, so let us see what terms and conditions the government sets.
Maybe I'm dumb, but why do the banks desperately need to start lending again? Don't they already make a profit on the massive amount of interest they currently collect?
They need to start borrowing again. Thats the problem
OK, but I assume that's borrowing so they can lend more money? If so, I do not understand how their business model doesn't support the idea of making money off their current loans.
I think doing the figures is important - I don't have enough information but here is my attempt ..... After doing those figures, I am not as worried about the system wide guarantee - It seems clear that the banks assets and liabilities are ok.
But when the developer can not repay the loan to the bank, if the bank can't repay the loan to the other bank, You and Me will be repaying the loan.
I think doing the figures is important - I don't have enough information but here is my attempt
Irish times quote
"The NTMA had calculated that the liabilities of the six banks amounted to €440 billion while their assets came to €520 billion. Expanding the scheme to cover foreign-owned banks would have an impact on the calculations and would only be taken after serious consideration, the Minister said.
"
520 Billion of assets
lets assume 90% of assets is is loan book = 468B loan book
70% of loan book is property ref post earlier in this thread = 326B Loans tied to property
To erase the 80B more assets than liability, 50% of these loans must turn bad, and the underlying properties on the bad loans would only have to sell for 50% of their value.
Even assuming the bank asset values are based on 2006, Regardless of how bad it gets it is hard to imagine this case - Remember also a good percentage of their loan book will still be in positive equity, being made pre 2005. so it seems they have more assets than liabilities and a cushion.
After doing those figures, I am not as worried about the system wide guarantee - It seems clear that the banks assets and liabilities are ok.
But, we might still get hit having to pay out on one bank, I don't have figures for each bank to take a look at each bank, and see what it might cost us.
WHY AREN'T THE BBA LOBBYING THE UK GOVERNMENT FOR A SIMILAR GUARANTEE, RATHER THAN COMPLAINING TO US POOR IRISH!!
Because, as has already been pointed out by some British commentators, the equivalent figure for London would be truly astronomical.
D.
He has to have that wrong. There is no way that the XYZ Bank will be allowed to dump all its toxic waste on the Irish taxpayer and continue with the rest of its profitable business. I presume the Irish taxpayer will only step in when XYZ Bank is unable to honour any guarantees on such packaging i.e. when it is insolvent or when all other avenues (mergers etc.) have failed.Banks will package toxic loans as asset-backed securities and sell them off with a Government guarantee, passing on their losses to the Irish taxpayer.
No it's not the correct analogy. The 100K depositor's guarantee stopped the flight of deposit money. The problem isn't that the (two) dodgy banks are being hounded to hand back what they've borrowed; it's because no-one will lend them a penny more more because of a justifiable fear that it cannot be paid back.Duke of Marmalade said:Darag, I think you lost your way with this analogy. The correct analogy is that the bank are demanding back the mortgage. Maybe there is negative equity, maybe not. The value of the house is somewhat irrelevant as the person may be struggling but is fully confident of paying pack the mortgage over time.
I couldn't have put it better myself, Compass.Is there not a wee problem here?
Does anyone really know to what extent the taxpayer is exposed - do the banks themselves know?
Have they been 'upfront and honest' to the Irish public and our politicians?
To the ordinary person this really looks like we are 'buying a pig in a poke'. It might work but it might not .. someway to run a country. A gamble, part of life, but is that not also part of the reason why this crisis arose in the first place. Doubles or quits!!
What are you :mad: about? At best we are looking at getting a member representing the government on the board. I didn't hear anything about the government taking any sort of executive role. And even if it wanted to where is the expertise going to come from to supervise every money market and bond market deal of six banks? Not to mention that most of these deals aren't even done in public markets and don't have standarised contracts. How the hell is the government going to vet every bond every bank sells? Are they going to hire an army of high-end financial legal people to examine the small print of every deal? There is absolutely nothing in the legislation that I know of that provides this sort of micro control to the government. It's the very first thing I'd do if I was a bank exec; i.e. get these rotten loans off my books at the expense of the Irish taxpayer.Professor Morgan Kelly (you know the guy that makes George Lee sound positive) writes as follows in today's IT:
He has to have that wrong. There is no way that the XYZ Bank will be allowed to dump all its toxic waste on the Irish taxpayer and continue with the rest of its profitable business. I presume the Irish taxpayer will only step in when XYZ Bank is unable to honour any guarantees on such packaging i.e. when it is insolvent or when all other avenues (mergers etc.) have failed.
Why does the good professor wish to grossly mislead like that?:mad:
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