Dr Strangelove
Registered User
- Messages
- 2,133
IIRC some >€100k Anglo depositors in the IBRC liquidation in 2013.Did any depositor lose anything?
IIRC some >€100k Anglo depositors in the IBRC liquidation in 2013.Did any depositor lose anything?
Sure. I don't actually have a strong view on whether bailing out the banks was the better call. My point is just that these are two very different calls.They weren't great options and avoiding the mess in the first place with better regulation would have been the better path not taken. But looking back and burning the bond holders feels a little bit like a Brexit moment i.e., short term gain (or rather respite) but at a cost of long term pain.
IIRC some >€100k Anglo depositors in the IBRC liquidation in 2013.
I had some old Irish Nationwide deposits with IBRC which were taken by one of the retail banks (I can’t remember which) in 2013.maybe AIB systems could not support.
So the state gave the money to the banks, who in turn gave it to the depositors.
So who was bailed out again?![]()
AIB and BOI were both toast in 2008.
And the State effectively went bust trying to save them.
Now factor in the near-decade of increased cost of state borrowing that resulted.The state made a profit on BoI as far as I can recall.
lot more to factor Than the high interest rates the state paid to service the money borrowedNow factor in the near-decade of increased cost of state borrowing that resulted.
The huge loss was Anglo followed by Irish Nationwide. These banks paid higher interest rates to depositors for the higher risk involved
The huge loss was Anglo followed by Irish Nationwide. These banks paid higher interest rates to depositors for the higher risk involved and these depositors should not have been bailed out.
Maybe these institutions should've been categorised as subprime deposit takers...I don't think there should be any question that deposit insurance should pay out in these circumstances.
I remember back a little more than 20 years ago being sent by work to an introductory course on the principles of investment. The lecturer at one point told us he didn't have a pension but instead invested himself. He brought in an AIB share cert and and BoI share cert. Even as a youngster with no investinf knowledge at all, I knew that was a terrible idea on at least two fronts.And we all assumed that 'Bank shares were as safe as houses!'
But deposits that were protected under the various schemes, should, and were, reimbursed. I don't think there should be any question that deposit insurance should pay out in these circumstances.