Showing posts with label irish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label irish. Show all posts

Thursday, June 7, 2012

NEWS, 07.06.2012.

Greece pressured to close down banks

The European Commission is pressing Greece to wind down certain banks, possibly including its fifth-largest lender ATEbank, EU sources said.Although it is the responsibility of Greece's central bank to close a struggling lender, the EU's executive also has a say under state-aid rules, which allow it to refuse a request to rescue a bank if the Commission considers it too costly to save - effectively forcing the bank to be wound up.Throughout the crisis, the Commission has rarely used the full extent of its state-aid powers and few European banks have been closed. If it were to use them in Greece, it would mark a more aggressive stance in tackling weak European banks at the heart of the crisis. It could use the same powers to wind up banks in Spain and Portugal, one of the sources said."We are moving into a new phase with Greece, Portugal and Spain," said one of the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter. "Some banks are going to be squeezed. Some are going to be closed down."It is always a balance," the source said, explaining that if a bank is central to a country's financial stability it might need rescuing, but otherwise it may have to be let go."If you have a financial stability component, then you could be prepared to rescue a bank, but we are beyond that point now in a number of countries," the official said. "ATEbank will have to be closed or wound down over time."ATEbank, the Greek central bank and the Greek finance ministry all declined to comment. ATEbank management has in the past proposed merging all state-controlled banks, including the Hellenic Postbank, into one.If ATEbank were shuttered, meanwhile, it would not mean that the whole of Greece's banking system was collapsing. Other key Greek banks are not the same danger and could benefit from any refocused capital.No decision will be taken until after Greece holds elections on June 17. The outcome of the vote, which polls suggest could be won by a far-left coalition opposed to Greece's EU/IMF bailout, could fundamentally change Greece's ties to the EU.Last month, Greece's four biggest banks, National Bank , Alpha, Eurobank and Piraeus Bank , received 18 billion euros in capital under the joint EU/IMF bailout, a 130-billion-euro programme that involved writing down the value of Greece's privately-owned debt, including sovereign bonds held by Greek banks.ATEbank, a state-owned agricultural lender founded in 1929, did not get money under the bailout after failing to present a plan for its own longer-term commercial viability and is now the focus of concern, the sources said.The Greek authorities have started to make early preparations to wind down ATEbank, a process of liquidation that would not mean immediate closure but which is expected to begin in the second half of the year, one of the sources said.A Greek government source said shutting down the bank was a likely scenario, but reiterated the importance of the elections and said it would be some time before a decision was taken.A spokesman for Joaquin Almunia, the EU's competition commissioner, said a restructuring plan for ATEbank, approved last year, envisaged further steps to restore the bank to health. This could include recapitalisation measures."We expect new aid measures to be notified to the Commission. When this is the case we will assess the situation of the bank," the spokesman said.Under any winding up, depositors, who had more than 17 billion euros at the bank as of September last year, would be protected by the country's deposit guarantee scheme, which protects the first 100,000 euros of any deposit.The resources to pay for the winding down, which could include setting up a bad bank for risky loans, would come from the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund, at least in part. The Hellenic Stability Fund was set up in July 2010 to help restabilise Greece's banking system.Any closure of a bank in Greece, whose future could determine the survival of the euro, would be highly sensitive. None of the country's major banks were wound up in the crisis.But officials believe the money left in the country's aid programme - around 7 billion euros currently, with the possibility of 25 billion more from the EU/IMF bailout funds - is insufficient to recapitalise all banks and that some must be sacrificed to secure the most important lenders.Dire situation Greek banks suffered heavy losses on the government bonds they own when the country negotiated a writedown of its debt, known as private sector involvement (PSI), earlier this year."This is such a dire situation," said another source. "PSI left Greek banks with huge writedowns and many have negative capital as a result. We cannot recapitalise all the banks."Some in the Greek administration fear that closing a bank could send an unwelcome signal."At this particular moment, you have the issue that the closing of a bank can trigger higher depression because of the perception," said one Greek official. "They are going to create even more destabilisation in the economy."ATEbank, which failed a pan-European stress test last July, had customer loans of more than 20 billion euros in September 2011, the most recent records available. The bank, which expanded beyond its agricultural roots into mainstream commercial banking between 2000 and 2009, racked up heavy losses on bad loans to farmers and consumers and suffered a large writedown in the value of its Greek government bond holdings.In the absence of a pan-EU framework to wind down banks, the Commission's power under the state-aid regime, has made it the bloc's de facto resolution authority for troubled lenders.Winding up a bank in Greece would be left chiefly to the country's central bank and the European Central Bank.While the United States has closed hundreds of banks since the subprime mortgage crisis, European countries have been reluctant but there has been a gradual shift in this thinking."In Europe, weak banks one way or another have been taken over by bigger banks," said a central bank source."However, I think there are some cases where this is difficult because the condition of the banks is such that it doesn't make sense to keep the bank alive."Ireland's Anglo Irish Bank and Germany's WestLB are among the rare examples of banks that were shuttered in the crisis. Denmark also closed a number of small lenders.

 

UK retail bosses take bonus cuts

 

The chief executives of major British retailers J Sainsbury and Marks & Spencer have both taken cuts in their bonuses after failing to meet targets and as recession forces them to scale back growth plans.Philip Clarke, head of rival Tesco, last month forewent his annual bonus, paying the price for a weak performance in the UK and heading off an outcry by investors increasingly critical of excessive executive pay.Marks & Spencer's (M&S) annual report published yesterday showed that Chief Executive Marc Bolland has taken the biggest pay cut to date among Britain's leading retailers.M&S, Britain's biggest clothing retailer, said Bolland's total pay and bonus package of just under 1.7 million pounds ($2.6 million) last year was over 60% below the 4.4 million pounds he received the year before.On top of a basic salary of 975,000 pounds, pension contributions and perks such as a car and driver, Bolland received a bonus of 663,000 pounds last year which was roughly a third of his full entitlement of up to 200% of salary.Sixty% of his full bonus entitlement is dependent on profit before tax and he received nothing in relation to this performance measure after a 1.2% drop - the first fall in three years.The cut comes amidst a round of high profile shareholder revolts overexecutive pay at companies like Barclays, Inmarsat and Prudential in a phenomenon dubbed the "shareholder spring".Investor resistance to big pay rises at underperforming firms have also led some executives such as Aviva boss Andrew Moss, and Sly Bailey, head of newspaper group Trinity Mirror, to quit.Even at companies managing to outperform some executives have chosen to err on the side of caution.Sainsbury said Chief Executive Justin King had taken a 9% cut in his overall package, despite the fact Britain's No.3 grocer last month posted 7% rise in full-year profit that came in at the top end of expectations.King's basic salary rose to 920,000 pounds from 900,000 a year earlier but his annual cash bonus, share awards and long-term incentive plan all received haircuts, reducing his total package to just under 3.4 million pounds from 3.7 million a year ago.King had been entitled to a cash bonus of up to 125% of salary but received 55.9% after the remuneration committee at Sainsbury judged that while profit came in on target, sales had been "below threshold".Many of Britain's retailers are struggling as shoppers grapple with higher prices, muted wage growth and government cutbacks; with confidence further undermined by worries over job security, a shaky housing market and the euro zone crisis.

Friday, June 1, 2012

NEWS, 01.06.2012.

Irish say yes to EU pact, now seek EU growth deal

 

Ireland's voters have agreed to ratify the European Union's deficit-fighting treaty with a resounding 60.3 percent "yes," vote final referendum results Friday showed, but government leaders and pro-treaty campaigners alike expressed relief rather than joy because of the stark economic challenges ahead.The treaty's approval, after weeks of nervousness in Dublin and Brussels, relieves some pressure on EU financial chiefs as they battle to contain the eurozone's debt crisis. But critics said the tougher deficit rules would do nothing to stimulate desperately needed growth in bailed-out Ireland, Portugal and Greece, nor stop Spain or Italy from requiring aid too.And a stern-faced Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny agreed, stressing in his victory speech that Ireland's decision would strengthen his hand as he seeks, with many other European nations, to shift Germany in its stubborn resistance to more aggressive measures to boost growth through government spending."I have consistently argued that budget rules alone will not be enough to overcome the economic crisis that faces Europe. They must go hand in hand with a real and concrete growth program for Europe," Kenny said in a nationally televised press conference on the steps of his central Dublin office.Kenny said EU and European Central Bank chiefs must agree on a European-wide new system for managing the toxic banking debts that brought Ireland to the edge of bankruptcy in 2010 and now threaten to do the same to Spain. Ireland long has pressed EU partners, particularly Germany, in vain to permit partial writedowns of Irish banking debts that could ultimately cost Irish taxpayers an estimated (EURO)68 billion ($85 billion) and have already given Ireland the worst deficits in Europe.Kenny later spoke with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Europe's leading champion of austerity. Merkel welcomed Ireland's willingness to vote yes to more cuts as an outcome that "deserves particular recognition and respect." And she mirrored Kenny's call for new growth initiatives, saying debt and deficit reduction "must go hand in hand with the strengthening of forces for growth and competitiveness in the economies of the eurozone. "German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said all EU nations should follow Ireland's example and speedily ratify the treaty, which 25 nations signed in February and which is supposed to come into force by early 2013."The fiscal compact stands for long-term financial policy good sense. If all of Europe decisively commits itself to this course, we will be rewarded with new confidence," he said.The result of Thursday's referendum represented a surprisingly strong victory for Kenny, who courted unpopularity by insisting that Ireland already four years into a brutal austerity program that has slashed 15 percent from many workers' incomes had no choice but to vote in support of yet more cuts and tax hikes.And when the official result was announced in Dublin Castle, victorious campaign officials engaged in none of the cheers, shouts and hugs normally associated with the occasion."There was nobody from the `yes' camp jumping up and down," observed Gerry Adams, leader of the Irish nationalist Sinn Fein party, which campaigned against the deal.Government ministers emphasized that voters' anxiety about the parlous state of the economy with unemployment stuck on 14.3 percent and hundreds of thousands of households trapped in negative equity colored their every step on the campaign trail."The astonishing thing about this campaign was that lots of people voted yes with a heavy heart, and many voted no with a heavy heart. Both sides were really concerned about growth and employment," said Ireland's minister for social protection, Joan Burton, who has overseen cuts in many welfare payments.
Overall, about half of Ireland's 3.13 million registered voters participated in Thursday's referendum, a typical turnout in an officially neutral country that is constitutionally required to hold a referendum on each European treaty.Public rejection could have blocked Ireland from receiving new EU loans once its 2010 bailout money runs out next year. It also would have sent political shockwaves through other eurozone members, where anger against austerity and bank bailouts runs similarly high but citizens are denied the chance to vote on the treaty. The other 24 signatories are ratifying it through their parliaments.During the campaign, Kenny warned that rejection would mean even worse austerity, because Ireland would suffer more credit downgrades and lose its key EU source of funding.The treaty proposes that all members who ratify it should reduce their annual deficits to no more than 0.5 percent of gross domestic product. The current eurozone limit is 3 percent of GDP. Ireland is committed to cutting its way back to that level by 2015.Opponents of the treaty argued that the new 0.5 percent deficit limit would force Ireland to keep cutting until perhaps 2020, when greater state investment to stimulate the economy was required. The government countered that much would depend on whether Ireland could keep growing its economy against the tide of austerity.Ireland, unlike much of Europe, has recorded a faint pulse of growth over the past year thanks to strong exports by nearly 1,000 foreign high-tech companies based in Ireland. But the domestic economy  with consumers reducing their own debts and salting away savings after a decade of Celtic Tiger extravagance  has shrunk for four straight years.Ireland has posted the EU's worst deficits since 2009, including an EU-record 32.4 percent in 2010 and 13.1 percent last year. Both figures were greatly inflated by the exceptional costs of Ireland's decision to nationalize five of its six banks rather than see any collapse. That debt burden overwhelmed Ireland's national finances and pushed the nation into the bailout zone in 2010. Ireland's expected repayments to international bondholders and central banks, plus decades of related interest charges, represent (EURO)19,000 ($23,500) for every man, woman and child.