Allied Irish Banks, AIB hilft sich selbst
Seite 29 von 95 Neuester Beitrag: 26.07.18 15:11 | ||||
Eröffnet am: | 17.03.10 12:41 | von: ExcessCash | Anzahl Beiträge: | 3.356 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 26.07.18 15:11 | von: rainharuto | Leser gesamt: | 675.065 |
Forum: | Börse | Leser heute: | 150 | |
Bewertet mit: | ||||
Seite: < 1 | ... | 26 | 27 | 28 | | 30 | 31 | 32 | ... 95 > |
http://www.insideireland.ie/index.cfm/section/...BoI007/category/1084
€12bn cash injection mooted for Irish banks
By Sharlene Goff, Retail Banking Correspondent
Published: November 24 2010 22:56 | Last updated: November 24 2010 22:56
Ireland’s three largest banks could receive an immediate cash injection of about €12bn (£10bn) from the government and be given access to a much larger pool of rescue funds, as they grapple to meet the tough new capital requirements that are expected to form part of Ireland’s bail-out package.
European authorities are still thrashing out the details of how much capital would be needed to lift the banks’ core tier one capital ratios to 12 per cent – the likely new level under the terms of the rescue package.
The capital injection could push the Irish government’s stake in Bank of Ireland up from 36 per cent to more than 80 per cent and effectively nationalise AIB.
The big banks will have a large safety net of contingent capital to fall back on should further losses on loans push their core Tier 1 capital levels below a minimum of 10.5 per cent.
The measures – together with a tough programme of forced asset sales – will form a three-pronged approach to recapitalise the banks, ensure there is sufficient capital to absorb future losses and shrink their balance sheets.
While the Irish government is thought to be reluctant to set a ceiling on how much of the expected €85bn of rescue funds could be used to cover future losses at the banks, analysts believe further writedowns may not be as severe as feared. Once the transfer of commercial loans to Nama, Ireland’s “bad bank”, has been completed, domestic Irish lenders would hold about €300m of gross loans.
While average writedowns on Nama loans have been more than 50 per cent, one analyst expected losses on the remaining loans – which include mortgages and corporate lending – to be much less.
A bigger problem could be finding buyers for the banks’ assets to enable them to shrink their balance sheets. As a condition of the bail-out they are expected to have to scale down their loan-to-deposit ratios from about 150-160 per cent to 110-120 per cent.
As they have already sold subsidiary businesses, the banks will now have to take the axe to their principal loan books. The government is expected to offer buyers some insurance to cover future losses on loans and may look to strip out the most toxic loans from saleable businesses such as AIB’s UK arm to encourage buyers.
http://us.rd.yahoo.com/finance/news/rss/story/...44feab49a,s01=1.html
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2010/...224284098806.html
Heisst das nun, dass der Staat sich mit den 0,1% offen hält seine shares nach einem gewissen Zeitraum wieder mit Gewinn zu verkaufen?
Deshalb keine 100%-ige Verstaatlichung?
Alleine über die angekündigte Kapitalerhöhung ist eine Staatsquote von 99,9% (#703) nicht zu erreichen. 95% dagegen schon. Damit wäre - vermutlich auch nach Irischem Aktienrecht - ein squeeze out der Minderheitsaktionäre möglich.
Ich sehe nur nicht, warum Irland das tun sollte, ...gehe weiter davon aus, dass wir bis auf ca 5% verwässert werden.
0,35
Möglich zb. auch, dass die weiteren [staatlichen] Aktien zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt vernichtet werden, wenn AIB dann doch diese Beteiligungen verticken kann und den Erlös zum Rückkauf der staatlichen Anteile nutzt.
Allerdings alles Spekulatius....
Aktien bleiben attraktiv, dank Irland-Hilfen.
Hat das Auswirkungen auf AIB oder ist das "Kosmetik" zur Beruhigung der Märkte?
http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/frontpage/...5/1224284101416.html
Hast du auch Daten, wie und wann die Kapitalerhöhung durchgeführt werden soll ?
Shareholder dilution
“While shareholders would still get diluted, AIB could avoid being nationalised, which would potentially benefit investors” as the shares would still have some value and be tradable, Oliver Gilvarry, head of research at Dolmen Securities in Dublin, said in a telephone interview.
Bank of Ireland shares fell 4.3pc to 24.5 cents. The five-member ISEQ Financial Index has fallen about 98pc from its peak in February 2007.
The Government will seek to raise banks’ core Tier 1 capital ratio, a measure of financial strength, to between 10.5pc and 12pc, up from the central bank’s 8pc target, two people familiar with the situation said November 24.
Allied Irish Bank would require an additional €3bn to the €6.6bn fundraising the Government is already underwriting to meet the 12pc target, Niall O’Connor, a London-based analyst with Credit Suisse, said in a note to clients yesterday.
The Government’s AIB stake would rise to as much as 97pc from 19pc today, he said.
Forcing losses on senior bondholders “sets a nasty,” if understandable, “precedent,” Marc Ostwald, a strategist at Monument Securities in London, said in a note today.
“The constant ‘goal-post moving’ in terms of regulation” does “enormous damage to investor and entrepreneurial confidence.”
http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/...amid-bailout-2437617.html
http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-11-26/...ubordinated-bonds.html
http://www.finanznachrichten.de/...tpapiere-new-instruments-2-029.htm
Könnte das heißen, dass AIB überlebt oder ist das eher zufällig ?
http://www.ad-hoc-news.de/...-irische-banken-herab--/de/News/21750101
http://wirtschaft.t-online.de/...en-d-mark-alptraum/id_43568752/index
http://www.abendblatt.de/politik/article1710115/...lliarden-Euro.html