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http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/...e-operations-2568347.html
AIB, Bank of Ireland plan internal splits-report
| DUBLIN, March 7Mon Mar 7, 2011 4:13am EST
(Reuters) - Allied Irish Banks (ALBK.I) and Bank of Ireland (BKIR.I) have submitted plans to the central bank that would see their assets separated into core and non-core operations, the Irish Independent newspaper said on Monday.
Ireland has pledged to restructure and shrink its banking sector under an EU/IMF bailout deal to end the lenders' dependence on emergency funding from the European Central Bank and its own central bank.
Citing banking sources, the Irish Independent said there was no clarity on how the splits would be achieved or whether a new finance minister would request a change in strategy.
"We've submitted plans but talks are ongoing: absolutely nothing is set in stone yet," one source was quoted as saying.
A spokeswoman for AIB declined to comment. No one from Bank of Ireland was immediately available to comment.
The central bank is currently reviewing the sector as it conducts fresh tests on the lenders' capital and liquidity levels.
A new coalition government made up of the centre-right Fine Gael party and the centre-left Labour party will meet for the first time on Wednesday.
A source told Reuters on Sunday that Fine Gael's finance spokesman Michael Noonan would be appointed finance minister. [ID:nLDE72507J]
Fine Gael want Europe and the IMF to give Ireland's banks more time to offload non-core assets to avoid a fire-sale that would trigger more losses.
The new government has postponed injecting around 8 billion euros into AIB, Bank of Ireland and the EBS Building Society [EBSBS.UL] until after the stress tests are completed.
Ireland has already poured some 46 billion euros into its banks, whose reckless lending fuelled a property bubble that has brought the economy to its knees.
In an interview in January, the central bank governor Patrick Honohan told Reuters that Irish banks' capital requirements may rise once the stress tests are completed at the end of this month. [ID:nSLAPCE7NH]
(Reporting by Carmel Crimmins; editing by Sophie Walker)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/03/07/...ealEstateNews&rpc=43
AIB and Bank of Ireland have both submitted plans to the Central Bank that would see their assets separated into "core" and "non-core" operations, the Irish Independent has learned.
But banking sources last night insisted there was "no clarity" on exactly how the splits would be achieved and that the broad plans are subject to major change in light of the appointment of a new Finance Minister.
The news comes as both institutions continue to engage with the Central Bank on plans to scale back their operations so they are no longer reliant on massive levels of liquidity from the European Central Bank
The Central Bank is reviewing the banks' proposals with a view to making an announcement on the restructuring of Ireland's entire banking system at the end of March.
Any restructuring strategy must also have the agreement of the European Commission, the ECB, the International Monetary Fund, the Department of Finance and the National Treasury Management Agency.
"We've submitted plans, but talks are ongoing; absolutely nothing is set in stone yet," one banking source said.
Another pointed out that the appointment of a new Finance Minister could lead to a change in the restructuring strategies.
The plans submitted so far are understood to involve both major banks splitting their businesses into "core" and "non-core" portions.
The "non-core" portions could include entire businesses -- such as UK operations -- and could also include piles of loans in areas the banks are withdrawing from.
Those "non-core" assets would then be warehoused in a structure separate from the main Bank of Ireland and AIB groups, so that the banks would not have to sell them at fire-sale prices and endure a massive capital hit.
Sources said that "no decision" had been made on whether both AIB and Bank of Ireland would each have their own internal "bad banks" for the non-core assets, or whether there would be a sector-wide "bad bank" to mop up the non-core assets of several Irish banks.
Sources also said that the ownership structure for the non-core assets had not yet been worked out.
Banks in the UK, including Ulster Bank owner RBS, have set up their own internal bad banks so that the performance of loans from discontinued (and often troubled) areas can be stripped out from the performance of the surviving bank.
- Laura Noonan
Irish Independent
http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/...e-operations-2568347.html
, da sie die gleiche schicksal wie AIB erleiden wird!
mit sicherheit wird die bank den Streßtest nicht überstehen! mit der Außname : es wird zufällig im Keller bei BOI-Zentrale 10 Milliarden gefunden, die von der guten Zeiten gealagert wurden!
morgen gehen wir unter 30 cent..
bin selber hier investiert und inzwischen viel verloren. schade schade
Mir hat dieser Spass € 7000,- gekostet!
Für mich ist dieser Wert ausgebucht und vergessen................
Ich glaube, dass die BoI den Stresstest bestehen wird und als Gewinner aus der Krise hervorgehen wird. Darüberhinaus glaube ich nicht daran jemals den absoluten Tiefpunbkt einer Aktie erwischen zu können. Die Börse läuft halt nunmal langsam.
Von mir aus kanns gern nochmal 50% runtergehen, und dann schön langsam und kontinuierlich nach oben. Klar nerven die ups and downs aber was solls, ich glaub an das Invest und bleib dabei, bis zum bitteren Ende oder zur Großen Guinnes Party:-)
Bin ja auch gespannt was bei dem Stresstest rauskommt! Aber ganz so trostlos sehe ich die Situation nicht!
Mein Verlust ist derzeit höher! Und ich bleibe drin!
Im Gegenteil werde noch nachlegen!
bei AIB ging damals ganz schnell mit verstatlichung. innerhalb von 3 stunden wurde dies beschloßen incl. gerichtbeschluß!
nicht vergessen ,daß BOI mehr aktien (% fach) hat als AIB!
der kurs wir dann nicht bei 24 cent landen sondern tiefer!
ich weiß aber wirklich nicht wie tief runter gehen würde! kann einer von euch uns über solche szenarien erzählen?