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Group of 20 leaders discussed Ireland’s debt crisis, which has driven bond yields to records and weakened the euro on concern the European Union will need to step in with a bailout. Finance ministers from Germany, France and the U.K. are monitoring developments and will probably issue a joint statement later today, said Steffen Seibert, a spokesman for German Chancellor Angela Merkel. G-20 leaders spent a considerable time discussing Europe’s debt woes, said a U.S. official who participated in the meetings in Seoul and spoke to White House reporters on condition of anonymity. Full Story
I would think that santander would look forward in 2/3 years time Ireland will get back up and runing and all todays problems will be history, What better time to pick up a bargin than at presant
Would Santander really want to be entering Ireland as all these austerity cuts are being made, do you think it would be a very smart move on there behalf? with years upon years of loss's to look foward to? I dont know im only guessing that it wouldnt be a great move untill at least they know that there is no IMF comming in.
In my humble opinion this bank is ripe for a takeover bid very soon,Santander is expanding all over europe and what better oppertuinty for them than to pick up whats left of AIB, No problems with the competitions commissions as thy would only be to glad to see competition with the only bank that looks like staying out of full state control BOI and for santander a foot in the irish market,
Yep,we all have to wait until the irish government sort out this mess. Looking on the bright side, you only make the loss when you cash the shares in so up till now our loss is just a paper loss!!!! (still hurts though).
i thought i was in the minority but feel much better now thanks all! we have to sit this out and wait... got to be some upside from here over the next few months.. look what happened last year.. good luck all.
She is falling again, down 10% today so far, it will be like this untill the Budgit gets passed, and the rights are annonoced, it will be a tough few weeks.
Mine isn't much better. All we can do is sit on this investment and wait until it all comes good again; and it will, given time.
My average is 2.50euro with 5000 shares enough said I even think that I burnt the Certificate,
Just bought in here thats all, took a massive hit with YELL, pumped all I had left in here yesterday so obviously my av is low (0.35). I have done a lot of research and genuinely think this is the best share around for growth potential from its present position. Hope u get your averages back, i reckon it could treble quite easily in the next few months.
I´m sitting at 1.50€ ave. Took as high as 2.55€ and as low as 0.82€. could have bought more at 0.28€ but who the hell knew it was going to bounce up 32% in one day. This share is like the Irish. Mad !!
1.71 euro! im past caring... what about you?
What are peoples averages on this share out of curiosity??
0.38 Euros on it's way to 0.50 at last
No news on the rights yet, are they still going ahead with the 0.5 per share, if so it would be a great time to get in but if they changed it?? then it might not be a great time to get in, yesterday afternoon was the time to get in on this, I had my finger on the buy button but chickened out, but watching it for the right moment, 1.08 in the US at the moment, and went down to 0.76 then bounced on support and up like a rocket, maby we will have a run up to the rights?? Not sure with this rollercoster
...that has risen over 30% today, its sure quiet here. 0.6 Euro by the end of the week!!
having sunk about 40 grand in these from 3 euros all the way down, im still scared to buy any more... lets all hope this is the bottom...!!! anyone buying in?
...by the end of the week!!!
0.31 Euros At last on the way up.
Would be great to see a steady rise but not likely at present. If the Govt go ahead with 50c RI and the budget passes with easing of bond pressure this could trade between 40-60c over next few months. Worth holding on now if in deep
She is up 14% in the US, maby this will be the start of a we rise, GL all
Nov. 8, 2010, 10:15 a.m. EST AIB - NAMA Loans DUBLIN, IRELAND, Nov 08, 2010 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- DUBLIN, Ireland (8 November 2010) - Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c. ("AIB") (AIB 0.85, +0.02, +2.82%) announces that it has transferred loans for a further 20 customers to NAMA totalling EUR3.2bn. As previously stated, NAMA has estimated the overall discount to be applied to the remaining c.EUR13.5bn of loans to transfer to NAMA, by year end, including these loans, at 60%. AIB has agreed with NAMA that the final tranche can complete on a phased basis. This transfer is part of the final tranche of EUR13.5bn of loans that are intended to transfer to NAMA. [HUG#1460160] This announcement is distributed by Thomson Reuters on behalf of Thomson Reuters clients. The owner of this announcement warrants that: (i) the releases contained herein are protected by copyright and other applicable laws; and (ii) they are solely responsible for the content, accuracy and originality of the information contained therein. Source: Allied Irish Banks, p.l.c. via Thomson Reuters ONE
We just bounced of 0.76 on the NYSE, then she went up to 0.87 thats the last line of support, hopefully we get some clarity from Ollie Rein today and maby this will be the end of the drop, who nos we might even finish in the green for a rare day.
Sovereign bond crisis takes huge toll on banks INBS facing UK challenge in row on subordinated debt payment SHAREPRINTEMAILTEXT SIZE NORMALLARGEEXTRA LARGE Also in Irish McInerney pleads for further court protection €35m hike in airport fees to impact cuts at Aer Lingus Ulster Bank writedown of £1bn in latest quarter Appleby set to probe Pierse after collapse of builder Rapid growth at Zurich slows in third quarter Irish Home By Donal O'Donovan, Laura Noonan and Emmet Oliver Saturday November 06 2010 Bank shares plunged as much as 20pc last night as the sovereign bond crisis took its toll on Ireland's leading banking stocks. Government bonds remain firmly in danger territory even after Finance Minister Brian Lenihan's announcement of €6bn of cuts for next year. Irish Nationwide, meanwhile, is being sued in a British court over attempts not to honour the face value of subordinated debt. AIB shares fell to an all-time low of just under 27c last night, losing 12pc of their value in a brutal day's trading. AIB shares have dropped more than 40pc in the past month. Some investors have expressed concern about a fresh stress test being done at the bank. The fall increases the gulf between AIB's 27c share price and the State's commitment to buy new AIB shares as 50c each later in the month. Shares in bancassurer IL&P saw the sharpest fall yesterday, down almost 20pc at the close. It left the bank's shares at a level not seen since the dark days of April 2009. Bank of Ireland's stock also slumped to its lowest since April 2009, closing down more than 11pc at just under 44c. The fall means the shares are now trading 35pc lower than they were a month ago. The yield on Irish 10-year government bonds steadied over the course of yesterday to settle around 7.6pc. It is the first sign of stability for close to two weeks, even if the yield remains in the danger zone. The difficult picture complicates fundraising efforts for a number of state bodies. The National Asset Management Agency has plans to issue a €2.5bn bond in the fourth quarter, but the agency may hold off issuance unless the climate improves. Bonds from Bord Gais and ESB are also believed to have been hit due to sovereign concerns and ratings downgrades. Padhraic Garvey of ING Bank said the bonds were steadier after net buying overtook net selling for the first time since the recent crisis began. While he had heard from other lenders of the European Central Bank buying Irish bonds yesterday, he had seen no evidence of it himself. He said the volume of trading in the bonds had been light. Mr Garvey said private sector investors bought Irish and Portuguese bonds yesterday. He said the buyers were not necessarily long-term holders but trading accounts that think the markets have over-sold peripheral bonds. Ploy Mr Garvey said the key to bringing down the cost of government debt would be hard numbers on the economy. Me
If this bank goes bankrupt, remember what happened after Leeman brothers, there is very little chance of them letting that happen again, all the Billions that have been pumped in will have been in vane, the Euro will fail and we will be going back to the dark ages, no I dont think that will happen, the fools will just have to give the market the information that its asking for and renew the bank Guarrentee. sooner rather than later.