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Bank of Ireland to join NAMA scheme

Mon, 30th Nov 2009 08:32

Bank of Ireland is to join the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA) asset acquisition programme.The bank’s announcement follows hot on the heels of a similar announcement on Monday by its fellow Irish bank, Allied Irish Banks (AIB).As with AIB, the size of Bank of Ireland’s participation in the programme has yet to be determined, but the company said the portfolio of potential eligible bank assets to be transferred could comprise a gross book portfolio of around €16bn.The price paid by NAMA for any acquisitions transferred will be somewhere between the market price and the long-term economic value, with the latter being defined as an amount that could be realised in a post-crisis stable environment.The Minister for Finance has provided guidance that an average industry discount of 30% to the gross value of the NAMA assets could be applied, but this has not been guaranteed.A 30% ‘haircut’ on €16bn of assets would have the following effect on the bank’s ratios:Tier 1: reduces from 6.6% to 4.2%Core tier 1: reduced from 10.1% to 8.3%Total tier 1: reduced from 11% to 9.5%.Bank of Ireland will receive bonds equal in value to the purchase price of the assets, and will have the ability to use these as collateral to raise liquidity from monetary authorities.Once the assets have been transferred there will be a loss of income but the bank expects this will be partially offset by the interest the company will receive from the bonds issued to it by NAMA, although the interest rates on these securities is not yet known.Shareholders will get to vote on the bank’s participation in the scheme some time in early January 2010.
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18 Sep 2009 06:17

Friday newspaper round-up: Lloyds Banking, BSkyB, African Minerals

Lloyds Banking Group has been forced to abandon its plan to withdraw from the Government's toxic debt insurance scheme after failing to raise enough capital to meet the Financial Services Authority's strict requirements. The decision dashes the hopes of Eric Daniels, chief executive, who wanted a w

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19 Aug 2009 11:41

Former bank bosses rehired

Banks have lost tens of billions of pounds over the past few years, so it's perhaps a little surprising that men held responsible for the credit crunch have found gainful employment at some of Britain's biggest companies. Back in May, Richard Burrows apologised for Bank of Ireland's £6.2bn full-yea

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3 Jul 2009 17:12

London close: Stocks tread water

A late swoon saw Footsie relinquish virtually all of its gains, with losses on resource stocks counter-balancing gains made by banks. Barclays, Royal Bank of Scotland, HSBC and Lloyds Banking were the pick of the banking sector, despite chancellor Alistair Darling firing a warning about the re-eme

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3 Jul 2009 14:30

London afternoon: Banks lead the fight back

Share prices are creeping higher after yesterday's heavy falls, with banking stocks leading the fight back. Barclays, HSBA and Lloyds Banking lead the banking sector higher while insurers such as Aviva and Legal & General are also wanted. An exception to the general strength of insurers is Friends

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3 Jul 2009 12:02

London midday: Shares remain dull

Trading remains quiet in London, today after yesterday's excitement following dismal US unemployment figures. Friends Provident is the worst performing blue-chip as the market adjusts its share price to take account the demerger of its 52% stake in F&C Asset Management. Resource stocks are friendl

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3 Jul 2009 08:49

London open: Blue chips shrug off Wall St woes

London has shrugged off last night's collapse on Wall Street to trade higher in the absence of traders in the US, closed for Independence Day on Friday. The Dow Jones slumped more than 200 points Thursday as the market reacted badly to awful jobs data. Banks are a strong spot, despite chancellor A

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3 Jul 2009 07:38

London pre-open: Early buying forecast

London is promising to shrug off last night's collapse on Wall Street to trade higher in the absence of traders in the US, closed for Independence Day on Friday. The Dow Jones slumped more than 200 points Thursday as the market reacted badly to awful jobs data. The FTSE 100 is seen up about 8 point

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3 Jul 2009 07:19

Bank of Ireland under intense pressure

Ireland's premier bank, Bank of Ireland, has warned it is facing a squeeze on profit margins in addition to the huge impairment charges it will take this year and next. "Demand for new lending remains muted and the lower interest rate environment together with the impact on deposit pricing of more

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19 May 2009 09:34

Bank of Ireland chairman resigns, debt buyback

Bank of Ireland chairman Richard Burrows stepped down today after the bank slumped into losses for the year due to an increase in writedowns But shares moved ahead on a buyback programme, which will boost Tier 1 capital. The bank will purchase €1.4bn out of €3bn of debt. The group swung into loss

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