Tag Archives: AIB

Stephen Donnelly tackles the payment today of €1.5 billion to unsecured, ‘unguaranteed’ AIB bondholders, in a statement today.

“Today, while rural schools are threatened with the loss of teachers and new figures reveal that 200,000 children in Ireland are living in poverty, €1.5 billion will be paid over to anonymous, unsecured, unguaranteed senior bondholders at AIB.

That’s €1,100 per household in the country – or 11 times the Household Charge. And the real tragedy is, this isn’t even ‘news’.

Think of the acres of coverage given to the Household Charge. And yet there’s been hardly a murmur about this €1.5 billion bond payment. Why? Because many in the media have clearly accepted that this government is going to pay back debts that we don’t owe.

This government came in on a wave of promises to negotiate hard to get write downs on this debt. They had a mandate from the people to do so. Major capitalists, like George Soros, said the bond holders should take losses. The IMF has said unsecured bondholders could take losses. But the government’s negotiating strategy, instead, has been to do whatever the ECB and the bondholders wanted.

Some believe that we are liable to pay these bonds because AIB is a state-owned bank. However, these are debts incurred by professional investors which have no sovereign guarantee and which occurred before the state took control of the bank. Therefore we have no moral obligation to pay them whatsoever.

Not only has the government not sought to negotiate with the bondholders, it has not even tried to find out who they are. The Minister for Finance, Michael Noonan, confirmed to me that they have not sought to identify the bondholders, yet in opposition not only did he demand their identity but he provided the late Brian Lenihan with the website where the bondholder information could be found.

The Government said its negotiating strategy had moved on to the promissory notes. But a substantive deal on promissory notes hasn’t happened – all we got was a one-year deferral that’s going to cost us an additional €90 million.

AIB has been recapitalised by the citizens of this country to the tune of €20.7 billion. We own 98.8% of it. Without our aid, AIB would be bust. AIB got to this point because it pursued a reckless lending strategy. Its bondholders facilitated that – they lent recklessly to AIB. And yet those bondholders have taken no losses on those bonds, and the Government – this one and the last – has consistently boasted that no bondholders would be burnt.

Whilst accepting that there are no easy decisions on this issue, and that the ECB is applying very significant pressure for Irish citizens to cover the losses of private investors, it is galling that this bond is being paid, and it is a tragedy that the media seems so reconciled to the fact that it is being paid.

It may not be feasible to renegotiate today’s bond payment, but a focus on it, and on the immorality of these anonymous, unguaranteed bondholders being paid billions at the expense of the Irish people, could at least lay the ground for some genuine, hard negotiations prior to the next bond payment due.”

Another month.

Another unsecured, ‘unguaranteed’ bondholder payment.

From Nama Wine Lake:

Who: AIB, which is 99.8% owned by the State and which has so far cost €20.7bn to bailout

How much: €1,500,000,000 (€1,500m or €1.5bn)

When: tomorrow, 11th April 2012

What: “Unsecured”, that is, not secured against specific assets, “unguaranteed”, that is not covered by the September 2008 guarantee or its extensions.

Just Another Day In the Irish Economy As €1.5bn is Paid Over By State-Owned Bank To Unsecured, Unguaranteed Bondholders (Nama Wine Lake)

Related: Social Justice Ireland Says 700,000 People Are living In Poverty In Ireland (RTE)

AIB says 40 per cent of its customers will still qualify for free banking.

Which means  60% will no longer qualify for free banking.

Which (we assume) means most of its current account holders have less than €2,500 in credit to their names on any given month.

Is this a cause for concern?

And where should Ewok go or free banking now?

Meanwhile:

 

 AIB Changes ‘Free Banking’ Rules (Ciara O’Brien, Irish Times)

Shedding a little more light on the bailed-out, failed-ass, employee-shedding mess that is AIB, the Irish Times’ Simon Carswell has seen a series of reports that reveal nothing less than Anglo’s ugly sister:

“The spoils of the property market lured the mighty AIB into a heavy concentration that felled it.The loan book increased by €76 billion between 2002 and 2008, when the percentage of property loans as a proportion of overall loans went from 18 per cent to 37 per cent.”‬

And there’s more.

Property’s spoils ruined mighty AIB (Simon Carswell, Irish Times)

(Photocall Ireland)

“In the excellent film ‘Senna’, the documentary currently showing in cinemas on the life of the Brazilian racing driver, there is a scene where suddenly a new racing car comes on the circuit that starts winning everything.

Senna, like all the racing drivers, becomes obsessed and wants the same technology as this car so he too can burn up the track.

“The scene could be a metaphor for what happened in Irish banking. Everybody, or most at least, in Irish banking sought to ‘out-Anglo’ and the carnage at the end has not, metaphorically, been much different to what happens at the end of the Senna documentary.”

Executive chairman of Allied Irish Banks, David Hodgkinson, at the MacGill Summer School yesterday.

Ayrton Senna: A phenomenally gifted driver who drew millions of new fans to Formula One. Considered a saint in his native Brazil he fought with officials throughout his career for tougher safety measures on Grand Prix circuits.

AIB: Regulation-free, bonus-crazed “faintly dim rugby players” turn profitable, 200-year-old conservative lender into cash-starved, state-funded zombie.

Metaphor sturdiness: poor

Senna And AIB’s Drive For Success (Deaglan De Breadun, Irish Times)

“The news this morning that a former AIB bank executive received €3m remuneration in 2010 will be greeted by anger, frustration and disbelief by the Irish public.  I share these feelings,” said Deputy Brian Lenihan.

Fianna Fail.ie (19 April, 2011)

AIB WAS directed by government officials, acting on behalf of then minister for finance Brian Lenihan, to pay Colm Doherty his contractual entitlements when it was told to dismiss him as managing director last September.

John Corrigan, chief executive of the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA), wrote to the board of the bank directing that it terminate Mr Doherty’s contract as a condition of the second bailout of the bank. In the letter, AIB was told to pay him what he was entitled to under his contract.

Mr Corrigan was writing on the direction of the minister.

(Irish Times, 21 April, 2011)

Which feelings would you like to share with Brian?

Doherty payout directed by government (Irish Times)

The Revenue Commissioners Annual Report