Back

Cyprus large depositors face 60% in losses

FXstreet.com (Barcelona) - Large deposits above 100,000 euros sitting on Bank of Cyprus account face losses of as much as 60% on Bank, an announcement made over the weekend by the bank suggests, which occurs within the context of a semi-legal robbery to prevent the country from going bust.

According to authorities, customers will have 37.5% of their deposits above 100,000 euros converted into shares with access to the bank's future possible dividends. An additional 22.5% is to be provisionally withheld until a recapitalization process is complete, a tough decision that follows the agreement between Cypriot officials with the Troika.

According to Bloomberg, citing Marios Mavrides, a lawmaker for the ruling Disy party, in a phone interview from Nicosia: "The deposit-loss plan will make things worse as small and medium-sized companies will run out of liquidity,” with the move “not helping to gain back people’s trust, deposits should be free in order to gain that trust,” he said.

As Sebastien Galy, currency strategist at Societe Generale, notes: "Over the week end, Cyprus decided to effectively freeze all deposits above 100k in the two banks and in the offshore one to swap 60 percent for stocks. Excluded are government and financial institutions. Trusts are completly frozen until ID is shown (presumably a large chunk of the offshore money)."

"It looks like a very raw deal for what are presumed russian clients, suggesting we haven't heard the last of it. More importantly, it will increase the perception that gvt debt is ultra prime in Europe and this at the expense of all" he adds.

China HSBC at 51.6, meets expectations

The HSBC Purchasing Managers’ Index came at 51.6 in March, up from 50.4 in February, "signalling a modest improvement as operating conditions in the Chinese manufacturing sector improve for five consecutive months" HSBC said.
Leer más Previous

Forex: AUD/JPY lowest in 2 weeks, holds above 97.50

AUD/JPY is currently around 97.64, off fresh session lows at 97.53, lowest since March 17. The cross is down -0.59% for the session mostly on the back of Yen strength, in the first trading day of the fiscal year in Japan, ahead of another day with closed markets in Europe due to Eastern holiday.
Leer más Next