Irish lawmakers voted through emergency legislation to liquidate the former Anglo Irish bank on Thursday, as part of a deal to ease the eurozone country's massive debt burden.
Weary lawmakers voted in the small hours to liquidate the failed bank, now known as the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC), by a majority of 113 in favour to 36 against.
Its assets will now be bought out by Ireland's state-run 'bad bank', the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA), which buys risky mortgages from debt-plagued lenders.
Finance Minister Michael Noonan was forced to announce the emergency bill overnight after details of the plans were leaked, sparking fears there could be a rush to offload the bank's assets.
'As soon as the information relating to the proposal to liquidate IBRC was made public, there was an immediate risk to the bank,' Noonan said. 'Given this position, I as minister for finance, took immediate action to secure the stability of the bank and the value of its assets, valued at 12 billion euros, on behalf of the state.'
Accountancy firm KPMG has taken control of IBRC after its board was stood down on Noonan's orders on Wednesday afternoon.
The bank's assets, which include those of the Irish Nationwide Building Society, will be purchased by NAMA under a plan aimed at improving the terms of Ireland's banking debt.
In particular, Ireland is seeking to lessen the burden from a 31-billion-euro promissory note -- effectively a high-interest IOU that was pumped into Anglo Irish to rescue it during the financial crisis. The government, which was forced to seek an 85-billion-euro bailout from the EU and IMF in 2010, wants to scrap the promissory note and replace it with a long-term bond to stretch out the repayments.
Dublin already issued a long-term bond last year to ease the pressure on its finances. But changes to the promissory note hinge on the support of the European Central Bank (ECB).
The governor of the Irish Central Bank, Patrick Honohan, was negotiating the deal with ECB officials late yesterday ahead of a formal meeting on the issue today.
Noonan stressed that there had not been 'any deal done' so far on the promissory note. Lawmakers did not even begin debating the Anglo Irish liquidation plans until after midnight at a special late sitting of Ireland's Dail, or parliament, and finally voted the bill through just before 0230 GMT.
Ireland's President Michael D. Higgins cut short a state visit to Italy late yesterday to fly back to Dublin and study the legislation.
Several lawmakers criticised the bill's hasty timeframe, with Socialist Party leader Joe Higgins describing it as 'chaotic'.
Noonan said all employment contracts at IBRC would be immediately terminated but that many staff could be rehired to assist the liquidator. Prior to the emergency bill, IBRC was already in a process of winding up —set to be achieved by 2020 —with the vast majority of deposit accounts already transferred to other Irish banks.
ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND TO PAY $612-MN FINE FOR LIBOR RIGGING
State-rescued Royal Bank of Scotland said it will pay fines totalling $612 million to US and British regulators to settle allegations of Libor interest rate rigging.
RBS, which is 81-per cent owned by the British government, said it has agreed to pay the equivalent of GBP 391 million to regulators, becoming the third bank to admit its part in the Libor affair after Barclays and UBS.
The investigations uncovered ‘wrongdoing’ by 21 employees, predominantly in relation to the setting of the bank’s yen and Swiss franc Libor submissions between October 2006 to November 2010, the bank said.
RBS added it had been fined $325 million by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, $150 million by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) and GBP 87.5 million by Britain’s Financial Services Authority.
Weary lawmakers voted in the small hours to liquidate the failed bank, now known as the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC), by a majority of 113 in favour to 36 against.
Its assets will now be bought out by Ireland's state-run 'bad bank', the National Asset Management Agency (NAMA), which buys risky mortgages from debt-plagued lenders.
Finance Minister Michael Noonan was forced to announce the emergency bill overnight after details of the plans were leaked, sparking fears there could be a rush to offload the bank's assets.
'As soon as the information relating to the proposal to liquidate IBRC was made public, there was an immediate risk to the bank,' Noonan said. 'Given this position, I as minister for finance, took immediate action to secure the stability of the bank and the value of its assets, valued at 12 billion euros, on behalf of the state.'
Accountancy firm KPMG has taken control of IBRC after its board was stood down on Noonan's orders on Wednesday afternoon.
The bank's assets, which include those of the Irish Nationwide Building Society, will be purchased by NAMA under a plan aimed at improving the terms of Ireland's banking debt.
In particular, Ireland is seeking to lessen the burden from a 31-billion-euro promissory note -- effectively a high-interest IOU that was pumped into Anglo Irish to rescue it during the financial crisis. The government, which was forced to seek an 85-billion-euro bailout from the EU and IMF in 2010, wants to scrap the promissory note and replace it with a long-term bond to stretch out the repayments.
Dublin already issued a long-term bond last year to ease the pressure on its finances. But changes to the promissory note hinge on the support of the European Central Bank (ECB).
The governor of the Irish Central Bank, Patrick Honohan, was negotiating the deal with ECB officials late yesterday ahead of a formal meeting on the issue today.
Noonan stressed that there had not been 'any deal done' so far on the promissory note. Lawmakers did not even begin debating the Anglo Irish liquidation plans until after midnight at a special late sitting of Ireland's Dail, or parliament, and finally voted the bill through just before 0230 GMT.
Ireland's President Michael D. Higgins cut short a state visit to Italy late yesterday to fly back to Dublin and study the legislation.
Several lawmakers criticised the bill's hasty timeframe, with Socialist Party leader Joe Higgins describing it as 'chaotic'.
Noonan said all employment contracts at IBRC would be immediately terminated but that many staff could be rehired to assist the liquidator. Prior to the emergency bill, IBRC was already in a process of winding up —set to be achieved by 2020 —with the vast majority of deposit accounts already transferred to other Irish banks.
ROYAL BANK OF SCOTLAND TO PAY $612-MN FINE FOR LIBOR RIGGING
State-rescued Royal Bank of Scotland said it will pay fines totalling $612 million to US and British regulators to settle allegations of Libor interest rate rigging.
RBS, which is 81-per cent owned by the British government, said it has agreed to pay the equivalent of GBP 391 million to regulators, becoming the third bank to admit its part in the Libor affair after Barclays and UBS.
The investigations uncovered ‘wrongdoing’ by 21 employees, predominantly in relation to the setting of the bank’s yen and Swiss franc Libor submissions between October 2006 to November 2010, the bank said.
RBS added it had been fined $325 million by the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission, $150 million by the US Department of Justice (DoJ) and GBP 87.5 million by Britain’s Financial Services Authority.