Freitag, 29. Oktober 2010

Buyback of Anglo bonds in jeopardy as debt costs soar

By Donal O'Donovan

Friday October 29 2010

There was more bad news from the bond markets yesterday with the revelation that the Anglo Irish buyback could be in trouble and cause another surge in the cost of government debt.

Holders of 43pc of Anglo Irish subordinated bonds said they would oppose the plan to swap €1.6bn of bonds for new government guaranteed debt worth 20 cent in the euro.

Most observers believe the real agenda is to raise the offer above the current 20 cent level.

A bondholder meeting will be held in a number of weeks and needs a double majority for the deal to be passed. Two- thirds of the bondholders must attend the meeting and a 75pc majority must be met to push through the deal. But market sources say a deal is far from certain.

If the deal goes ahead bondholders will automatically vote to pay dissenters just 1 cent per €1,000 of bonds.

One warned against being so tough with the group.

"Ireland's best friends (and worst enemies) right now are hedge funds because no real money account is investing a cent in the country," he said.

The risk of taking a loss if the exchange goes ahead, however, is key to its likely success. If members of the bondholder group fear others could break ranks the sensible option is to break ranks first.

Unicredit strategist Alexander Plenck said: "They would have to completely trust each other on the day or will end up backing the deal."

The mix of opportunistic hedge funds and vulture funds trying to block the deal makes it even harder to maintain discipline, said another source who is involved in the transaction.

If bondholders vote against the plan, or abstain in big enough numbers, the deal will fail and the debt will remain in place. Voting gets under way in the middle of next month.

Yesterday, Anglo Irish chairman Alan Dukes said the bank would not negotiate with the bondholders.

Traders

The bonds changed hands at prices between 20 cents and 23 cent each yesterday, above the price being offered in the buyback. Traders said the volume of trading was very low with few investors committing new money.

Credit strategist Brian Barry of Evolution Securities said the Anglo Irish news was not behind the increase in the cost of government debt yesterday.

The yield demanded by investors for holding Irish debt rose to 7pc early in the day before the European Central Bank stepped in to buy bonds for the first time in two weeks.

The ECB action stabilised prices. The cost rose on the back of bad news from Portugal and Greece about their budgets.

- Donal O'Donovan

Irish Independent

Donnerstag, 28. Oktober 2010

Anglo Irish bondholders seek to block offer

By Matt Scuffham

DUBLIN, Oct 28 (Reuters) - Bondholders in nationalised Anglo Irish Bank are seeking to block the lender's proposed exchange of 1.6 billion euros ($2.2 billion) of subordinated debt at a discount of 20 cents per euro.

Anglo, brought under state control last year, is forcing bondholders that don't take up the offer to accept just 1 cent per 1,000 euros to redeem their floating notes due 2014, 2016 and 2017.

But a consortium of investors who hold about 690 million euros of lower Tier 2 debt are planning to vote against the offer.

'In an astonishing move, Anglo Irish is attempting to strongarm noteholders to vote in favour of the exchange offer by threatening to eliminate minority dissenting noteholders' rights to repayment of monies loaned by them to Anglo Irish,' Brown Rudnick, a law firm representing the noteholders, said in a statement issued late on Wednesday.

'The noteholders believe Anglo Irish's proposal is inconsistent with principles of fair and equal treatment of creditors.'

Ireland faces a bill of up to 50 billion euros to purge its banks of soured property loans and Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said subordinated bondholders in Anglo Irish and other nationalised lender Irish Nationwide would have to make a contribution towards that bill.

Analysts at Glas Securities in Dublin have estimated that Dublin's bill for bailing out Anglo Irish would be cut by 1.65 billion euros if there was a 100 percent takeup of the debt swap and a repurchase of more junior Tier 1 debt also announced this month.

The bondholder meetings to approve the exchange must have a minimum attendance of holders of 66 percent of the notes, three quarters of whom must agree to the changes in order for it to pass.

Subordinated paper in both Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide have been trading at discounts of around 70 to 80 percent, reflecting impending losses.

The noteholders consortium had made several unsuccessful attempts to meet with Anglo Irish, Brown Rudnick said.

'This is unprecedented and provides for unequal treatment of the minority. We sincerely wish to meet with Anglo Irish to discuss a fair and consensual resolution,' said Louise Verrill, restructuring partner at Brown Rudnick.

http://www.finanznachrichten.de/nachrichten-2010-10/18378824-anglo-irish-bondholders-seek-to-block-offer-020.htm


Bondholders finally faced down by Lenihan -- just ask Abramovich

Thursday October 28 2010

'WE are not negotiating.' With the kind of bluntness only the Dutch can summon up, Anglo Irish Bank's chief financial officer Maarten van Eden has shown subordinated bondholders in the nationalised bank what the future looks like.

It is a world of discounts, shared pain and creditors' meetings and, from the perspective of the bank and Finance Minister Brian Lenihan, it is all going swimmingly so far.

Anglo is offering to exchange €1.6bn of subordinated debt for new bonds at a rate of 20 cents in the euro as the nationalised lender seeks to generate capital and lighten the load on the citizenry, who are already on the hook for Anglo to the tune of €7,500 per person.

While Lenihan's critics think he should go well beyond just subordinated bondholders and grapple with creditors further up the line, that is a non-runner, especially when you are planning to borrow €20bn a year from these lenders to plug a chasm between spending and tax receipts.

But the move against subordinated bondholders in Anglo and Irish Nationwide is progressing well and there is little sign of elevated funding costs arising from the decision for Irish banks or the sovereign.

What is pushing Irish bond yields out wider this week is not concern over the legal rights of subordinated bondholders in just two non-clearing banks, but concern over the size of the budgetary adjustment required for 2011.

In fact, the move against subordinated bondholders may have provided something of a booster for the sovereign, indicating that the capital requirement for Anglo is going to be less, rather than more, as a result of the move.

The bondholders themselves have hired a legal firm and are wailing about the way creditors are being treated, while depositors are being protected.

Of course, not all creditors are being hit with such a savage exchange offer and debt holders in most of the entire Irish financial system are not in any way having their holdings eroded.

The public were curious to find out who was taking the losses on the subordinated bonds? Most observers expected to see the pages of the 'Financial Times' dripping with pathos as little old ladies from small German towns came forward to talk about their pensions being ruined because of the haircut being imposed on their investments.

But instead, in a publicity coup Lenihan's staff could never have conceived of themselves, Russian oligarch billionaire Roman Abramovich stepped forward to talk of his deep sense of loss at the plans to impose discounts.

His asset management company Millhouse has talked of reputational loss for Ireland from the move.

That may be the case, even though Irish Nationwide was until a year ago a private commercial company with not a cent of equity from the Irish government.

The financial world is full of investment punts of various hues.

But any rational person who bought a deeply subordinated bond in Irish Nationwide was taking what could mildly be described as an investment risk. A risk that should be insured for too, through a credit default swap.

Irish Nationwide has been massively loss-making since 2008 and even at that stage everyone knew its property exposures were truly terrifying (of its €10.4bn loan book in 2008, €8.1bn was accounted for by commercial property).

But apparently holders of subordinated bonds in the building society, like Millhouse, were expecting some new "strategy'' that would re-invigorate the property-laden company and protect all its creditors.

This was even though the society had become a national corporate governance joke, with its current management team claiming only two people used to manage its entire UK loan book.

So far, the jilted bondholders have filed no legal papers and produced no convincing argument why they should get back par value.

It has taken him a long time but Lenihan has finally picked a row with bondholders he has every chance of winning.

How do you convince $82 trillion (€60 trillion) worth of investors you are doing the right thing?

With great difficulty , the Government is finding out.

The depth and scale of the global bond market is such that it does not speak with one voice.

Attempts by the Government to "win over'' the bond market may be doomed to failure because the market is so atomised and consists of millions of different investor types, all with different financial world views.

There's no pleasing the markets

Some think the Irish Government should front-load its deficit reduction plan, some think tax rises are the best approach to closing the gap, others believe expenditure reductions are better.

The Government may have foolishly believed that winning over the bond market was all about showing your bona fides on spending cuts. But, in fact, 10-year government bond yields rose by 30 basis points last week when a total adjustment of €7bn was first mentioned.

"There is this central question of where does growth come from,'' one concerned bond trader said this week.

One must have a little sympathy for the Government on this.

If you give bond markets what they apparently demand -- drastic cuts in spending -- then those markets start to worry about the impact on growth.

If you delay and soft pedal on the cuts to protect growth, they then switch to worrying about the deficit.

It would drive one to drink.

Irish Independent

Anglo creditors ‘gambling’ on improved debt-swap offer

Thursday October 28 2010

Anglo Irish Bank bondholders plan to block a proposed debt exchange that imposes losses of more than €1.3bn as they seek to force the nationalised lender to improve the offer.

Creditors holding a €690m “blocking position” of notes will vote against the deal worth 20pc of their €1.6bn of securities, according to a statement from Houlihan Lokey which is advising investors.

The extra yield demanded to hold Irish 10-year bonds over German debt rose by about 20 basis points to 443 basis points today, approaching the record 449 basis points last month.

The Government faces a bill of more than €50bn to prop up Irish banks and is seeking to ensure the losses of lenders it owns outright are shared with subordinated noteholders.

Finance Minister Brian Lenihan has said he will legislate to allow the Government to impose penalties on subordinated creditors while making senior investors whole.

“Bondholders are gambling the government is willing to pay up and doesn’t want to use the draft legislation to impose losses,” said Brian Barry, an analyst at Evolution Securities Ltd in London.

Imposing losses “has a knock-on impact on other banks, it creates uncertainty and raises the question of what the Government is willing to do in extreme situations.”

The Government also owns Irish Nationwide Building Society, where bondholders are also opposing enforced losses.

Ray Gordon, outside spokesman for the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA), which manages certain bank oversight functions for the state, declined to comment. An official at the Department of Finance also wouldn’t comment.

Confidence undermined

Opposition to the proposals is undermining confidence in the creditworthiness of the Government and the nation’s other banks.

Credit-default swaps on Irish sovereign debt jumped 21 basis points to 465, the highest level in a month, according to data provider CMA. Contracts on Allied Irish Banks bonds rose 8.5 basis points to 629.5.

Credit-default swaps insuring €10m of Anglo’s subordinated debt for five years fell to €6.98m in advance and €500,000 annually from €7.07m upfront, according to CMA.

Anglo Irish subordinated bonds due 2014 rose 0.71 cent to 20.8 cents on the euro, according to pricing data compiled by Bloomberg.

Exchange penalty

The lender has said that bondholders who don’t accept the terms of the debt exchange will be given 1 cent per 1,000-euro face amount.

The challenge by investors risks ending up in court, especially if no consensus is reached and new legislation is introduced, said Simon Adamson, an analyst at CreditSights Inc in London.

“If bondholders are determined to challenge this, it could be quite a long, drawn-out situation,” he said.

“This goes against the general thrust of regulation right now, which is all about getting bondholders to share losses. There doesn’t seem to be much upside, except for the lawyers.”

The exchange of the lower Tier 2 notes will generate a capital gain of about €1.26bn that the bank can use to bolster its capital ratios, according to analysts at Barclays Capital in London.

A repurchase of more-junior so-called Tier 1 debt that was also announced this month, will generate a gain of €347m, the analysts said.

The bondholder meetings to approve the exchange must have a minimum attendance of holders of 66pc of the notes, 75pc of whom must agree to the changes, according to JPMorgan, which is managing the offer.

Martha Kavanagh, an outside spokeswoman for Anglo, said the bank was unable to comment while the exchange offer was open.

http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/anglo-creditors-lsquogamblingrsquo-on-improved-debtswap-offer-2398727.html


Mittwoch, 27. Oktober 2010

Große Gläubigergruppe will Regierungsangebot ablehnen

Anglo Irish Creditor Group Plans to Decline Subordinated Debt-Swap Offer


A group of Anglo Irish Bank Corp.’s creditors will decline to participate in a debt swap proposed by the nationalized lender, said Houlihan Lokey, an investment bank that is representing the noteholders.

Anglo Irish this month offered to exchange 1.6 billion euros ($2.2 billion) of subordinated debt for new bonds at 20 cents on the euro to generate capital. The group of noteholders, which hold about 690 million euros of lower Tier 2 debt, plan to vote against the offer, Houlihan Lokey said in an e-mailed statement late yesterday.

“Anglo Irish is attempting to strong-arm noteholders to vote in favor of the exchange offer by threatening to eliminate minority dissenting noteholders’ rights to repayment of monies loaned by them,” the statement said. The group includes pension-plan money managers, insurers, retail investors and secondary purchasers, and Brown Rudnick LLP is providing it with legal advice, it said.

Ireland faces a bill of more than 50 billion euros, about 22 percent of 2009 gross domestic product, to prop up lenders and wants to ensure the burden is shared with subordinated bondholders. The Oct. 21 exchange offer came after Finance Minister Brian Lenihan vowed to “address the issue” of junior bondholders taking a loss on investments in nationalized banks.

Billy Murphy, an outside spokesman for Dublin-based Anglo Irish, couldn’t immediately be reached outside office hours.

According to Anglo Irish’s proposal, the lender would offer bondholders that don’t take up the debt swap 1 cent per 1,000- euro face amount to redeem their floating-rate lower Tier 2 notes due 2014, 2016 and 2017. The new securities would be due 2011 and guaranteed by the government.

Quelle: Bloomberg


Anglo Irish Bank: Zum Ablauf der Abstimmungen

Conquering Anglo Irish CDS

CDS-watchers — mark your calendars.

November 23 is the first possible date that Anglo Irish Bank’s sub-debt exchange could trigger a credit event for CDS written on the bonds. That is, the ‘liability management exercise’ will elicit lump-sum payments for protection buyers.

The exchange is expected to set-off CDS on both the sub- and senior bonds since it entails “a reduction in the amount of principal, or premium payable at maturity or at scheduled redemption dates.” This is a restructuring event under Isda definitions, (Section 4.7, ii) as long as it satisfies the so-called Multiple Holder Obligation requirement. That is, there must be more than three holders of the obligation and the obligation must require at least two thirds of holders agree to the potential restructuring.

According to Depository Trust & Clearing Corp data there are currently 974 contracts, or $420m net, sub- and senior CDS written on Anglo Irish debt. But the first trigger — that November 23 one — would be on Lower Tier 2 bonds due in 2017.

Weiterlesen...


Samstag, 23. Oktober 2010

Besitzer von Bankanleihen in Unruhe

Für Regierungen ist der Umgang mit den Bankanleihen ein heikler Balanceakt. Den Anleihenmarkt zu vergrätzen, können sie sich nicht leisten. Doch der Druck, auch die Gläubiger an der Überwindung der Bankenkrise zu beteiligen, wächst.

Von Marcus Theurer und Philipp Krohn, London/Berlin

19. Oktober 2010

Roman Abramowitsch ist sauer auf Dublin. Der russische Milliardär und Eigner des Londoner Erstliga-Fußballvereins FC Chelsea hat über sein Investmenthaus Milhouse Geld in Anleihen irischer Banken investiert, doch Abramowitsch und andere Anleihengläubiger des irischen Immobilienfinanzierers Irish Nationwide Building Society (INBS) und der Albtraumbank Anglo Irish können sich immer weniger sicher sein, in welcher Höhe sie ihr Geld zurückbekommen. Abramowitsch will die irische Regierung, die beide Krisenkonzerne übernommen hat, notfalls verklagen. „Wir sind entschlossen, unsere Position mit allen rechtlichen Möglichkeiten zu verteidigen“, kündigte Milhouse an. Auch andere Investoren formieren sich zum Widerstand.

Für die irische Regierung ist der Umgang mit den Bankanleihen ein heikler Balanceakt. Einerseits wächst angesichts harter Sparmaßnahmen der Druck der Bevölkerung, auch die Anleiheinvestoren für die Bankenkrise zur Kasse zu bitten. Andererseits kann es sich Finanzminister Brian Lenihan nicht leisten, den Anleihenmarkt zu vergrätzen, denn die irischen Banken und der Staat sind darauf angewiesen, dass ihnen internationale Investoren auch weiterhin Geld pumpen.

Weiterlesen...



Donnerstag, 21. Oktober 2010

Anglo Irish Offers Bondholders 20 Cents on Euro in Debt Swap

Anglo Irish Bank Corp. offered to exchange 1.6 billion euros ($2.2 billion) of subordinated debt at a discount, paying in new bonds at a rate of 20 cents on the euro as the nationalized lender seeks to generate capital.

Anglo Irish will ask bondholders that don’t take up the exchange offer to accept just 1 cent per 1,000-euro face amount to redeem their floating-rate notes due 2014, 2016 and 2017, the Dublin-based lender said in a statement today.

The new securities will be due 2011 and guaranteed by the government, according to the statement.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2010-10-21/anglo-irish-offers-exchange-of-2014-2016-2017-notes-for-new-2011-bonds.html

Veröffentlichung der Regierung:

http://www.investegate.co.uk/Article.aspx?id=201010211528467992U


Mittwoch, 20. Oktober 2010

Anglo Irish to buy back subordinated debt at discount

DUBLIN, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Nationalised lender Anglo Irish Bank will buy back its subordinated debt at a big discount, Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said on Wednesday.

'I understand that the management at Anglo will be carrying out an exercise to repurchase the debt at a very substantial discount,' Lenihan told parliament.

(Reporting by Carmel Crimmins)

http://www.finanznachrichten.de/nachrichten-2010-10/18292286-anglo-irish-to-buy-back-subordinated-debt-at-discount-020.htm


Donnerstag, 14. Oktober 2010

Anglo-Irish-Gläubiger wollen nicht für Rettung zahlen

New York (Reuters) - Eine Gruppe von Gläubigern der angeschlagenen Anglo Irish Bank wehrt sich einem Bericht zufolge dagegen, sich an den Rettungskosten für das Geldhaus zu beteiligen.

Die Investoren besäßen rund 500 Millionen Euro oder rund ein Fünftel der risikoreichsten Papiere, berichtete das "Wall Street Journal" am Dienstag auf seiner Internetseite unter Berufung auf eine mit dem Vorgang vertraute Person.

Weiterlesen...

Mittwoch, 13. Oktober 2010

Honohan warns on 'risky' action against Anglo bondholders

CENTRAL BANK governor Prof Patrick Honohan said it would be “highly risky” to take action against senior bondholders at Anglo Irish Bank such as buying back debt at a lower price.

“To take any aggressive action would be highly risky,” Prof Honohan said at an event in Philadelphia in the US yesterday.

The Government “is not minded to do that”, he said.

The Irish head of financial regulation, Matthew Elderfield, said last week the Government could enter a “liquidity management exercise” with senior bondholders of Anglo Irish.

Minister for Finance Brian Lenihan said a day later that the Government had “no intention” of imposing losses on those bondholders through legislative measures.

Prof Honohan said dealing with senior bondholders was “complicated” because under Irish law they “stand equally with depositors”.

He also said things went “in a bad direction” for Ireland, and “we’re now turning this around and coming out of it”.

Prof Honohan said Ireland had the highest budget deficit of any euro-area nation, and the Government does not face any easy decisions in its 2011 budget.

The Central Bank governor said the Government would have to replace the revenue lost in the recession and the housing slump with “income tax, value-added-tax and so forth’.

“It has to be done,” said Prof Honohan.

However, he said that he does not see pressure building to raise Ireland’s low corporate tax rate in order to help tackle the budget deficit.

“A lot of people have been talking about there being pressure; so far I don’t actually see that pressure being made explicit,” said Prof Honohan, who is also a member of the European Central Bank’s governing council.

“I think there is definitely a general view in Ireland: why change this system, it works reasonably well,” he said in response to a question following his speech at the Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank.

Prof Honohan said the period of converting the Irish economy ended in 2000, after which it grew based upon unsustainable lending to property development and construction firms. – (Bloomberg, Reuters)

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/finance/2010/1013/1224280973188.html


Freitag, 8. Oktober 2010

Anglo Irish has 90pc of liabilities 'set to mature'

By Emmet Oliver Deputy Business Editor

Friday October 08 2010

Almost 90pc of Anglo Irish Bank's liabilities mature within the next 12 months and retaining deposits is the key challenge facing the bank, Canada's largest ratings agency has claimed.

About €67bn of the bank's funding is maturing over the next year, representing 87pc of liabilities coming due. The liabilities come in the form of inter-bank deposits, customer deposits, bonds and subordinated debt, said a note to clients from Toronto-based agency DBRS.

It said the new Anglo funding bank would face "significant challenges in attracting and retaining deposits'' as this bank would not be offering any other banking services or products. The agency also speculated that the EU Commission might restrict the kind of interest Anglo can offer.

The Government here still regards Anglo as a "systemically important bank'', but not as critically important as before, said the company. The support of the Government would allow the bank time to split itself in two, into an asset recovery bank and a funding bank. The asset recovery bank would continue to depend on central bank funding and government support.

Anglo's franchise was "materially and permanently impaired'' the agency said, and the bank had limited earning power with no return to profit in the "near or medium term".

"DBRS sees Anglo Irish's earnings-generation ability as irrevocably damaged. The lack of new lending activity, a declining balance sheet and elevated funding costs will constrain the ability of the bank to generate income,'' the note said.

The Canadian company said that the quality of Anglo's non-NAMA loans was viewed as "extremely weak'' and the NAMA exercise itself would only remove 41pc of the bank's loans.

"Managing the impact of credit losses in the run-off non-NAMA portfolio is the primary challenge of Anglo Irish,'' it said.

"Given the proposed split of the bank and the uncertainty regarding the funding bank's ability to attract and gather deposits, DBRS sees Anglo Irish as remaining reliant on support from the Irish Government and central bank facilities for funding though the run-off of the asset recovery bank,'' the company said.

- Emmet Oliver Deputy Business Editor

Irish Independent

Donnerstag, 7. Oktober 2010

Anglo, INBS bondholders to form new action group

By Emmet Oliver and Donal O'Donovan

Thursday October 07 2010

Subordinated bondholders in Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide are working on a plan to set up an action group to oppose government plans to apply a 'haircut' to their investments, the Irish Independent has learned.

A London law firm has been consulted already on setting up the group, and several financial analysts have also been asked to give their view. How many holders of Anglo and Irish Nationwide securities join the group will be watched closely on both sides of the Irish Sea.

Already, a firm linked to Russian billionaire Roman Abramovich has objected to the plan to ensure "burden sharing'' among subordinated bondholders. Legislation to allow this is being drafted by Attorney General Paul Gallagher.

Mr Gallagher is working the legislation that would put the taxpayer ahead of subordinated bondholders in the queue to be repaid as Anglo Irish Bank and Irish Nationwide are wound down.

"The obligation (to subordinated bondholders) would remain on the book, but the taxpayer would be given priority over the sub debt," Finance Minister Brian Lenihan told bond investors during a conference call on Friday.

Under the planned law, subordinated bonds will not be cancelled. The law would insert a claim by taxpayers for the cost of their support ahead of the subordinated bondholders of the two banks.

The scale of the Government's support makes it highly unlikely taxpayers will ever be paid back in full, so the chances of subordinated bondholders being repaid would then be remote. The minister reiterated that senior bonds would not be affected and that the legislation would not apply to other Irish banks.

- Emmet Oliver and Donal O'Donovan

Irish Independent


Mittwoch, 6. Oktober 2010

Fitch stuft Irland runter

Für das finanziell angeschlagene Irland kommt es noch dicker: Fitch senkt das Rating des Euro-Landes auf "A+" von bislang "AA-". Der Ausblick ist negativ. Aber dabei bleibt es wohl nicht. Auch Moody's spielt mit dem Gedanken, das Irland-Rating abzusenken. Die Experten sehen die irischen Sparpläne mit Unsicherheiten behaftet.

Irland bekommt eine schlechtere Bonitätsnote von Fitch. Die Ratingagentur teilte mit, sie habe ihre Einstufung auf "A+" von bislang "AA-" gesenkt. Als Grund führten die Experten die immensen Kosten des Landes für die Rettung seiner angeschlagenen Banken an, die höher seien als erwartet.

"Die Herabstufung von Irland spiegelt die außergewöhnlichen und höher als erwarteten fiskalischen Kosten im Zusammenhang mit der Rekapitalisierung der irischen Banken wider, vor allem für die Anglo Irish Bank", so die Fitch-Begründung. Wegen des unsicheren Wirtschaftsausblicks und den ungewissen mittelfristigen Konsolidierungsanstrengungen sei der Ausblick als "negativ" eingestuft worden. Die Experten sehen insbesondere die Sparpläne der Regierung und die Konjunkturaussichten Irlands mit Unsicherheit behaftet.

Die Regierung in Dublin hatte diese vergangene Woche auf bis zu 50 Milliarden Euro beziffert. Ministerpräsident Brian Cowen will nächsten Monat einen Vier-Jahres-Plan vorstellen, mit dem das außerordentlich hohe Haushaltsdefizit angegangen werden soll.

Die irische Zentralbank hatte Ende des vergangenen Monats mitgeteilt, allein der Betrag zur Rettung der taumelnden Anglo Irish Bank steige auf fast 30 Milliarden Euro, im schlimmsten Fall sogar auf knapp 35 Milliarden Euro. Das irische Staatsdefizit verdreifacht sich damit 2010 auf den europaweiten Rekordwert von mehr als 30 Prozent der Wirtschaftsleistung.

Weiterlesen...


Anglo Irish Debt Swaps May Pay Out on Burden Sharing

Oct. 6 (Bloomberg) -- Banks and hedge funds may have to pay out on Anglo Irish Bank Corp. debt insurance after the government insisted holders of its riskiest bonds share the pain of a $47 billion bailout.

The cost of credit-default swaps protecting Anglo Irish’s subordinated notes has more than doubled since Sept. 1 on speculation of a payout. Irish Finance Minister Brian Lenihan said last week that holders of the bank’s 2.45 billion euros ($3.4 billion) of junior notes must take on some of the “burden” of the rescue, raising the prospect of the swaps being triggered.

Ireland is pledging more cash for Anglo Irish after nationalizing the lender in January 2009 as its bad loans mounted following the collapse of a decade-long real-estate bubble. The bill represents as much as 21 percent of Ireland’s economic output, the most for a euro-region bank rescue since the start of the credit crisis three years ago.

“It’s almost guaranteed that there will be an event of default” that will cause the swaps to pay out, said Michael Hampden-Turner, a credit strategist at Citigroup Inc. in London. “It’s almost inevitable that the junior bondholders won’t get paid.”

Net $390 Million

There are 674 credit-default swap contracts insuring a net $390 million of Anglo Irish’s senior and subordinated debt, according to Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. data. It now costs 5.2 million euros in advance and 500,000 euros annually to insure 10 million euros of the bank’s junior bonds for five years, implying a more than 82 percent probability of default, according to data provider CMA.

Credit-default swaps pay the buyer face value in exchange for the underlying securities or the cash equivalent when a borrower fails to adhere to its debt agreements.

The Irish government pledged as much as 11.4 billion euros to support Anglo Irish on Sept. 30, on top of the 22.9 billion euros it has already pumped in since seizing the lender in January 2009. Lenihan said that, while senior bondholders will be paid in full under the bailout, legislation is being prepared to “address the issue” of junior bondholders taking a loss on their investments.

Ireland will retain the option of asking investors to sell their holdings back at a “very deeply discounted” price, according to Michael Torpey, head of banking at the National Treasury Management Agency, established in 1990 to manage assets and liabilities for the government.

Possible Downgrade

The cost of bailing out Ireland’s banking system has also weighed on the nation’s credit quality.

Moody’s Investors Service placed the nation’s rating on review for possible downgrade yesterday after the government in Dublin pledged as much as 50 billion euros to save the country’s banks. Any downgrade to Ireland’s Aa2 rating will “most likely” be by a single level, Moody’s said in a statement.

Credit-default swaps tied to Irish debt have risen 115 percent since the beginning of August, climbing to 427 basis points, according to CMA. The extra yield investors demand to hold 10-year Irish government bonds instead of benchmark German securities rose to a record 4.54 percentage points on Sept. 29, and was at 4.12 percentage points today, Bloomberg data show.

The Anglo Irish rescue package will cost every man, woman and child in Ireland as much as 7,500 euros. The bailout of Germany’s Hypo Real Estate Holding AG, in absolute terms Europe’s most expensive bank collapse, cost less than 5 percent of the nation’s GDP of 3.4 trillion euros in guarantees and cash injections, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

‘Lessons of Crisis’

“Anglo Irish is one of the lessons from the crisis,” said Simon Adamson, a banking analyst at CreditSights Inc. in London. “A bank may not be obviously systemically important, yet because it’s a bank that makes it too big to fail.”

The price of Anglo Irish’s junior debt has fallen in past months on speculation holders would lose money in a rescue. The bank’s Tier 2 floating-rate bonds due 2016 have dropped to about 23 cents on the euro, from as high as 42.75 cents in May, according to composite prices compiled by Bloomberg. Tier 2 notes rank above so-called Tier 1 debt in a default.

If the Irish government fails to repay Anglo Irish’s junior notes, investors would then need to ask the New York-based International Swaps and Derivatives Association, which administers the credit-swap market, to declare an event of default that would cause the insurance contracts to pay out.

Game Changer

After the U.K. government nationalized Bradford & Bingley Plc in 2008, it changed the rules to allow the troubled lender to defer interest on its subordinated debt without that legally constituting a default. Its failure to pay still triggered credit-swaps protecting all the Bingley, England-based bank’s bonds in July.

“If the terms of the debt are changed to the detriment of the holder, then that usually constitutes a restructuring event” and triggers credit-default swaps, said Arup Ghosh, a strategist at Barclays Capital in London. “If buyers of default swap protection are subsequently not made whole on their investment, it could damage the credibility of the market.”

--With assistance from Joe Brennan in Dublin and Paul Dobson in London. Editors: Michael Shanahan, Paul Armstrong

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-10-06/anglo-irish-debt-swaps-may-pay-out-on-burden-sharing.html

Samstag, 2. Oktober 2010

Anglo LT2-Anleihenbesitzer wollen gerichtlich vorgehen

By Donal O'Donovan and Emmet Oliver

Saturday October 02 2010

Subordinated Anglo Irish Bank bondholders are threatening to block the restructuring of the bank if the Government imposes haircuts, but lawyers say they are facing an uphill struggle.

Posturing from both sides is more focused on agreeing the price of a debt buyback than the legal issues, sources told the Irish Independent.

Finance Minister Brian Lenihan is planning legislation allowing the Government to impose haircuts on these bondholders. But London-based hedge funds, who spoke to the Irish Independent yesterday, on condition of anonymity, said the situation was "messy" and holders of sub debt were talking to their legal teams.

The funds claim the Government's argument rests on the notion that without state capital the bonds would be worthless. But the funds are claiming this argument would also apply to senior debt holders and to select them in isolation for haircuts would be discriminatory.

But a government spokesman confirmed that a buyback could still go ahead in the meantime. He said lenders to the Government were told on a conference call with the minister on Friday that a buyback of Anglo sub debt was still on the cards.

The move to change the law provides a stick for the Government to encourage bondholders towards the carrot of a cash payment for agreeing to hand back bonds. That would be a simpler, and possibly cheaper, process than forcing them out through legislation.

Control

Under bond market rules, if the Government gains control of a majority of the bonds any remaining bondholders would be forced to accept a deal.

Hedge funds are trying to outstare the Government and are threatening legal action, but a number of lawyers say their case is weak. They said the move is aimed at getting a better price to go away.

One capital markets lawyer, who asked not to be named, said he opted not to take the bondholder case because it had little chance of success.

The lawyer works for a US firm and specialises in advising hedge funds. He said he was receiving queries on the issue from subordinated debt holders in both Anglo and Irish Nationwide.

In his view, the Government was in a game of chicken with holders of subordinated bonds, each trying to maximise their bargaining position ahead of a buyback. He said the State had by far the stronger hand.

- Donal O'Donovan and Emmet Oliver

http://www.independent.ie/business/irish/anglo-bondholders-square-up-to-government-over-possible-haircuts-2361791.html


Freitag, 1. Oktober 2010

Hedge funds hold Ireland to ransom over Anglo Irish Bank bail-out

, 23:56, Thursday 30 September 2010

Hedge funds are holding the Irish government to ransom over its 30bn (£26bn) bail-out of one of the country's biggest lenders, Anglo Irish Bank (Dublin: CKL1.IR - news) .

The investors are attempting to force the Irish authorities to pay them more for the debt they hold in Anglo Irish Bank and say if their demands are not met they could trigger a default crisis.

The London and US-based hedge funds are fighting moves to pay them no more than current market prices for their holdings of junior debt in Anglo and are understood to be prepared to take the Irish government to court.

Anglo junior debt is trading in a range of 23 to 25 cents in the euro and the investors are thought to be looking for a payout of 35 to 40 cents. However, the authorities are unwilling to offer a premium to the market price, according to a source close to the Irish government.

The hedge funds in turn argue that the government has no legal right to force them to accept a haircut on the value of their holdings.

The dispute centres on £2bn of Tier 2 bonds sold by Anglo, which the hedge funds argue are governed by English law. They claim that for investors to be legally obliged to accept a lower than face value payout, the bank's senior debt which the government has said it will pay back in full must already be in default.

While small compared to the total size of the Irish rescue package, the dispute could have disastrous consequences for the bail-out.

If the hedge funds were to press their case, Ireland could be required to put Anglo into insolvency, which could ultimately mean that depositors would have to make use of the country's guarantee scheme to get their money back.

One banker with knowledge of the discussions said the legal opinion his firm had received was that the Irish government was in the wrong.

Robin Creswell, a senior bond specialist at fund manager Payden & Rygel, said investors trying to force the government's hand were playing a risky game.

"They might have a good legal claim, but when you are dealing with a government in the position of the Irish that will go to great lengths to prevent default, you are entering a very complex situation."

The cost of bailing out the Irish banking system has so far cost the state 44bn, and this year the country's budget deficit is projected to equal 32pc of GDP 10 times the amount permitted under European Union guidelines.

Speaking on Thursday, Irish finance minister Brian Lenihan was clear that while junior debt holders would make a "significant contribution" to the cost of the bank bailouts, depositors and senior debt holders would be protected.

Mr Lenihan attempted to calm market fears over the effect the cost of the bailout would have on the country and said the government would be publishing a four-year budget plan in November on how it intends to cut the deficit.

Ireland is not the only eurozone country coming under pressure from the market, with Moody's yesterday cutting the credit rating of Spain over fears of weak economic growth and the government's ability to reduce the deficit.

http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/hedge-funds-hold-ireland-to-ransom-over-anglo-irish-bank-bail-out-tele-770d5bdb5006.html