综合一区欧美国产,99国产麻豆免费精品,九九精品黄色录像,亚洲激情青青草,久久亚洲熟妇熟,中文字幕av在线播放,国产一区二区卡,九九久久国产精品,久久精品视频免费

left corner left corner
China Daily Website

Cypriot govt gives assurances to Bank of Cyprus

Updated: 2013-03-27 09:44
( Xinhua)

NICOSIA - The Cypriot government gave assurances on Tuesday that the Bank of Cyprus (BoC) will not be wound down, after several hundred bank employees demonstrated in protest at the appointment of an administrator to run the bank.

The demonstrators gathered outside the headquarters of the BoC and then marched to the nearby Central Bank building, calling for the resignation of its governor Panicos Demetriades.

Cypriot govt gives assurances to Bank of Cyprus

Policemen stand guard in front of the central bank of Cyprus as employees of the Bank of Cyprus protest in Nicosia March 26, 2013. [Photo/Agencies]

Government spokesman Christos Stylianides said the appointment of an administrator was meant to facilitate the restructuring of the BoC and could be very short, perhaps until banks reopen on Thursday.

He said the BoC was quite different from that of the Cyprus Popular Bank (Laiki), which will be resolved and its good part merged with the BoC under the provisions of a Eurogroup bailout deal for Cyprus.

A Central Bank statement clarified that it appointed an administrator at the bank and not a receiver. The administrator's mission is to take over the running of the BoC and not its resolution, which would be a receiver's job. It explained that the administrator at both the Bank of Cyprus and Laiki will help conclude their consolidation and restructuring.

As far as the BoC is concerned the administrator's mission is mostly to see through its recapitalization,the statement said.

Bank of Cyprus CEO Andreas Artemis earlier on Tuesday sent a letter of resignation to the bank's Board, expressing his disagreement both with the merger and the takeover of the Greek part of the operations by the Bank of Piraeus.

However, the Greek takeover was concluded a short while later under a bailout condition that all three Cypriot banks spin off their operations in Greece, where they had about 300 branches and accounted for between 8 and 10 percent of Greek banking transactions.

The Greek branches are set to reopen on Wednesday after a 10-day bank holiday designed to prevent a run on deposits, but banks in Cyprus will stay closed a day longer until Thursday.

Laiki will be split into a good part which will take with it insured deposits of up to 100,000 euros ($129,000) and other assets into the BoC, along with a 9.2-billion-euro emergency liquidity assistance debt.

To offset liquidity difficulties, the European Central Bank promised to continue liquidity support to the BoC within the appropriate arrangements. Uninsured BoC depositors and shareholders will be force to take a loss estimated by the finance minister to be up to 40 percent.

The government spokesman, who had earlier set the loss will be around 30 percent, said the size of the loss will only be known when the Central Bank, the ministry of finance and the troika conclude a survey of the BoC.

The bad part of Laiki will ultimately be resolved, with uninsured deposits and shares taking the loss.

The Central Bank will impose restrictions on transactions when the banks reopen but little is known yet about their nature.

President Nicos Anastasiades has said they will be of a very temporary nature and Finance Minister Michael Sarris said they will last only a few weeks.

Withdrawal of cash through teller machines is continuing but limited at 100 euros per day and the BoC has restored electronic transactions.

In an expression of popular resentment at the conditions going with the 10-billion-euro bailout the Eurogroup agreed for Cyprus, about 3,000 students left their classrooms on Tuesday and gathered outside parliament to vent their anger.

A parliamentary committee was in session at the time hearing evidence about mismanagement at Laiki over the last 18 months.

A bank official told the committee the bank had received 300 million euros in emergency bank liquidity by September, 2011, but the sum went up to 3.5 billion by the end of the year. Liquidity support shot up to 8 billion euros by June, 2011, when parliament approved an emergency state support of 1.8 billion euros to the bank.

Giving this amount to Laiki forced Cyprus to seek EU/IMF bailout support a few days later.

The student demonstration outside parliament was the first massive popular protest up to now, as Cyprus has not experienced yet the kind of violent mass protests other bailout euro countries have gone through.

 
...
汉中市| 化德县| 灌云县| 弋阳县| 岳阳县| 沭阳县| 顺平县| 桂阳县| 东丽区| 佛冈县| 定边县| 靖西县| 哈尔滨市| 宜良县| 卢龙县| 凤台县| 鄂尔多斯市| 泉州市| 凤山县| 信丰县| 上杭县| 铜山县| 阳高县| 岳普湖县| 永和县| 和林格尔县| 涞水县| 嘉禾县| 乌鲁木齐县| 隆化县| 泰州市| 富锦市| 永城市| 东方市| 宕昌县| 资兴市| 文安县| 封开县| 黄浦区| 鹤壁市| 措勤县|