Eurogroup
suffers repeated delays as Anastasiades balks at troika demands
The
start of the Eurogroup meeting was delayed by at least three hours on
Sunday night amid tense negotiations about a possible bailout for
Cyprus.
24
March, 2013
Eurozone
ministers had arrived in Brussels for the talks, which were due to
begin at 7 p.m. Greek time but the start was put back several times.
It is thought that talks could begin at around 10 p.m. Greek time.
Ahead
of the Eurogroup Anastasiades had been meeting with European
Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso, European Council chief
Herman Van Rompuy, European Central Bank head Mario Draghi, European
Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner Olli Rehn and
International Monetary Fund managing director Christine Lagarde.
It
is though that the main sticking point in negotiations was the IMF’s
insistence that Bank of Cyprus, the island’s largest lender, merge
with Cyprus Popular Bank (Laiki) after its resolution and take on
responsibility for the 9 billion euros in Emergency Liquidity
Assistance (ELA) it had received from the European Central Bank.
Anastasiades
reportedly rejected this proposal and warned Lagarde that he would be
forced to resign if the IMF insisted on it.
Earlier,
German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble called for Anastasiades
and Cypriot officials to view the challenges facing them
“realistically”. “We had an agreement following our
negotiations last Saturday but we start again today,” he said.
“There
were talks during the week but I am not aware of their outcome. I
hope we will be able to reach an agreement, however this demands that
Cyprus must see the situation realistically. We are ready for a
solution, we want to do everything and not spend every weekend here.
It does not depend on us, but Cyprus.”
Ahead
of the meeting an EU official with direct involvement in the talks
told Kathimerini that there has been progress on details of a bailout
agreement between Cyprus and the troika but some major obstacles
remained.
The
main question surrounds the future of the island’s largest lender,
Bank of Cyprus. If unsecured deposits (above 100,000 euros) at all
Cypriot banks are taxed then large savings at Bank of Cyprus are
likely to be taxed between 20 and 25 percent. If the levy is not
imposed on deposits at other lenders, the haircut for Bank of Cyprus
customers will be much larger.
The
option of a full bail in of Bank of Cyprus depositors is still on the
table. As with Laiki, which is to go through a resolution process,
the full bail in option could lead to deposits above 100,000 euros
being lost. The only compensation for unsecured depositors will be
shares in the “good” bank that will be created by a possible
merger between the «healthy» Laiki and Bank of Cyprus entities.
Anastasiades
to lenders: do you want to force me to resign?
24
March, 2013
UPDATED
21:33
Eurogroup
meeting rescheduled for the second time due to ongoing
discussions.New time is 10pm, the Cyprus News Agency said.
President
Nicos Anastasides told international lenders that their proposal to
saddle the Bank of Cyprus with some €9 billion in emergency
liquidity assistance owed by the Popular Bank to the European Central
Bank, effectively meant the lender’s closure in six months, the
Cyprus News Agency (CNA) reported.
“I
table one proposal, you don’t accept it; I table another, same
thing. What else do you want me to do? Do you want to force me to
resign? If that’s what you want, let me know,” CNA quoted
Anastasiades as telling international lenders.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Widely
reported that President Nicos Anastasiades has threatened to resign
should the IMF insist in saddling the Bank of Cyprus some 9 billion
euros in emergency liquidity assistance owed by the Popular Bank to
the European Central Bank.
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