'It's
robbery!' New Cyprus bombshell as Britons are told they may lose
EVERYTHING over £85k
Although it was known that the wealthiest savers would take a large hit from last week’s €10 billion (£8.5 billion) EU rescue deal, the loss is far greater than feared.
The blow will fall on customers of the country two biggest banks – Bank of Cyprus and Laiki Bank.
Laiki Bank customers are also reported to be facing the loss of 80 per cent of their deposits above the £85,000 limit.
However, that plan was voted down by the Cypriot parliament, leaving the country in urgent need of a new solution to raise its €5.8 billion contribution towards the bailout.
- Bank of Cyprus will see 37.5% of deposits over £85k converted into shares
- Laiki Bank customers are also reported to be facing the loss of 80%
- Experts say there is a good chance that shares will be worthless
31
March, 2013
British
expats in Cyprus face a near-total wipe-out of any deposits over
£85,000 as the full nightmare of the stricken island’s EU
bailout became clear yesterday.
Although it was known that the wealthiest savers would take a large hit from last week’s €10 billion (£8.5 billion) EU rescue deal, the loss is far greater than feared.
The blow will fall on customers of the country two biggest banks – Bank of Cyprus and Laiki Bank.
Bank
of Cyprus savers will see 37.5 per cent of any deposits over €100,000
(£85,000) converted into shares in the bank, with a strong
possibility that these will prove worthless. Another 40 per cent will
be repaid only if the bank does well in future, while 22.5 per cent
will go into a contingency fund that could be subject to further
write-offs.
Laiki Bank customers are also reported to be facing the loss of 80 per cent of their deposits above the £85,000 limit.
An
early bailout plan – highlighted by The Mail on Sunday two weeks
ago – would have seen the losses shared across all bank customers,
regardless of their balance.
However, that plan was voted down by the Cypriot parliament, leaving the country in urgent need of a new solution to raise its €5.8 billion contribution towards the bailout.
Thousands
of Cypriots demonstrate to protest against the harsh treatment
imposed on Cyprus by the Eurogroup earlier this week
The
deal – which was clinched last Monday between Cyprus, the European
Union and the International Monetary Fund – made clear that richer
bank customers would shoulder a much larger bill.
Although
it is not known how many of the 60,000 British expats living on
the island have deposits of more than £85,000, it is likely
that a considerable number will be caught in the net.
Neil
Hodgson, 48, who moved to Paphos, on the south-west coast of the
island, six years ago, said he has lost nearly £200,000. The former
farmer, who has two accounts with Bank of Cyprus, added: ‘I had
more than €300,000 in my deposit account and €20,000 in my
current account. When I went to the bank the other day I was told the
total balance for both is €100,000.
‘They
were unable to explain how this had been worked out but indicated I
might get some back at a later stage.
‘I
checked online and it confirmed that the €20,000 in my current
account remains, but that I only have €80,000 in my savings
account. It’s robbery, plain and simple.’
Laiki
Bank customers are also reported to be facing the loss of 80 per cent
of their deposits above the £85,000 limit
Banks
in Cyprus are open for normal business but with strict restrictions
on how much money their clients can access, after being shut for
nearly two weeks
Mr
Hodgson, from Newcastle upon Tyne, whose wife died two years ago,
said he moved to Cyprus believing he was destined for a ‘happy life
of semi-retirement’.
‘Our
farm in Ayrshire was bought by a mining company and I came into a lot
of money,’ he added. ‘We moved to Cyprus for the sunshine and
easy life but it has turned into a nightmare.
‘My
big mistake was to move all my money here, but at the time things
were very stable. Most of the Brits here had the foresight to
move their money in the last few months, but I genuinely thought it
would be OK. I’m not sure what the future holds now.’
The
Treasury has said it will compensate any of the 3,000 British
Service personnel facing losses.
Those hit hardest include
thousands of wealthy Russians who have deposited millions of
euros on the stricken island. Peter Dixon, strategist at European
bank Commerzbank, said: ‘These suggested new sacrifices being
demanded of better-off depositors sound even worse than we assumed.
‘The
problems in Cyprus are twofold. First, the central bank ignored the
huge build-up of debt. There was a problem of mismanagement.
‘Secondly,
the Cypriots essentially imposed these tough solutions on themselves
and the eurozone rubber-stamped them.’
Ordinary
Cypriots step in the streets to protest against the massive
"haircuts" imposed by The European Union, the European
Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund
Last
week markets took fright at suggestions that the Cyprus model could
be a blueprint for future bailouts elsewhere in Europe.
Those
with less than £85,000 in the bank have also seen themselves hit by
the bailout. Temporary capital controls have been imposed to stop
residents taking cash off the island, including capping cash machine
withdrawals at €300 a day.
At
the same time, businesses have been told they will be unable to
transfer more than €5,000 abroad without approval, while no one,
including tourists, can leave the island with over €1,000 in cash.
Meanwhile,
the spotlight has now swung to Slovenia, another small member of the
single currency in which investors are losing faith.
Last
week, the price it had to pay to borrow money jumped sharply as
markets began to take account of the risk that the country may
default on its debts.
However, on Friday, finance minister Uros Cufer insisted: ‘We will need no bailout this year. I am calm.’
However, on Friday, finance minister Uros Cufer insisted: ‘We will need no bailout this year. I am calm.’
Dan
Atkinson: How the euro turned into the biggest theft in history
For
a currency that promised to provide a sure bet on a glorious future,
the euro is turning into the biggest theft of people’s savings in
Western Europe since the war.
Greece,
Ireland, Portugal and Spain were among the first to be
crushed by the fallacy of a one-size-fits-all currency.
Now it is Cyprus’s turn, and the scale of losses for some savers
is eye-watering.
Last
week, the latest Cypriot bailout proposals hinted at a 40 per cent
levy on all deposits of more than €100,000, or £85,000. This
weekend, it emerged that the true cost for those better-off
depositors could be much closer to 80 per cent.
British expats feature prominently among those who will suffer from an effective confiscation of their assets.
British expats feature prominently among those who will suffer from an effective confiscation of their assets.
Claims
that the victims are shady Russian oligarchs have a nasty whiff
to them, and even if some of the cash that will be taken is of
doubtful provenance, that cannot justify the burden now being placed
on the tiny island economy.
Smaller
savers may not have been hit by a levy on their bank accounts, but
they will be swept up in the economic storm that is sure to descend
on Cyprus as a result of such draconian measures.
It’s
tempting to wonder why any troubled eurozone country like Cyprus was
ever let into what was obviously a rich man’s club.
But
that is unfair – the poorer members were welcomed with open arms,
with the assurance that the euro would turn them into German-style
economic titans. It was like persuading a pauper to join a
casino.
Yes,
Cyprus let its banking sector balloon wildly and, yes, it is the
Cypriot government that has dreamt up some of the more masochistic
features of the various bailout plans.
But
all this human sacrifice in the eurozone – austerity, mass
unemployment, arbitrary bank account levies – is about saving the
euro. You wonder how much pain there has to be before someone
realises that what must be sacrificed is the euro itself.
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