Cyprus: Savings account theft plan draws fury
Source: Anniston Star
"A plan to seize up to 10 percent of savings accounts in Cyprus
to help pay for a (EURO)15.8 billion ($20.4 billion) financial
bailout was met with fury Monday, and the government shut down banks
until later this week while lawmakers wrangled over how to keep the
island nation from bankruptcy. Though the euro and stock prices of
European banks fell, global financial markets largely remained calm,
and there was little sense that bank account holders elsewhere
across the continent faced similar risk." (03/18/13)
Cyprus seeks to
shield small depositors from raid
By
MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS and ELENA BECATOROS
Associated Press

AP
Photo/Petros Karadjias
NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) -- The Cypriot government sought Tuesday to
shield small savers from a plan that is intended to raise (EURO)5.8
billion ($7.5 billion) toward a financial bailout by seizing money from
bank accounts.
The plan, which is part of a larger bailout package being negotiated
with other European countries, has been met with fury in Cyprus and has
sent jitters across financial markets.
Banks in Cyprus will stay shut until Thursday to prevent a bank run
before Parliament has backed the plan to seize a percentage of bank
deposits. If the bill goes through some savers could still try to get
their money out.
Just hours ahead of the expected debate and vote in the country's
56-member Parliament, officials sought to limit the impact on small
savers. They also hinted that the country was looking to limit the
amount it has to raise from the grab on deposits. The new plan would
leave a shortfall in the amount Nicosia has been told it must raise.
About 300 protesters gathered outside parliament, which was cordoned off
by police.
A vote in favor of the bank account confiscation is needed if Cyprus is
to get (EURO)10 billion ($12.9 billion) in rescue loans from its euro
partners and the International Monetary Fund. The money will be used to
prop up the banks and help Cyprus pay its bills.
A new draft bill discussed in Parliament's finance committee proposed to
spare all deposits below (EURO)20,000 ($25,900). Those between
(EURO)20,000 and (EURO)100,000 ($129,290) would still have a 6.75
percent charge imposed, and those above (EURO)100,000 would have to give
up 9.9 percent of their deposits, in line with the original plan put
forward over the weekend.
In a sign of the scale of disagreement over the deposit charge, the
country's central bank governor, Panicos Demetriades, recommended that
no accounts below (EURO)100,000 be touched. That level represents the
amount of savings that are supposed to be insured if a bank collapses.
"The credibility of, and trust in the banking sector depends on this,"
said Demetriades, who conceded that he expects at least 10 percent of
deposits to be withdrawn when the banks eventually re-open.
Failure to pass the bill could mean no bailout money from the eurozone
and IMF and lead to Cyprus's bankruptcy, which could reignite concerns
in financial markets over the single currency's future. That would
likely put deposits in the country's banks under even more threat.
Although Cyprus is the smallest eurozone country to be bailed out, the
details of the plan sent shockwaves through the single currency area as
it was the first time savers' banks accounts have been directly
targeted. Other bailed out countries such as Greece, Ireland and
Portugal have raised funds by imposing new taxes.
Proponents of the deposit seizure argue that this way gets foreigners
who have taken advantage of Cyprus's low-tax regime to share the cost of
the bailout of the banks, which have been hit hard by their
over-exposure to bad Greek debt.
About a third of all deposits in Cypriot banks are believed to be held
by Russians.
Finance Minister Michalis Sarris was flying to Moscow Tuesday afternoon
to meet with his Russian counterpart. Andreas Charalambous, a senior
official at the ministry, said the aim is to extend repayment of a
(EURO)2.5 billion loan Russia granted Cyprus in late 2011 when the
country could no longer borrow from international markets.
But he admitted there was a bigger ambition than just an extension of
the loan and that Cyprus is looking for "potential interest for further
investment in the country."
Opponents say a blanket charge on people's bank accounts will hurt
ordinary Cypriots more, and could shake the confidence of all in the
country's banking sector. And by going after deposits, European
policymakers have set a precedent that could be repeated in the future.
The worry of bank runs across Europe lies at the heart of market
concerns.
Charalambous said Cypriot authorities believe depositors should be
protected, but that a wholesale exemption for those below (EURO)100,000
would mean a "disproportionate" burden on large savers, and a "very
detrimental" knock-on effect on economic growth.
"Because of the size of the estimated (bailout) needs, the burden on
those above (EURO)100,000 would be such that it would again impact small
people because it would destroy the ability of the country to attract
foreign investment," Charalambous said.
In a Monday night teleconference, eurozone finance ministers concluded
that small depositors should not be hit as hard as others. They said
Cyprus should stagger the seizures more, but insisted that the overall
take should stay the same.
President Nicos Anastasiades, who was elected less than a month ago,
told German Chancellor Angela Merkel Monday night that "the possibility
of reducing the requirements from self-raised funds is being explored,"
a Cypriot government spokesman said.
The two leaders were expected to speak again on Tuesday, he added.
Christine Lagarde, the head of the International Monetary Fund which is
participating in Cyprus's bailout, said in Frankfurt that the IMF was
"extremely supportive of the Cypriot authorities' intentions to
introduce more progressive rates in the one-off tax."
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