Whatever the haircut paid to the banks, the borrower still remains liable for the full amount borrowed, including rolled up interest. Nothing is being written off at this stage (Zoe will be the first big one). Whether its NAMA or the banks responsible, what you want to do is maximise how much of the borrowing that you can recover.
The banks have rolled up interest for years. The reason they won't foreclose is that a firesale of assets would crystalise immense losses by driving down values even further.
If I read you right Macy you seem to think that bailing the developers out and doing the best thing for the taxpayer are aligned. Nothing could be further from the truth.
If you want to give the developers what they deserve, you'd call all the loans now, force liquidation and call personal guarantees and sell the collateral (i.e. do what ACC are doing now). This firesale would bankrupt the developers (which they deserve) and because of the low values that would be recovered on the land and developments, almost certainly bankrupt the banks (which they also deserve). So you'd teach the developers and bankers a lesson, BUT at huge cost to the taxpayer.
The alternative is the NAMA approach, spread the asset sales over 5 or 10 years and get a better return and try to minimise the costs to the taxpayer(a la Sweden). But to do this you can't stick it to the developers and the banks.
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