Does anyone have any money in Northern Rock? Did you take it out?
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"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
I have not read the details but if I had money there I would have withdrawn by now. No disadvantage to moving money. I presume most people will take their money out subject to terms of their account.
The brand name is muck now & only a matter of time before no customers left.
No need to take it out, if only because its a waste of time queuing up all day.
Can't remember off the top of my head if non-UK residents are covered by the Deposit Guarantee Scheme there (100% up to £35k) but its a bit of a non-issue in any case.
Still can't believe the FSA allowed them to operate on a business model which pretty much ensure implosion in the event of a credit crunch (something that generally occurs at least once in each economic cycle).
Didn't have to queue up as ours was an internet account and id accessed itit before midnight on Thursday as soon as I heard about the "loan".... before their website became clogged.
Moved it very simply to another institution based in Ireland but offering a lower long term interest rate.
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"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
Certainly is.
They didn't have a huge deposit base, which is what caused the problem in the first place. As for the mortgage base, its inevitable that will be sold, probably fairly soon.
Net effect, zero (save for usual herd panic behaviour spurred on by the media).
Actually, whilst thats a fair assessment for the general public, its probably not strictly true in terms of the market impacts. One of the major effects will be that the fashion of the last decade for banks to act only as salesmen and securitise assets quickly to get them off the balance sheet will no longer be an option.
* Loans and assets of £113bn
* Deposits from customers of £24bn
With those numbers if everyone was to request their savings back they would be bust but then again its the same with most banks. I think NR fund a lot of customer loans by borrowing from other banks though.
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"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
NR was overly dependent on "wholesale" funding, i.e., borrowing in large size from other banks, borrowing in large size from "securitising" its mortgage assets, but borrowing relatively little from "retail" depositors.
A complicated chain of events was set off by the implosion of the US sub-prime mortgage lending market which has caused a crisis of confidence in the wholsale markets leaving NR hopelessly short cash but not necessarily insolvent. If a liquidator was called in tomorrow assets would most ikely exceed liabilities, but the funding that was the lifeblood of their business model has dried up.
The size of the BoE lifeboat made the Deposit Guarantee Scheme irrelevant but if you were able to get it out over the net it makes it less messy.
It wasn't really that complicated or unforseeable.
All banks have liquidity risk policies which should deal with credit crunches. I'd love to see what NR's said ("put up for sale sign" presumably?!).
Last edited by dahamsta; 18/09/2007 at 10:45 AM.
ORA, on Thursday evening there was no indication of the size or terms of the BoE lifeboat.
As a depositor from outside the jurisdiction I had no way of knowing if my funds were secure so I took the action I deemed necessary at that time.
As I am not currently employed the funds are there should I need to maintain our current standard of living. OK, I could ask Stutts as an actuary what the best place for these finds are but I'd prefer to have instant access at a reasonable rate to account for irish inflation. NR offered that as did a Dutch based outfit.
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"It's time for the FAI to grow up." John O'Donoghue, Minister for Sport, RTE , Sunday 7 Nov 2004
How do you figure?
They have assets of E113bn and are going to pay out, worst case, £24bn. That leaves E79bn. They're not losing any money by refunding everyone - they're just losing cash flow. The loan they got from the Bank of England covers the money they're going to have to return, so that eases over the cash flow. Rebuilding their name seems to be the major issue now.
The UK gov is now guaranteeing all deposits. This should stop the panic and bring some balance to the market. Still will, as been said, leave NR a tough road to re build their reputation.
54,321 sold - wws will never die - ***
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Normal for all banks to have a high loan to deposit ratio.
I really don't blame people taking their money out - why would you take the risk if you could take the money out? Easy for people without money in the bank, and mega rich politicians to tell people not to panic...
If you attack me with stupidity, I'll be forced to defend myself with sarcasm.
Fwiw,share price up 10% this morning.(Takeover ?)
well the will mainly be the reaction to the Government bail out and their efforts to steady the market. Alliance and Leicester (similar business model to NR) are up 25%. I doubt they will be taken over for the same reason they are in the mess in the first place i.e. lack of credit available to a potential buyer.
Its got nothing to do with credit risk, its liquidity risk that caused the problem.
Buyers are lining up to make a bid, there were allegedly two before last Thursday, but the FSA insisted NR when public and tried to sort themselves out before they would approve a takeover.
Their mortgage business, although at the higher end of the risk scale (self cert and buy-to-let focus) is very attractive.
Its got everything to do with the credit squeeze and nothing to do with their liquidity. Common misconception that they are at the higher end of the lending scale as well. Their average LTV is below 70% and their arrears percentage is below the CML average. I agree that their mortgage book is very attractive especially when you consider Non prime lenders like GMAC have (or should i say had until the credit squeeze) most of the main UK lenders falling over themselves to buy their assets
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