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2008–2009 Irish banking crisis : ウィキペディア英語版
Post-2008 Irish banking crisis


The post-2008 Irish banking crisis led to a number of financial institutions being bailed out by the government, and subsequently led to a number of unexpected revelations about the business affairs of some banks and business people.
==Background==
In the second half of the 1995–2007 ''Celtic Tiger'' period of growth the international bond borrowings of the six main Irish banks,
Bank of Ireland, Allied Irish Banks, Anglo-Irish Bank, Irish Life & Permanent, Irish Nationwide Building Society and Educational Building Society grew from less than €16 billion in 2003 to approximately €100 billion (well over half of Ireland's GDP) by 2007. This growth in bond funding was quite exceptional relative to the aggregate euro area and the focus of the Central Bank and most external observers was on the apparently strong capital adequacy ratios of the banks or Pillar One of the Basle framework.〔 For example, the 2007 International Monetary Fund Article IV Consultation—Staff Report on Ireland has a heading summarizing the position of the banking sector as ''“Banks Have Large Exposures to Property, But Big Cushions Too.”''. However, this appears to have come at the expense of a lack of emphasis on the second pillar, which relates to the supervisory process. In particular, the Basle II guidelines contain an extensive section on the importance of dealing with “credit concentration risk”, i.e. banks having too much exposure to one source of risk.〔 Inadequate and/or lax supervision of the Irish banking system had allowed excessive borrowing by the Irish Banks on the corporate and international money markets. By October 2009, it was German and French banks that were most exposed in the periphery of the eurozone with more than 40 per cent of the foreign claims on Greece, Ireland, Portugal, Italy and Spain being French and German. In 2010 the Bank for International Settlements recorded between US$186.4 Billion and $208.3 Billion in total exposure to Ireland with $57.8 billion in exposure to Irish banks. The German monetary financial institution sector was the largest investor in Irish bank bonds during the pre-crisis period and according to the Bundesbank's consolidated figures German banks had, by September 2008, the month of the bank guarantee, was €135 billion invested in Ireland. These figures for the exposure of German banks to "Irish" banks, however, relate almost in their entirety to their exposure to their own large subsidiaries based in Dublin's International Financial Services Centre, for example Depfa, which reportedly had an external focus and external ownership.
The heavy borrowing abroad by Irish banks reflected the enormous increase in their lending into the Irish property market,〔(【引用サイトリンク】work=European Commission Representation in Ireland )〕 a lending area which since 1996 seemed to be able to provide an endless flow of profitable lending opportunities as the Irish public relentlessly bought and sold property. The total stock of mortgage loans in Ireland exploded from €16 billion in the first quarter of 2003 to a peak of €106 billion by the third quarter of 2008, about 60 percent of Ireland's GDP for that year. This, in turn, led to a massive increase in the price of Irish property assets. The freezing-up of the world's interbank market during the financial crisis of 2007–2008 caused two problems for Irish Banks. Firstly, with no new money available to borrow, withdrawal of deposits caused a liquidity problem. In other words, there was no cash available to honour withdrawal requests. A liquidity problem on its own is usually manageable through Central Bank funding. However, the second problem was solvency and this was much more serious. The lack of new money meant no new loans which meant no new property deals. No new property purchases both exposed fragile cash-flows of developers and highlighted the stratospheric valuations. With the value of most of their assets (loans) declining in line with the property market, the liabilities (deposits) of the six Irish domestic banks were now considerably greater than their assets. Insolvency loomed and Irish banks would need a major cash injections (recapitalisation) to stay open.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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