Greek banks
are preparing contingency plans for a possible “bail-in” of depositors amid
fears the country is heading for financial collapse, bankers and businesspeople
with knowledge of the measures said on Friday.
A Greek bail-in could resemble the rescue
plan agreed by Cyprus in 2013, when customers’ funds were seized to shore up
the banks, with a haircut imposed on uninsured deposits over €100,000.
It would be implemented as part of a
recapitalisation of Greek banks that would be agreed with the country’s
creditors - the European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European
Central Bank.
“It [the haircut] would take place in the
context of an overall restructuring of the bank sector once Greece is back in a
bailout programme,” said one person following the issue. “This is not something
that is going to happen immediately.”
Eurozone officials said no decision had been
taken to wind up any Greek banks or initiate a bail-in of depositors, a process
that would be started by the ECB declaring the banks insolvent or pulling
emergency loans.
Greece’s banks have been closed since
Monday, when capital controls were imposed to prevent a bank run following the
leftwing Syriza-led government’s call for a referendum on a bailout plan it had
earlier rejected. Greece’s highest court rejected an appeal by two citizens on
Friday who had asked for the referendum to be declared unconstitutional.
Depositors can withdraw only €60 a day from
bank ATM cash machines, while requests to transfer funds abroad have to be
approved by a special finance ministry committee in co-operation with the Greek
central bank.
Two senior Athens bankers said the country
had only enough cash to keep ATMs supplied until the middle of next week. This
followed the ECB’s decision this week not to increase Greece’s allocation of
emergency liquidity assistance after the bailout programme ended on June 30.
The outcome of Sunday’s referendum will
determine how quickly Greece wraps up a new bailout agreement with creditors, a
top Greek banker said.
“The solvency of Greek banks is not
currently an issue, but obviously the banks will be affected by how soon the
country enters a new programme,” the same banker said.
Greek deposits are guaranteed up to
€100,000, in line with EU banking directives, but the country’s deposit
insurance fund amounts to only €3bn, which would not be enough to cover demand
in case of a bank collapse.
With few deposits over €100,000 left in the
banks after six months of capital flight, “it makes sense for the banks to
consider imposing a haircut on small depositors as part of a recapitalisation. . . It could even be flagged as a
one-off tax,” said one analyst.
Πηγή: ft.com
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