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It shouldnt bother me, but it does

2»

Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 32,370 ✭✭✭✭Son Of A Vidic


    OPENROAD wrote: »
    We don't support the banks = we have no economy

    If we don't try and maintain a first world health service = you might not live/be around long enough to support banks or anything else for that matter. No wanker, Banker will ever save your life I can assure you.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 86,334 ✭✭✭✭Overheal


    I didnt have an interest in politics or politicians until recently when they started to give my money away to bailout the banks. Thats a failure on my part I admit
    I honestly think the vast majority of people in the country are not interested in politics.
    The problem with that is that they (politicians) are getting away with murder becasue of this general apathy , I think if people really cared they would be shouting louder than they are now
    What do you think has to happen for the Irish people to say "enough" ??
    Well at least another one is finally turning on when others including myself were trying to highlight problems with apathy years ago, and since.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,487 ✭✭✭Mister men


    I think it's just pretty sad we let it happen. The apathy is astounding tbh.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 451 ✭✭seven-iron


    If your still (its 2010!) wondering why banks need to be bailed out, you need to read up on Lehman Brothers. People's memory must be short.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    Overheal wrote: »
    Well at least another one is finally turning on when others including myself were trying to highlight problems with apathy years ago, and since.

    I am shocked by the apathy of the Irish in the last 2 years. they dont seem to give a sh*t that the government are bum raping them with this bailout. I thought that it was because the pain hadnt trickled down to the people yet, but there are nearly 500,000 on the dole :confused:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    seven-iron wrote: »
    If your still (its 2010!) wondering why banks need to be bailed out, you need to read up on Lehman Brothers. People's memory must be short.

    I think most people see the need for bailing out banks, especially AIB and BOI, it's the likes of Roman Abromavic, the Chelsea owner, people object too.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 959 ✭✭✭maringo


    I think the least we are entitled to is a breakdown of where exactly our money went when it was put into the hole that is Anglo. I'm mad as hell - I never gave my permission to any government to bankrupt my kids and grankids - how dare they use OUR sweat to bail that bank which was never a normal operating bank but seemed to exist to enrich a golden circle.

    What about their accountants who examined and certified their accounts year after year? Is there no offence there?

    The guy who drove his mixer lorry to the gates of Leinster House was arrested pretty sharply and quite rightly - in contrast. Did he beggar every man, woman and child into the distant future?

    But one law for them and another one for us in this corrupt country!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    maringo wrote: »
    What about their accountants who examined and certified their accounts year after year? Is there no offence there?

    No apparently no politician or banker committed any criminal offence whatsoever
    I know, I find it hard to believe too


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 86,334 ✭✭✭✭Overheal


    and oh yeah:
    It shouldnt bother me, but it does
    YES. Yes it should.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,103 ✭✭✭Tiddlypeeps


    Best summation yet of the horseturd we've been fed.
    You may not have noticed, but we already effectively don't have an economy, since there are half a million on the dole, a hundred thousands beggared in negative equity, and we're borrowing just to pay the public sector wage bill each month.
    Adding a 50 billion banking bailout to pay the losing bets of the banksters, Fianna Fail funders and shady bondholders like Roman Abramovich is not a solution to any of the above.
    Forgive me for stating what should be BLINDLY FVCKING OBVIOUS, but a further 50 billion debt on top of the current situation is endgame for this nation.
    We have to default on that debt or we'll default on our sovereign debt. At this point, I'd be inclined to do both, actually.

    I find it hilarious when people on the internet say we have no economy when they can clearly still afford a computer and an internet connection. If the country really is as bad as people make it out to be I really don't see how these things can be on their list of priorities. If things were as bad as they were in the 80's then people would be scraping every penny they could to feed their kids, or keep a roof over there own heads. I'm not saying the country isn't in a bad way by any means, just find this kind of thing funny.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    maringo wrote: »
    I think the least we are entitled to is a breakdown of where exactly our money went when it was put into the hole that is Anglo. I'm mad as hell - I never gave my permission to any government to bankrupt my kids and grankids - how dare they use OUR sweat to bail that bank which was never a normal operating bank but seemed to exist to enrich a golden circle.

    What about their accountants who examined and certified their accounts year after year? Is there no offence there?

    The guy who drove his mixer lorry to the gates of Leinster House was arrested pretty sharply and quite rightly - in contrast. Did he beggar every man, woman and child into the distant future?

    But one law for them and another one for us in this corrupt country!

    Karl Whelan did a well balanced piece on it a few months back. Best piece I've read on it:

    The Irish Economy » Blog Archive » Anglo: What Are The Options?

    Gives you a general idea of where the money goes. Bear in mind he was basing those figures on a 50% NAMA haircut, it could well be 60-70% which will mean more money!

    As for the Accountants, they usually have disclaimers regarding fraud etc. so probably covered by that.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,456 ✭✭✭Jev/N


    Confab wrote: »
    I'm preparing an article on this, but it boils down to a few words:
    Ireland needs a Swiss-style pure democracy.

    Exactly. We're lacking in our 'separation' of the three organs of the State... it's a winner takes all situation


    And to the above poster, unless I'm mistaken you can't disclaim fraud, only negligence if you have the insurance to back it up. In this instance, the monetary limit on such insurance would have been obviously exceeded anyways


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Jev/N wrote: »
    Exactly. We're lacking in our 'separation' of the three organs of the State... it's a winner takes all situation


    And to the above poster, unless I'm mistaken you can't disclaim fraud, only negligence if you have the insurance to back it up. In this instance, the monetary limit on such insurance would have been obviously exceeded anyways

    Considering our penchant for "parish pump" politics and Independents, I'm not sure if the Swiss model is ideal.

    As regards fraud, I think the disclaimer is, while Accountants may uncover fraud and obviously the onus is then on them to report it, an Audit should not be seen as the sole method of detecting it. The main responsibility lies with the Directors who run the company on a day to day basis.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    K-9 wrote: »
    As regards fraud, I think the disclaimer is, while Accountants may uncover fraud and obviously the onus is then on them to report it, an Audit should not be seen as the sole method of detecting it. The main responsibility lies with the Directors who run the company on a day to day basis.

    So its was up to the people who were fraudulent to report themselves ?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    So its was up to the people who were fraudulent to report themselves ?

    Yep. These would be the people who are presenting the Accounts to the Auditors to check. We don't know how well hidden certain transactions were, transactions that obviously should have been brought to the Auditors attention, or should have shown up as irregular activities.

    In short, certain transactions should have shown up like a sore thumb! If they didn't, I'd wonder why not and IMO, the directors would face serious questions. If they did, well...............

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    K-9 wrote: »
    Yep. These would be the people who are presenting the Accounts to the Auditors to check. We don't know how well hidden certain transactions were, transactions that obviously should have been brought to the Auditors attention, or should have shown up as irregular activities.

    In short, certain transactions should have shown up like a sore thumb! If they didn't, I'd wonder why not and IMO, the directors would face serious questions. If they did, well...............

    I can imagine the conversation between the Auditor and Anglo
    "Your accounts have been audited Seany , there are a few anomalies"

    "Thanks a lot, I'll take care of it"


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 694 ✭✭✭douglashyde


    I agree but
    underfunded hospitals=even ****tier health system

    you have to say their wages and expenses are ****ing ridiculous, especially when they are telling people to take cuts

    I agree there wages are high compared to your average Joe. However you have to look at this in a realitive context.

    You'd expect that the salary of those running a country to be in line with a CEO that runs a large multinational company, however you would also expect them to be as qualified and competent as that CEO. In MY ideal world we would have top class business strategists, economists, accounts and marketers that came from the PRIVATE industry running this country - not people with a lifetime background in our inefficient civil service.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,215 ✭✭✭galah


    so can anyone explain why the healthcare system was sh*t even during the boom, when the country was supposedly awash with money?

    It's not like there weren't people on trolleys then...

    what annoys me most - I didnt live the highlife during the boom, was barely on the average industrial salary. Now I'm lucky I still have a job - and yet am made to fund all the extravaganza and mistakes of the people who squandered it all recklessly...THAT really p*sses me off.

    and I also think that some negative benchmarking of the public sector is in order - they were allowed to raise their salaries it to private sector standards, now they should lower it to those again as well...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    I wonder who will get hit in the budget the hardest ?
    I cant see the government taking on the public sector properly


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    galah wrote: »
    so can anyone explain why the healthcare system was sh*t even during the boom, when the country was supposedly awash with money?

    It's not like there weren't people on trolleys then...

    Bad management I guess.
    We are now being told that we are a low tax economy compared to other EU countries and taxes must rise. However these other countries have quality public services for their citizens, so we will have their taxes and still have **** services ?


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    K-9 wrote: »
    A bank to fail?

    If they'd let Anglo fail 2 years ago, people would care, a bit like Iceland now.

    Sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind, but nobody wants to break the bad news.

    Iceland are in a much better position than Ireland now, Iceland can borrow money at a much cheaper interest rate than Ireland.... plus, it has been announced that Ireland will no longer go to the bond market after the last 2 disasterous experiences... although the Irish state media will have us believe that it was successful.

    If Ireland has decided to refrain from going to the bond market to sell Irish bonds, it will mean a draconian budget in December... meanwhile we continue to bail out Anglo Irish Bank to the tune of €29 billion.... and wait for it.... the government have decided not to disclose who we are actually paying this money to, its confidential information! And we sit there and take it........

    So while the banks and bond holders will enjoy 20 years of collecting revenue at an exhorbitant rate of interest from the people of Ireland, we will have reverted back to our position in the 70's as a politically stagnant, peasant culture (with, now, the disadvantage of having to pay for the 'sin' of our aspirations, by means of a generational period of high taxation, SH!T healthcare and derelict public services)

    and you can sit there and declare that 'sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind'


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,089 ✭✭✭ascanbe


    It shouldn't bother me, but it does.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    Iceland are in a much better position than Ireland now, Iceland can borrow money at a much cheaper interest rate than Ireland.... plus, it has been announced that Ireland will no longer go to the bond market after the last 2 disasterous experiences... although the Irish state media will have us believe that it was successful.

    If Ireland has decided to refrain from going to the bond market to sell Irish bonds, it will mean a draconian budget in December... meanwhile we continue to bail out Anglo Irish Bank to the tune of €29 billion.... and wait for it.... the government have decided not to disclose who we are actually paying this money to, its confidential information! And we sit there and take it........

    So while the banks and bond holders will enjoy 20 years of collecting revenue at an exhorbitant rate of interest from the people of Ireland, we will have reverted back to our position in the 70's as a politically stagnant, peasant culture (with, now, the disadvantage of having to pay for the 'sin' of our aspirations, by means of a generational period of high taxation, SH!T healthcare and derelict public services)

    and you can sit there and declare that 'sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind'

    Some of these threads are crawling with Fianna Failers ;)


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Iceland are in a much better position than Ireland now, Iceland can borrow money at a much cheaper interest rate than Ireland.... plus, it has been announced that Ireland will no longer go to the bond market after the last 2 disasterous experiences... although the Irish state media will have us believe that it was successful.

    If Ireland has decided to refrain from going to the bond market to sell Irish bonds, it will mean a draconian budget in December... meanwhile we continue to bail out Anglo Irish Bank to the tune of €29 billion.... and wait for it.... the government have decided not to disclose who we are actually paying this money to, its confidential information! And we sit there and take it........

    So while the banks and bond holders will enjoy 20 years of collecting revenue at an exhorbitant rate of interest from the people of Ireland, we will have reverted back to our position in the 70's as a politically stagnant, peasant culture (with, now, the disadvantage of having to pay for the 'sin' of our aspirations, by means of a generational period of high taxation, SH!T healthcare and derelict public services)

    and you can sit there and declare that 'sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind'

    You totally missed my point, but thanks for backing it up anyway!

    40,000 households in Iceland are behind on their mortgages, out of a population of 250,000 odd though. Something to bear in mind.

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    K-9 wrote: »
    You totally missed my point, but thanks for backing it up anyway!

    40,000 households in Iceland are behind on their mortgages, out of a population of 250,000 odd though. Something to bear in mind.

    Ireland's external debt as of Sept 2009 is $2.28 TRILLION... putting us in 7th place in the world (with a population of a little over 4 million people)

    Iceland's is currently in 120th place

    here is the link to the CIA Factbook

    Now..... give a guess as to what Ireland's external debt was in 1998?
    $11 billion you have to scroll well down the page to see this.

    see link here

    A few paragraphs of legislation would have prevented the absolute meltdown our economy is facing now. At least Iceland are trading their way out of it.... plus they are issuing charges of criminal negligence against the former prime minister and some of his cabinet.

    So in a period of 11 years, Ireland's external debt went from $11 billion to $2,280 billion under the Fianna Fail government. (who should currently be locked up with Seanie Fitz, Fingleton etc)

    Ireland is currently getting a rate of 7% for our 10 year bonds, and the reason why we are not going back to the bond markets is because nobody is interested in buying Irish bonds. The ECB had to step in and rescue us the last 2 times..... so please, can you tell me.... where the HELL is the government going to get the money to pay the PS wages and the social welfare etc. when no-one is buying Irish bonds anymore?

    Brian Lenihan was made a fool of on a conference call last week to the traders in Europe; there were over 250 people on the conference call, wher Mr. Lenihan tried to explain why traders should buy Irish bonds. He was jeered at. People were heard saying 'short Ireland', which basically means dump Irish bonds.
    Then he was told on no uncertain terms, that if Ireland comes back to the bond market again, we would be charged 10%. The conference call had to be abandoned as some of the traders were being insulting to Brian Lenihan.

    So the markets already know the dire position Ireland has been left in.

    We too, are facing a mega tsunami of mortgage defaulters in the new year. Since 2002, there have been 500,000 new mortgages issued in Ireland, out of a population of 4 million.... we cant pay that. The latter houses (2005 - ) all being purchased on overloaded mortgaging arrangements. Ireland's property-market-based, boom years were not just an anomaly, but a complete fiction.

    but that is another days talk


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,654 ✭✭✭Noreen1


    To answer the OPs question:

    The budget should do it - unless we hear more bad news before that, of course.

    Noreen


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    Do you think we will start seeing home reposession next year, or will the banks write off that debt also?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,454 ✭✭✭mink_man


    You really dont have a clue do you ?
    Banks do not HAVE TO BE SAVED. We, or should I say the government, choose to save them, big difference

    brainless, all our politicians are smart people, and anyone who thinks they aren't smart are thick as a plank, thinking ye'd do a better job.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,124 ✭✭✭Amhran Nua


    Ireland's external debt as of Sept 2009 is $2.28 TRILLION... putting us in 7th place in the world (with a population of a little over 4 million people)
    Most of that is funds passing through the IFSC and has nothing to do with the Irish state or national debt.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,454 ✭✭✭mink_man


    How many Irish speakers do we need?

    oh right, so you want the irish language just to die? what about all the people who do speak it, if you spoke fluent irish you'd think differently.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,556 ✭✭✭✭AckwelFoley


    I didnt have an interest in politics or politicians until recently when they started to give my money away to bailout the banks. Thats a failure on my part I admit
    I honestly think the vast majority of people in the country are not interested in politics.
    The problem with that is that they (politicians) are getting away with murder becasue of this general apathy , I think if people really cared they would be shouting louder than they are now
    What do you think has to happen for the Irish people to say "enough" ??

    A nations "apathy" will gauge how succesful a country is.

    The general perception now is that we're fooked. And tbh, it pretty bad, however people as you said dont care about politics because it appears they dont need ot care.

    If you look at countries where they really are in poor shape, ie many african nations and some south american countries, you will see a 95% turnout to the ballot box, and people will die to get there, because it has such an affect on them. However as much as we whinge and moan, most people will just do that because most people dont give a fcuk really and dont care because relatively speaking we are not badly off.

    Its the truth, most of you dont want to hear that, but it is, right now relatively speaking we are better off than most countries in the world...

    Easy way to test my theory. Cut off all social welfare payments in the morning, the lot.. unemployment, childrens allowance etc, and stop all expendature on health care.. within 1 month there would be more than peaceful demonstrations, there would be riots, and after these riots there would be a near 100% turnout to the next elections


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    Amhran Nua wrote: »
    Most of that is funds passing through the IFSC and has nothing to do with the Irish state or national debt.

    yes, its gross national debt... but can you explain to me how it has jumped by 2,269 billion (approx) in 11 years? why has this been allowed to happen? And how was it so low in 1998?

    Also, the Germans are particularly unimpressed at the minute with the fact that Ireland owes the German banks €224 billion... and they are looking for that money back....

    Now, to the half-wit who claims that our politicians are very clever people, please take a look at how Frank Fahey (you should know him) handles a debate with banking expert, Peter Mathews... be sure and watch how Frank Fahey tries to explain to Peter Mathews how NAMA works with the ECB,




  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    Ireland's external debt as of Sept 2009 is $2.28 TRILLION... putting us in 7th place in the world (with a population of a little over 4 million people)

    Iceland's is currently in 120th place

    here is the link to the CIA Factbook

    Now..... give a guess as to what Ireland's external debt was in 1998?
    $11 billion you have to scroll well down the page to see this.

    see link here

    A few paragraphs of legislation would have prevented the absolute meltdown our economy is facing now. At least Iceland are trading their way out of it.... plus they are issuing charges of criminal negligence against the former prime minister and some of his cabinet.

    So in a period of 11 years, Ireland's external debt went from $11 billion to $2,280 billion under the Fianna Fail government. (who should currently be locked up with Seanie Fitz, Fingleton etc)

    Ireland is currently getting a rate of 7% for our 10 year bonds, and the reason why we are not going back to the bond markets is because nobody is interested in buying Irish bonds. The ECB had to step in and rescue us the last 2 times..... so please, can you tell me.... where the HELL is the government going to get the money to pay the PS wages and the social welfare etc. when no-one is buying Irish bonds anymore?

    Brian Lenihan was made a fool of on a conference call last week to the traders in Europe; there were over 250 people on the conference call, wher Mr. Lenihan tried to explain why traders should buy Irish bonds. He was jeered at. People were heard saying 'short Ireland', which basically means dump Irish bonds.
    Then he was told on no uncertain terms, that if Ireland comes back to the bond market again, we would be charged 10%. The conference call had to be abandoned as some of the traders were being insulting to Brian Lenihan.

    So the markets already know the dire position Ireland has been left in.

    We too, are facing a mega tsunami of mortgage defaulters in the new year. Since 2002, there have been 500,000 new mortgages issued in Ireland, out of a population of 4 million.... we cant pay that. The latter houses (2005 - ) all being purchased on overloaded mortgaging arrangements. Ireland's property-market-based, boom years were not just an anomaly, but a complete fiction.

    but that is another days talk

    As Amhran Nua pointed out and I've pointed this out to a few people quoting that, we don't owe that money. The majority of it is IFSC debt, which also explains the huge increase.

    As for the bonds etc. completely agreed but there seems to be a naivety about alternatives. By all means go to Iceland and tell them how great they have it!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    K-9 wrote: »
    As Amhran Nua pointed out and I've pointed this out to a few people quoting that, we don't owe that money. The majority of it is IFSC debt, which also explains the huge increase.

    As for the bonds etc. completely agreed but there seems to be a naivety about alternatives. By all means go to Iceland and tell them how great they have it!

    and the €224 billion we owe the German banks? and how do you mean 'naivety about alternatives'? Iceland have their show on the road again, albeit a slow start... where as we have practically lost our soverignty. Germany are forcing Greece to sell off its islands to pay their debts to the EU... whats to stop them doing the same here?
    And when you consider the position Ireland was in back in 2000, it is clear to see that the government took this thriving economy, and drove it straight into the ground...


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,556 ✭✭✭✭AckwelFoley


    reland is currently getting a rate of 7% for our 10 year bonds, and the reason why we are not going back to the bond markets is because nobody is interested in buying Irish bonds
    .

    Really? Our last bond auction was over subscribed 6 times.

    "nobody is interested" is not accurate, somebody will always be interested, it simply depends on the value / interest rate


  • Banned (with Prison Access) Posts: 32,865 ✭✭✭✭MagicMarker


    mink_man wrote: »
    oh right, so you want the irish language just to die? what about all the people who do speak it, if you spoke fluent irish you'd think differently.

    If I spoke Irish I'd be thinking ''why the **** did I waste my time learning this pointless language when I could have learned something useful!''.

    By all means keep Irish optional but there are more important things to be learning.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    and the €224 billion we owe the German banks? and how do you mean 'naivety about alternatives'? Iceland have their show on the road again, albeit a slow start... where as we have practically lost our soverignty. Germany are forcing Greece to sell off its islands to pay their debts to the EU... whats to stop them doing the same here?
    And when you consider the position Ireland was in back in 2000, it is clear to see that the government took this thriving economy, and drove it straight into the ground...

    Well if it's owed, I assume it will have to be repaid at some stage. What's the breakdown of it, how much is state guaranteed? I know of one bank in particular al right that the Germans are rightly pissed of about.

    I keep hearing about Iceland but I think people are picking what they want to see there, eg. they have a lower unemployment rate of about 8/9% but missing the point that they had lower unemployment anyway, before the crash! Growth rates seem similar to ours and they aren't paying 18% interest rates anymore, 8/9% now.

    What seems to have happened there is, instead of the Govt. bailing out the banks through the taxpayer, the taxpayer is doing it more directly, out of their own pockets, or not, to be more accurate, as they can't afford the payments!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    snyper wrote: »
    .

    Really? Our last bond auction was over subscribed 6 times.

    "nobody is interested" is not accurate, somebody will always be interested, it simply depends on the value / interest rate

    Then why was the governer of our central bank, Mr. Patrick Honohan flying around the world, during our last bond sale, trying to sell Irish bonds, if our bonds were over subscribed as some of our papers stated.

    And why have the government announced that Ireland is no longer going to the bond markets? We have enough to get us through the next 9 months, apparently, then its uncharted territory. Interesting article here
    http://www.independent.ie/opinion/analysis/were-a-global-laughing-stock-and-we-fully-deserve-to-be-2362633.html


    @ K - 9
    dont know the breakdown, just saw the figure more than once, could trawl through the net finding more details... mentioned in this article

    http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2010/09/27/why-ireland-is-bailing-out-foreign-banks/

    sleep tight everyone


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 12,556 ✭✭✭✭AckwelFoley


    Then why was the governer of our central bank, Mr. Patrick Honohan flying around the world, during our last bond sale, trying to sell Irish bonds,]

    I presume to sell them, if you have something to sell, you make it known..

    And why have the government announced that Ireland is no longer going to the bond markets? We have enough to get us through the next 9 months, apparently, then its uncharted territory. ]

    The rate we are paying at the moment is alot more than we would like. They are essentially in my opinion taking a punt on stabilising the political and financial situation before going again in order to receive a more favorible rate


    The reality is that they dont know how long it will be befor they need to go to the bond markets again, but the reality is that it doesnt make them incompitant for not knowing - its not the politicans that make these projections, the politicans are the mouth pieces that announce the projections made by their economists..

    The reality is nobody knows, nobody has the answers, the reality is - its a best guess situation, regardless of how good or how bad they are its is only a guess, if they knew for certain, or if it was possible to know for certain, i could make alot of money putting my savings on red or black in the context of what should be dont


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,565 ✭✭✭southsiderosie


    Iceland are in a much better position than Ireland now, Iceland can borrow money at a much cheaper interest rate than Ireland.... plus, it has been announced that Ireland will no longer go to the bond market after the last 2 disasterous experiences... although the Irish state media will have us believe that it was successful.

    Yes, but a major difference there is that Iceland has its own currency which tanked big time and has yet to recover. For an island nation that has to import a lot of its basic goods, this has been disastrous.

    They have also had to call in the IMF.

    In addition, I don't think a lot of folks in Iceland think they are doing great given their behavior at the opening of their Parliament last week...
    Protesters took to the streets of Reykjavik today, forcing MPs to run away from the people they represent as renewed anger about the impact of the financial crisis erupted in Iceland.

    The violent protest came amid growing fury at austerity measures being imposed across Europe. Disruption in more than a dozen countries this week included a national strike in Spain and a cement truck driven into the Irish parliament's gates.

    Witnesses said up to 2,000 people caused chaos at the state opening of the Icelandic parliament, with politicians forced to race to the back door of the building because of the large number of protesters at the front. Eggs were said to have hit the prime minister, Jóhanna Sigurðardóttir, other MPs and the wife of the Icelandic president, Ólafur Ragnar Grímsson.

    <snip>

    According to the writer Hallgrímur Helgason, anger has flared in Iceland because of the increasing numbers losing their homes and fury that only the former prime minister Geir Haarde has been charged with negligence over the financial crisis. The parliament voted this week to charge Haarde, who has said he is confident he will be vindicated, but not three others facing similar charges.

    Iceland was at the centre of the financial crisis and took out loans from the International Monetary Fund and its Nordic neighbours after the collapse of three main banks in 2008.

    Birgitta Jónsdóttir, one of three MPs to join the protesters, said: "There is a realisation that the IMF is going to wipe out our middle classes."


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    yes, it can't be denied that Iceland is in a bad position, and there is huge dis-satisfaction and protests. They have made an application to join the Eurozone, and the IMF have had to help them out, but effectively, the ECB did the same job for us, but with a hell of alot less of the conditions that would be associated with an IMF bailout.
    I was merely commenting on the fact that Iceland can now borrow at a lower rate than Ireland. and this was a country that 'did everything wrong', according to the Irish method of dealing with a similar situation.

    http://www.octane.ie/forum/showthread.php?t=43435


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,565 ✭✭✭southsiderosie


    yes, it can't be denied that Iceland is in a bad position, and there is huge dis-satisfaction and protests. They have made an application to join the Eurozone, and the IMF have had to help them out, but effectively, the ECB did the same job for us, but with a hell of alot less of the conditions that would be associated with an IMF bailout.
    I was merely commenting on the fact that Iceland can now borrow at a lower rate than Ireland. and this was a country that 'did everything wrong', according to the Irish method of dealing with a similar situation.

    http://www.octane.ie/forum/showthread.php?t=43435

    Well, it's questionable if the EU would have let Ireland crash the way Iceland did. Although I will say, I think that Anglo should have gone to the wall in 2008, and possibly Nationwide as well. There are plenty of healthy banks in the EU that could have bought some of the assets and/or stepped in; Santander is just one example.

    Interestingly enough, the South China Morning Post (Hong Kong's daily) has been writing quite a bit about the Irish situation. Hong Kong is notoriously prone to real estate boom and busts, but they have an extremely low default rate for loans, due to stringent lending requirements, and little of the "golden circle"-itis that has infected the entire decision-making process around the bank guarantees:

    The word "shaky" hardly describes it. Try "total wreck". The rescue of [Anglo Irish]bank is now expected to cost the Irish government up to €35 billion. This is the equivalent of HK$370 billion - and the Irish economy right now is only about the size of Hong Kong's....could the Irish have avoided it? Prices on their property market crashed by 70 per cent with the 2008 global economic crisis. Surely no financial system could have withstood such a blow without public assistance.

    Could it?

    Well, yes it could. Right here in Hong Kong it could and did. Following the Asian financial crisis in 1997-98, property prices in Hong Kong also fell by roughly 70 per cent, and the resulting shakiness of the financial system is best expressed in the chart at right on mortgage delinquency ratios.

    Yes, take a close look again. At no point in the aftermath of this crisis did the six-month delinquency ratio in mortgage payments reach even 1 per cent of total home loans outstanding. It is now at one-hundredth of 1 per cent, which can comprise little more than borrowers who have been sent to prison.

    There is effectively no mortgage delinquency at all and, as to mortgages written off, haul out your microscope. Even at the height of the financial strain, it amounted annually to little more than one-tenth of 1 per cent of outstanding Hong Kong dollar loans.

    So if Hong Kong could glide right through a major property crash with hardly a tremor to its financial system, what happened in Ireland to cause a financial crisis?

    I think perhaps the most important difference is that we know all about property crashes in Hong Kong. We had one in the 1960s, we had one in the early 1970s, we had one in the early 1980s and then we had that thumper starting in 1998. Elsewhere in the world it is sometimes a revelation that property prices can fall as well as rise. Not here.

    It has made our banks prudent about these things. As a result, the average loan to value ratio of new mortgages in Hong Kong is about 60 per cent. That's for new mortgages. Take the entire mortgage portfolio and it will be lower yet, although I don't have the figures. You can only take out a home loan in Hong Kong if you have a big personal stake in the investment, too.

    It wasn't so with Anglo Irish. Much of its property lending was done on the basis of 100 per cent financing, with little due diligence on the borrower. This is asking for trouble and not only because it is imprudent. It actually contributes to the creation of property bubbles.

    Then there is the whole business of lenders being too cosy with the directors of corporate borrowers, apparently one of the big weaknesses at Anglo Irish.

    We had that problem, too, in the mid-1980s and about seven small banks, mostly with Malaysian connections, vanished. They had used Hong Kong deposits to fund Malaysian property losses.

    Our prudential supervision has become much better since that time. Maybe I'm fooling myself about this, but I don't think so.

    Full text


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 43,311 ✭✭✭✭K-9


    yes, it can't be denied that Iceland is in a bad position, and there is huge dis-satisfaction and protests. They have made an application to join the Eurozone, and the IMF have had to help them out, but effectively, the ECB did the same job for us, but with a hell of alot less of the conditions that would be associated with an IMF bailout.
    I was merely commenting on the fact that Iceland can now borrow at a lower rate than Ireland. and this was a country that 'did everything wrong', according to the Irish method of dealing with a similar situation.

    http://www.octane.ie/forum/showthread.php?t=43435

    Ah, exactly. That's more realistic about Iceland. Things seem a lot better than they were there, but the people are suffering hugely, let there be no doubt about that, no matter what McWilliams says.

    As for ECB conditions, barring a commitment to return to the Growth and Stability pact guidelines, they haven't imposed conditions. We did that all by ourselves because we have little room to manoeuvre.

    Really until the budget comes in and the 4 year plan is outlined, even vaguely, those rates are going to remain. How we are going to do that without cuts to PS pay and SW rates, which take money out of the economy and reduce GDP and GNP, I don't know. That's before you even touch the bank issue!

    Mad Men's Don Draper : What you call love was invented by guys like me, to sell nylons.



  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,925 ✭✭✭th3 s1aught3r


    dammit, I came in here looking for a bit of Faith No More. drat

    'Everythings Ruined' (these lyrics seem to work)

    People loved him so
    And helped him to grow
    Everyone knew the thing that was best
    Of course, he must invest
    A penny won't do
    But he made us proud
    He made us rich

    But how were we to know
    He's counterfeit
    Now everything's ruined


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 53 ✭✭Backard_Pell


    @Southsiderosie.... thanks for the article, very interesting. I wonder does this now mean that when Ireland eventually stabilizes its banking system, there will never again be 100%, or even 70% mortgages issued again. 60% seems v sensible. We also have the problem of the glut of vacant houses in Ireland. The recent figure of 620 ghost estates has now been revised to 2,700

    http://www.independent.ie/national-news/number-of-ghost-estates-four-times-initial-estimate-2363521.html
    The figure in the USA is 20 million vacant propertys.

    Google Street View as now provided an opportunity to explore some of these unfinished estates, bulldozing these properties hasn't yet been ruled out.

    Street View estates



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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,454 ✭✭✭mink_man


    If I spoke Irish I'd be thinking ''why the **** did I waste my time learning this pointless language when I could have learned something useful!''.

    By all means keep Irish optional but there are more important things to be learning.

    if ya knew anything about ireland you'd know that there's people in this country whose first language is irish.....they didn't learn it in school...

    SERVED!


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