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Other • Is this like 1931 and the Credit Anstaldt bankruptcy?

Cyprus decides to steal everything it can from depositors, is this like 1931 and the Credit Anstaldt bankruptcy?
Posted on 31 March 2013

Depositors in the beleaguered Bank of Cyprus are now facing losses of 60 per cent on deposits over 100,000 euros as the Cyprus Government seems to have woken up to the fact that this is its last chance to steal money off these mainly foreign depositors. It’s an absolute travesty and a red letter day for European Union banks.

Bank of Cyprus customers will have 37.5 per cent of their deposits above 100,000 euros converted into what are practically worthless shares, said the Nicosia-based central bank in an e-mailed statement seen by Bloomberg. A further 22.5 per cent of these deposits will be ‘temporarily withheld’ to ensure the lender meets the terms of its recapitalization.

ATM limits

Even smaller depositors are currently blocked from withdrawing more than 300 euro per day via ATM from their accounts under unprecdented capital controls. The European Union is supposed to safeguard the free movement of people, trade and capital as its raison d’etre.

These capital controls also mean that the remaining 40 per cent of Bank of Cyprus deposits above 100,000 euros that are not subject to the bail-in will also be ‘temporarily frozen to ensure the lender’s liquidity’, said the central bank, though it promised that this money, ‘which won’t be used to recapitalize the lender’, will receive interest at 10 per cent above current levels and be released ‘within a short time-frame’.

To any honest observer it is pretty obvious what has happened. The Cyprus Government is looking after its own people now, and realizing that the game is up as an offshore banking centre it is holding on to these deposits under any ruse for as long as possible.

How can this be happening inside the EU? Where are the competent EU authorities? How can they be participating in a bail-in that behaves like this? What message does this send to anybody with funds in an EU bank in one of its many heavily indebted member states?

Stealing from deposits

Money in EU bank accounts is clearly now up for grabs by any government that recapitalizes its banking sector. Moreover, the Cyprus precedent is going to cause a run on the weaker banks that will make this sort of recapitalization inevitable. Standby for a systemic banking crisis in the EU.

What the EU has done in Cyprus is the modern equivalent of the failure of the Credit Anstaldt in 1931 that brought on the Great Depression with thousands of banking falures around the world.

The ArabianMoney investment newsletter published today advocates a shift to non-euro cash deposits as financial markets face a 2008-style correction.

http://www.arabianmoney.net/us-dollar/2 … ankruptcy/

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sun Mar 31, 2013 7:11 am


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Business • J.C. Penney faces risk of bankruptcy, BMO warns in downgrade

J.C. Penney faces risk of bankruptcy, BMO warns in downgrade

Darcy Keith

The Globe and Mail

Published Monday, Mar. 25 2013

The future of struggling U.S. retailer J.C. Penney is looking increasingly dire, says BMO Nesbitt Burns analyst Wayne Hood, who warns that there’s a chance it could be heading into bankruptcy over the next couple of years.

“We were hoping to become more constructive on JCP following the significant underperformance in fiscal years 2012/2013. However, our research leads us to move in the opposite direction and lower our rating back to underperform from market perform,” Mr. Hood said in a research note.

J.C. Penney’s fourth quarter showed a continued steep deterioration in its business since launching a turnaround strategy nearly a year ago, with same-store sales dropping by 32 per cent.

Mr. Wood sees four potential outcomes for the company over the next 12 to 24 months – and three of the four would be bearish.

In the most bullish scenario, J.C. Penney restores sales growth and maintains sufficient liquidity by throttling back capital expenditures while selling non-core assets.

Mr. Wood’s “base-case scenario” sees the company reversing the steep slide in comparable store sales to post modest sales growth of 0.9 per cent in fiscal 2014. That scenario also assumes capital spending cuts and the sale of non-core assets, but assumes the company will continue to post annual earnings per share losses over the next five years.

The last two scenarios involve bankruptcy filings. One would be a voluntary Chapter 11 bankruptcy that enables the company to become smaller and more profitable. The fourth, and most dire outcome, would be the company being forced into an involuntary bankruptcy in the first or second quarter of fiscal 2014.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-in … e10296792/

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Mon Mar 25, 2013 5:44 pm


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International News • Ireland’s ‘bankruptcy tourists’ face tougher treatment in E

Ireland’s ‘bankruptcy tourists’ face tougher treatment in English courts
Distressed Irish moguls who would be declared bankrupt for 12 years at home are finding it harder to get courts in England – who would bar them for only one year – to hear their cases

Shane Hickey
The Observer, Sunday 3 March 2013

Irish investor Brian O’Donnell, with his wife Mary, are due in court for another attempt to be declared bankrupt in the UK.

At the peak of the Irish economic boom in 2007, lawyer and investor Brian O’Donnell had an empire that was the envy of his contemporaries. Along with a large house in south Dublin around the corner from Bono and an eight-bedroom townhouse in Westminster valued at £13m, his portfolio of luxury properties stretched from Washington DC to Stockholm.

Five years on, O’Donnell has joined a stream of credit crunch debtors crossing the Irish Sea – or the Northern Irish border – to go bust in the UK, which is a far friendlier place for those drowning in debt. Following in the footsteps of a boy band star, a former government minister and the one-time richest man in Ireland, O’Donnell this week returns to the high court to appeal against its refusal to declare him bankrupt on these shores.

Like countless others in Ireland, O’Donnell has suffered a spectacular downfall as a result of his property dealings. His €1bn empire crumbled during the 2008 bust as banks called in loans, including €71.5m (£61.7m) that is owed to Bank of Ireland. Since the downturn, a series of Irish passport holders have opted to declare themselves bankrupt in Britain. The difference between the two jurisdictions is stark: in Ireland, bankrupts may be faced with up to 12 years of financial purgatory. In the UK they can be clear after one year.

After initially attracting Germans, who face a minimum of six years in bankruptcy, the British system soon received an increasing number of Irish people. All applicants have to do is prove that their "centre of main economic interest" is in the UK; in other words, that Britain is the home of their business. Among the first prominent debtors to head to the UK was property developer John Fleming who, with his construction firm, owed €1bn to the banks. He declared bankruptcy in the modest setting of Southend county court, Essex, in November 2010 and was discharged a year later.

Last June, Westlife singer Shane Filan became the highest-profile Irish person to follow the trend when he was declared bankrupt in Kingston county court in Surrey, a week after his Irish-based property development company went into receivership owing €5.5m to Ulster Bank and Bank of Ireland.

Sacha Pickering, a partner with Michelmores solicitors, says the start of the recession saw Irish and German nationals entering bankruptcy in the UK without the media and legal scrutiny that they are receiving now. "I think a lot of them slipped under the radar but then the concept started coming up that they are not moving their centre of main interest properly and therefore it is harder now," he said.

The reduction in 2004 of the UK bankruptcy period from three years to one resulted in a surge of activity, says Neil Smyth at law firm Taylor Wessing. "The court system simply wasn’t in a position to have a judge hear all of these matters, so they were being dealt with on paper. Some would be having a brief look at the paperwork and deciding whether the centre of main interest was in England or not."

The original verdict against O’Donnell in December points to a clampdown on the Ireland-UK bankruptcy flight. Melissa Clarke, a district judge who sits at the bankruptcy court in the central London county court, said recently that claims needed to be scrutinised to see whether people switched their centre based on "substance" or an "illusion". "English judges sitting in the personal insolvency jurisdiction may have to look a little deeper into the circumstances of the debtor’s move to England and claims to have severed ties with the home country," she wrote in the Law Gazette.

In one case last year, a German sports photographer had a bankruptcy order against him annulled after it emerged that he still lived in Germany and did not even own a camera.

Smyth said: "I think the courts are trying to send out more of a warning signal that you can’t continue to abuse the system by trotting along, making yourself bankrupt and hoping people don’t look at the papers too readily – getting yourself made bankrupt here and after a few months going back to your original jurisdiction and leaving all of your problems behind."

Ireland will soon reduce the bankruptcy period from 12 to three years but Alan Shatter, the country’s justice minister, is alarmed at the number of Irish people seeking out the more liberal regime. "It is Minister Shatter’s view that there is need for greater clarity in bankruptcy matters across the EU in determining a person’s centre of main interest in the context of courts in EU states assuming jurisdiction to deal with bankruptcy matters," a spokesman said.

But even those forthcoming changes in the law in Ireland will not stop the flow, says Barry Cahir of Dublin solicitors William Fry. He thinks that people will continue to choose between three years of bankruptcy in Ireland versus one in the UK.

Steve Thatcher, a Leicester-based insolvency lawyer who once had an Irish client with €150m of debt whose case was heard in just 35 seconds, says most of the figures with large debts have already been through the system and it is now younger families who are looking for his services.

The number of Irish people who have declared bankruptcy in Britain is not clear, as the Insolvency Service (IS) does not keep such records. However, the IS says the system is not being abused. And it has not dissuaded O’Donnell from returning: last year, he admitted his initial application for bankruptcy in the high court was a "chastening experience"that had effectively ended his 30-year career. In December, Mr Justice Newey said O’Donnell had not been "a frank, or even a wholly truthful" witness as he rejected an application by O’Donnell and his wife, Mary Patricia, to declare bankruptcy.

Undeterred, O’Donnell will offer new evidence to appeal against the decision on Tuesday.

BUST IN THE UK

Other Irish entrepreneurs to have sought bankruptcy in the UK include:

Tom McFeely

The former IRA hunger striker turned property developer had his bankruptcy in the UK rescinded after a challenge by one of his creditors in a London court. McFeely, who had argued that he was a British citizen and it was his human right to be declared bankrupt in Britain, was declared bankrupt in the high court in Dublin last July.

Shane Filan

A court in Surrey declared the boy band star bankrupt days before Westlife played their final farewell show last June. Filan was forced into bankruptcy after the collapse of the property business he owned with his brother Finbarr. Between them they owed more than €5.5m (£4.45m) to Ulster Bank and Bank of Ireland.

Ivan Yates

Once a government minister, the bookie and radio presenter was made bankrupt in Swansea on 24 August 2012, days after the high court in Dublin refused an application by Allied Irish Banks to have him declared so in Ireland. Yates told reporters he would be an "economic zombie" for a year.

Sean Quinn

Once Ireland’s richest man, Quinn ran up unprecedented losses in Anglo Irish Bank through stock investments in the bank as its share price collapsed. He was initially declared bankrupt in Belfast in November 2011 but this was annulled following a challenge by Irish Bank Resolution Corporation, the rebranded Anglo. He was later declared bankrupt in Ireland.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/ma … ish-courts

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sun Mar 03, 2013 12:50 am


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American • Confronting our spiritual bankruptcy

Confronting our spiritual bankruptcy

- Doug Hagmann
Saturday, December 15, 2012

The clamor that is about to dominate the next several news cycles will be the usual stable of pundits engaging in obligatory verbal hand-wringing over the unthinkable death of innocents in a small Connecticut town. Newtown was once a town where life was the imitation of a Norman Rockwell painting, and where any of those young children whose lives were shortened by unimaginable madness could have been the very faces depicted in the paintings by Rockwell himself.

Individually and collectively, we weep for our needless loss. The salty bitterness we taste from the tears that stream down our faces must serve to remind us that our tears originate from a much greater loss and a much deeper trouble that anyone before the camera or in front of a keyboard has the willingness to confront. No one, I suspect, will have the moral courage to address the real problem, or the intellectual honesty needed to rebuke the fallacious arguments that are about to occur between pundits who are, it appears, just made-over and better dressed carnival barkers for their own agendas.

Our nation once proudly served as the moral and spiritual foundation for not only our citizens, but for the world. We were once a nation that accepted the true God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob and built its walls on the cornerstone of just men acting in compliance with the moral and spiritual guidance of a just God. Adherence to our spiritual principles and obedience to the laws of God, not man, were necessary to keep evil in chains. We have abandoned our spiritual foundation and not only accepted, but invited evil into our lives under the false pretext of societal tolerance.

Be warned that the clamoring from the ubiquitous cheerleaders of moral equivalence on each side of the perverted political paradigm will increase in intensity and tenor in the coming days. Many will shake their fists at others and shout to the perpetrators of evil, “through your lax laws and love of guns, you allowed this to happen!” They will assail the laws of man and demand immediate change of gun ownership laws to stop a behavior that cannot ever be legislated. They refuse to accept that the laws of man, no matter how restrictive, do absolutely nothing to recalibrate our moral and spiritual compass. They are not only shouting in the wrong direction, but from a wrong direction.

Meanwhile, the more introspective and spiritually grounded among us will instead fall to our knees and cry out, “why have we allowed this to happen?” But those hearing our cries will fail to understand that we are not blaming our system of laws, but our own acquiescence and failure to honestly confront our unquestioning acceptance of evil. We realize that we cannot fix spiritual problems and repair moral deficits with the legislation of man. We will never be successful in fixing spiritual problems with political solutions. Yet few have the courage, insight or willingness to address this very foundation of our existence as a people and a nation.

By permitting the perversion of our core spirituality from a new age ideology that has replaced or redefined our spiritual values, the blood of innocents are on our hands as well. By our own acquiescence to moral and spiritual perversity cleverly packaged as tolerance, we have embraced the very evil that is embodied within tolerance. In that form, tolerance itself becomes evil, and we become enraged at the mere symptoms of a great spiritual problem rather that the problem itself.

What should we expect from a nation of men and women who for years and even generations have demanded and subsequently celebrated the successful eviction of God from our lives, our national institutions and country as a whole? All of this is the name of tolerance, of equality, of the perversity of equal rights at the behest of our elected leaders and their spiritually bankrupt appointees and minions. Also included are the “big-box,” all inclusive Christian leaders who have drunk from the cup containing a devil’s brew of a tainted tincture of secular coexistence with evil. Have we not considered the ramifications of the redefinition of spirituality and morality, of good and evil, rather than its reinforcement?

The Godliness and spirituality of our nation has been incrementally yet aggressively assaulted
The Godliness and spirituality of our nation has been incrementally yet aggressively assaulted. Human life itself has been redefined under the insidious contention of women’s rights, yet how many who decry the life lost in Newtown will weep for the thousands of innocents murdered through deliberate blood sacrifice legalized by the laws of man? The value of human life has been defiled in all of its phases. Are we so naive to think that we are not now reaping the whirlwind of the unjust, and suffering for our own acquiescence and moral and spiritual relativism?

We will indeed hear the cacophony of debates about gun laws over the next few weeks, but such debates and those advancing their own agenda will never address the real reason we find ourselves sobbing with our heads in our hands. Until we realize that our problems began when we declared God as an unwelcomed guest in our nation and opened ourselves to a coexistence with evil, will be even begin to repair the damage caused by years of spiritual defilement.

Can we walk back the evil we have accepted, embraced and even exported? Unless we direct the argument to its root cause, and refuse to continue our subjugation to the evil thrust upon us by a leadership of the un-Godly, then it is unlikely.

Copyright © Douglas Hagmann
Douglas J. Hagmann and his son, Joe Hagmann host The Hagmann & Hagmann Report, a live Internet radio program broadcast each weeknight from 8:00-10:00 p.m. ET.

Douglas Hagmann, founder & director of the Northeast Intelligence Network, and a multi-state licensed private investigative agency. Doug began using his investigative skills and training to fight terrorism and increase public awareness through his website.

Doug can be reached at: director@homelandsecurityus.com

http://www.canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/51792

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Sat Dec 15, 2012 10:44 pm


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Hostess Bankruptcy: What Role Did Policy Play?

By Chris Edwards

The demise of Hostess and Twinkies is not a national emergency, but it is certainly sad when a major business goes under and thousands of people lose their jobs.

If federal and state policymakers want to play a useful role here, they should study why Hostess couldn’t make a go of it. Were there tax or regulatory factors that stood in the way of the company earning a decent rate of return?

Unions were an important factor that pushed up the firm’s costs and reduced its operational efficiency. The policy reform here is obvious for people who appreciate market economics: repeal America’s coercive union laws. If policymakers don’t kill so-called collective bargaining, these rules will keep on killing companies.

Sugar apparently played a role in the demise of Hostess, as discussed in this excellent CSM article. Food manufacturers that use a lot of sugar are at a competitive disadvantage in the United States because federal import barriers on sugar substantially push up prices for that production input.

Perhaps taxes played a role as well. Income taxes may not have been a big factor if Hostess wasn’t earning profits in recent years. However, I suspect as a manufacturing firm, the company payed substantial property taxes. In this study, I discuss the anti-investment effects of state/local property taxes on U.S. businesses.

Some Democrats and Republicans may use Hostess as a political football, and some politicians will probably want to bail out the company. A more constructive response would be to find out what governments are doing that makes it so hard for some manufacturing firms to survive in this country.

Hostess Bankruptcy: What Role Did Policy Play? is a post from Cato @ Liberty – Cato Institute Blog

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International News • 10 Big Companies That Are At Risk Of Bankruptcy

10 Big Companies That Are At Risk Of Bankruptcy

James A. Kaplan, GMI Ratings

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/10-big-c … z1yPZEs3kv

Following is a list of ten of the U.S. companies which GMI Ratings (a governance research firm) has identified as having a high likelihood of insolvency in the next twelve months.

This list is by no means comprehensive, nor are these the companies at greatest risk. Rather, they present potential solvency issues that have not yet been identified by the marketplace.

Click here to see the companies >

Analysis using GMI Ratings’ Bankruptcy Risk Model places the probability of insolvency of the listed companies in a range from 6.5 percent to 23.3 percent, or a one in four chance. Another dozen companies tested with similar results, but were removed from the list because they are late filers and probabilities of bankruptcy could not be determined without more recent data.

The likelihood of insolvency during the next one-year period is a function of a company’s exposure in four areas:
Macro-economic events (i.e., the state of the overall economy). The U.S. may still be in the throes of recession, with added alarm over the debt crises in Europe, and the pace of recovery is lethargic.
Micro-economic events (i.e., the state of the industry). The Homebuilding industry has suffered greatly in the past four years. Airlines are at the mercy of fluctuating oil prices. Bookstores and paper products are fighting to overcome reduced demand. Other industries may find themselves disproportionately affected.
Specific product events, such as product failure.
The company’s ability to finance continuing operations.

All these factors are intertwined, and impact each company in varying degrees.

Click here to see the companies >

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/10-big-c … z1yPZd0tms

Statistics: Posted by DIGGER DAN — Thu Jun 21, 2012 1:46 am


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Religion • Charles Street AME Church files for bankruptcy

Charles Street AME Church files for bankruptcy

Published : Wednesday, 21 Mar 2012
ROXBURY (FOX 25 / MyFoxBoston.com) – An historic Roxbury church is taking a drastic step in hopes of avoiding foreclosure.
The Charles Street African Methodist Episcopal Church reportedly filed for federal bankruptcy protection Tuesday night.
The move may prevent OneUnited Bank from auctioning off the church property Thursday.
The church and the bank have been in a bitter dispute over two loans totaling $4 million.
OneUnited moved to foreclose on the church when it failed to meet a $1 million balloon payment.

Read more: http://www.myfoxboston.com/dpp/news/loc … z1plmTbKyp

Statistics: Posted by yoda — Wed Mar 21, 2012 10:31 am


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