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In reply to the discussion: Cyprus in last-ditch bid to agree bailout (40% haircut) [View all]muriel_volestrangler
(106,229 posts)10. The 40% is for just the Bank of Cyprus
which is one of the 2 that are on the brink of failure. An uncontrolled failure could mean the loss of all of the deposits over 100,000.
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The EU is just making us the rules as they go. And that is EXACTLY what happened here
BlueStreak
Mar 2013
#8
FDIC isn't for wrongdoing...it's just insurance for whatever reason the funds may not be there.
dkf
Mar 2013
#59
I think fomenting panic about an FDIC failure is irresponsible and baseless.
OrwellwasRight
Mar 2013
#81
Savers are not only paying for bad loans, but for bad bets (supposedly called investments)
amandabeech
Mar 2013
#72
And please recall that in the heat of the 2008 meltdown there was serious discussion
BlueStreak
Mar 2013
#52
There is some cushion in that the FDIC may obtain a loan from the Treasury.
amandabeech
Mar 2013
#73
Depositors should be paid in full. Stockholders and bondholders should take any required haircut,
mbperrin
Mar 2013
#9
Stockholders should get wiped out if things go bad. That's the meaning of risk and reward.
mbperrin
Mar 2013
#41
If the EU banksters didn't like tax havens, then they shouldn't have let Cyprus into the EU
BlueStreak
Mar 2013
#32
Using a tax haven is not necessarily the same thing as money laundering.
OrwellwasRight
Mar 2013
#57
Are you saying that everybody who had 120,000 euros on account is a tax dodger?
BlueStreak
Mar 2013
#66
While the bondholders should suffer before depositors, that may not help much
muriel_volestrangler
Mar 2013
#15
Euro zone finance ministers have approved the EU-IMF plan to resolve cypriot banks - EU official
dipsydoodle
Mar 2013
#24
THEN the lynchings should begin. This "softer" landing really only benefits those in charge.
mbperrin
Mar 2013
#21
There isn't enough in the Cypriot equivalent of the FDIC to pay back all deposits
muriel_volestrangler
Mar 2013
#47
"What is to stop this from being a precedent that our USA banksters will now use against us?"
cstanleytech
Mar 2013
#22
And I am willing to bet the republicans are probably trying to outsource that to or
cstanleytech
Mar 2013
#28
I think that the Euro was helped by the fact that it was born during good times.
amandabeech
Mar 2013
#78
I agree about good times / bad times, but the fractures were there before 2008
BlueStreak
Mar 2013
#82