(Financial Times) -- Wealthy depositors in the Bank
of Cyprus could face losses of as much as 60 per cent -- far in excess
of what had been expected -- as the country scrambles to save what is
left of its stricken banking sector.
Depositors with more than
€100,000 in Bank of Cyprus are set to get shares in the bank in
exchange for at least 37.5 per cent of their uninsured deposits, while a
further 22.5 per cent of their deposits will be put into a special fund
attracting no interest and could see a further write offs.
The haircut on depositors
was a condition for Cyprus receiving €10bn in bailout funds from the
European Union and the International Monetary Fund, but it was though
that around a 40 per cent haircut would be the end of it.
Officials say that the haircut could be moved up from 37.5 per cent to 45 per cent.
Large depositors in Laiki
Bank, which is being broken into good and bad banks, are likely to see
nearly all of their assets written off.
The bailout by
international lenders averted a meltdown of the financial sector that
threatened the country's euro membership but forced large losses on big
deposits in the island.
Cyprus became the first
eurozone country ever to apply capital controls in an effort to prevent a
vast outflow of euros after its banks reopened on Thursday, following a
10-day closure.
Residents of Cyprus are
able to withdraw no more than €300 in cash per day from each bank where
they hold an account and local businesses have to limit transactions to
€5,000 a day.
Credit card transactions
are limited to €5,000 a month, while Cypriot customs officials will
ensure that travellers take just €1,000 in bank notes out of the country
per trip.
Some 18 per cent of the
deposits held in Cypriot banks by residents of other eurozone countries
were pulled out in February, according to figures published on Thursday
by the Central Bank of Cyprus. Such deposits in Cyprus had fallen 41 per
cent since last June to €3.9bn, the data showed.
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