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Ireland takes a punt on banks

China Daily | Updated: 2009-11-13 08:58

DUBLIN: The biggest financial gamble in modern Irish history is about to exit the realms of theory and enter the real world.

Lawmakers were yesterday expected to pass a bill creating a so-called bad bank that will pay the country's biggest banks 54 billion euros ($81 billion), or about a third of gross domestic product, for property loans to free up lending. The agency plans to start buying loans by the end of the year, according to a plan published last month.

Finance Minister Brian Lenihan is seeking to end a crisis that's wiped 70 percent from the country's benchmark stock index, sent bond spreads soaring to the highest in at least a decade and destroyed Ireland's status as Europe's most dynamic economy. Real-estate prices have on average dropped 50 percent since peaking in 2007, and bad debts at lenders led by Bank of Ireland Plc and Allied Irish Banks Plc are surging.

Ireland takes a punt on banks

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