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Landsbanki

Landsbanki (literally "National Bank"), also commonly known as Landsbankinn (literally "The National Bank") which is now the name of the current rebuilt bank (here called "New Landsbanki"), was one of the largest Icelandic commercial banks that failed as part of the 2008–2011 Icelandic financial crisis when its subsidiary sparked the Icesave dispute. On October 7, 2008, the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority took control of Landsbanki and created a new bank for all the domestic operations called Nýi Landsbanki (new Landsbanki) so that the domestic bank could continue to operate, the new bank continued to operate under the Landsbanki name in Iceland.[2]

Landsbanki hf
Company typePrivate (2003–2008)
Government-owned corporation (prior to 2003)
IndustryBanking
FoundedReykjavík, Iceland, 1885 (commenced operations on 1 July 1886)
DefunctEntered into receivership 7 October 2008, awaiting dissolution remaining assets
SuccessorNBI hf
HeadquartersReykjavík, Iceland
Key people
Björgólfur Guðmundsson (Chairman of the board), Halldór J. Kristjánsson (co-CEO), Sigurjón Þ. Arnason (co-CEO)
Number of employees
2,770 (2007)[1]
Websitelandsbanki.is

Prior to its failure, the bank was one of the largest Icelandic banks with assets of ISK 3,058 billion in December 2007 and a market capitalization of ISK 383 billion. It has been in operation since 1885 and had been instrumental in the economic development of business and industry in Iceland. From 1927 to 1961 the bank acted as the central bank until it was replaced by the Central Bank of Iceland, although this interest was primarily directed towards note issuance rather than monetary policy. The bank had been state-owned and was privatized in stages between 1998 and 2003.

Landsbanki had positioned itself as Iceland's primary provider of general and specialized financial services to individuals, corporate entities, and institutions. The bank had the country's most extensive branch network with 40 branches and sub-branches. At the end of 2006, Landsbanki provided close to 40% of corporate lending in Iceland, and for around 60% of companies listed on the OMX Iceland Stock Exchange, Landsbanki was their principal bank or one of two banks with whom they did business. The leading provider of M&A, derivatives, equity and fixed income services.

It started to expand overseas in 2000 through a number of acquisitions and organic growth, the expansion would lead to the creation of its Icesave subsidiary in 2006 which would ultimately seal its fate.

History edit

In establishing Landsbanki, the Icelandic parliament hoped to boost monetary transactions and encourage the country's nascent industries. Following its opening on 1 July 1886, the bank's first decades of operation were restricted by its limited financial capacity; it was little more than a savings and loan society. Following the turn of the 20th century, however, Icelandic society progressed and prospered as industrialization finally made inroads, and the bank grew and developed in parallel to the nation. In the 1920s Landsbanki became Iceland's largest bank and was made responsible for issuing its banknotes. After the issuing of banknotes was transferred to the newly established Central Bank of Iceland in 1961, Landsbanki continued to develop as a commercial bank, expanding its branch network in the ensuing decades.

While still publicly owned it went through a state-directed merger with Samvinnubanki (Cooperative Bank).

Liberalisation of financial services, beginning in 1986, opened up new opportunities, which the bank managed to take advantage of despite some economic adversity. In 1997, Landsbanki was incorporated as a limited-liability company, and the ensuing privatization finally concluded in 2003. Landsbanki then operated as a privately owned bank, competing in a free market, with substantial international activities added to its traditional Icelandic operations.[citation needed]

International expansion edit

The relatively limited size of the Icelandic market prompted Landsbanki, the first among Icelandic commercial banks, to expand and diversify outside of Iceland when it acquired the London-based Heritable Bank in 2000. In 2005, Landsbanki acquired three Europe securities houses: Teather & Greenwood, located in London and Edinburgh; Kepler Capital Markets, headquartered in Paris; and Merrion Capital Group in Dublin. These subsidiaries dealt in securities and prepared equity research in London, Paris, Frankfurt, Zürich, Nyon (25 km from Geneva), Milan, Madrid and Amsterdam. Landsbanki's own branches in London and Amsterdam specialized in structured finance and commercial finance (asset-based lending), while Landsbanki Luxembourg handled private banking and wealth management, as well as corporate services.

On 9 August 2007 Landsbanki completed its acquisition of UK investment bank Bridgwell plc. The operations of Teather & Greenwood were combined with those of Bridgewell under the brand name Landsbanki Securities (UK). The acquisition of Bridgewell made Landsbanki the second largest broker to listed companies on the London Stock Exchange measured by the number of clients.

In December 2008 Kepler Capital Markets is sold to management and staff through a management-led buy-out (MBO).[3]

Icesave edit

A deposit program for the UK market, Icesave, was launched in October 2006. An easy-access, online savings account, Icesave became an instant success, transforming Landsbanki's balance sheet and funding profile. Since launched, Icesave grew rapidly and on 31 March 2007, Icesave deposits totaled £2.8 bn with over 80,000 accounts opened.

A key factor in Icesave's appeal to savers was its interest rate guarantee: The gross Annual Equivalent Rate of Interest (AER) paid on balances over £250 was guaranteed to exceed the Bank of England Base Rate by at least 0.25% until 1 October 2009 and thereafter not to be lower than the Bank of England Base Rate until 1 October 2011. As a result, Icesave quickly became the market leader in internet deposit savings accounts in the UK in terms of interest rates.

Icesave operated in the Netherlands from May 2008 until October 2008.

On 7 October 2008 the Icesave UK website announced: "We are not currently processing any deposits or any withdrawal requests through our Icesave internet accounts. We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our customers. We hope to provide you with more information shortly."[4] and Icesave was declared in default on 8 October 2008, taking Landsbanki with it in its fall.

2008 financial crisis edit

On October 7, 2008, the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority took control of Landsbanki. A press release by the IFSA states that all of Landsbanki's domestic branches, call centers, ATMs, and internet operations will be open for business as usual and that all domestic deposits are fully guaranteed.[2] The Guardian reported that the Government had moved quickly to use the sweeping powers granted by the Reykjavik parliament, the night before.[5] The country's financial regulator said on Tuesday that Landsbanki's branches would open as usual and that all “domestic deposits” were fully guaranteed. The next day the United Kingdom Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling announced that his government would foot the entire bill for British Icesave savers, estimated at £4 billion,[6][7] and that he was taking steps to freeze the assets of Landsbanki using the financial freezing-orders provisions of the Anti-terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001.[8]

Under the Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008, passed on 8 October 2008, Her Majesty's Treasury froze the assets of Landsbanki in the UK, and assets belonging to the Central Bank of Iceland, and the Government of Iceland relating to Landsbanki.[9]

On 9 October 2008 the domestic, Icelandic branch was split off into the NBI, Nýi Landsbanki (New Landsbanki) and on 27 October 2008 the inability to render payment of deposits was declared for the remaining parts of Landsbanki.[10]

Sponsorship of sports: Landsbankadeildin edit

Landsbanki's sponsorship of football was an important aspect of the Bank's marketing and image policy. In September 2005, an agreement was concluded with the Football Association of Iceland, under which the Icelandic premier league for both men and women will be called the Landsbanki Premier League (Landsbankadeildin) for the next four seasons. The financial backing for football was, however, primarily directed towards supporting sports for children and youth divisions.

Landsbanki liquidation and repayment of claims edit

On 28 January 2013, the EFTA Court cleared Iceland of all charges, meaning that no loan agreement will be settled between the Icelandic state and the UK and the Netherlands, to guarantee their claim for repayment of Icelandic minimum deposit guarantees worth €4.0bn plus accrued interests. This claim will however still exist towards the Landsbanki receivership as a so-called "First priority claim", and will be met in full if the receivership succeeds to liquidate assets with a value equal to or in excess of this first priority liability.

The combined deposit repayment claims from retail Icesave customers in the Netherlands and Great Britain (including both the minimum depositor guarantees and the deposit values in excess of the Icelandic guarantee), were at first hand covered respectively by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) and by De Nederlandsche Bank (DNB), due to the inability/unwillingness for other Icelandic stakeholders to step in and ensure/guarantee immediate coverage for these claims. On 28 October 2011, the Supreme Court of Iceland ruled, that the UK FSCS and the Dutch DNB combined deposit repayments of respectively ISK 852.1bn (£4.459bn) and ISK 282.3bn (€1.668bn) should be repaid by the Landsbanki receivership as "priority claims" pursuant to Article 112 of "Act No.21/1991 on Bankruptcy", and noted these mentioned figures included contractual interest rates for the UK part and some extra penalty interest rates (6%) for the Dutch part for the period from 8 October 2008 until 22 April 2009.[11][12] Together these two claims amounts to ISK 1134.4bn (€6.704bn), which is equal to 86% of all "priority claims" towards the Landsbanki receivership. Among the other priority claims are also ISK 145.4bn deposit repayment claims (equal to 11% of all "priority claims"), submitted directly by more than 200 wholesale Icesave customers in the Netherlands and Great Britain, who initially received no repayment from their national authorities, but will now get repayment on equal terms - with equal priority status - from the Landsbanki receivership.[13]

As of 30 June 2013, the total value of the assets in the Landsbanki receivership (including the already repaid part of the claims) covered ISK 1531bn (€9.1bn), which was above the total amount of the priority claims at ISK 1325bn (€7.8bn). The final overall value for the assets is however still subject to change, as the receivership for various reasons has been granted extra time to liquidate all remaining assets until 2018, at a pace equal to approximately ISK 100bn per year. Repayment to the creditors happens step by step at the same pace as the liquidation of assets happens. The repayments so far happened through four tranches in 2011–2013, which already included a full repayment of all minimum deposit guarantees, due to their first priority status within the "priority claims".[14] As of 12 September 2013, the Landsbanki receivership had through liquidation of the first half of its assets, managed to repay the first 53.9% (ISK 715.2bn) of all the priority claims.[15][16]

According to the latest evaluation of the planned recovery of asset values, it is expected all "Priority claims" will have been fully repaid by the end of 2017.[14] Any additional claims for accrued interests after 22 April 2009 due to the delayed repayment of priority claims, will only be treated as secondary "General claims", and thus only be repaid once all of the "Priority claims" have been repaid in full, and then only to the extent it is possible on an equal footing together with all the other remaining ISK 1677bn (€9.9bn) of "General claims" towards the Landsbanki receivership.[17]

Status for claims towards the Landsbanki receivership as of 30 June 2013[14]
Claim type Amount (bn ISK) Accepted Settled1 (bn ISK) Repaid (bn ISK) Remaining Liability (bn ISK)
Proprietary Interest 4.9 100% 4.9 0 0
Administrative Expense 8.5 100% 6.1 2.4 0
Guarantee Claims 58.0 100% 58.0 0 0
Priority Claims 1325.4 99.1% 0 647.6 677.9
General Claims 1677.4 61.5% 0 0 1677.4
Total Claims 3074.2 78.6% 69.0 650.0 2354.2

Note: 1 Liability was not repaid by cash from liquidated assets, but got settled by other means.

According to the Landsbanki Receivership's initial interpretation of the Icelandic law, the creditor claims in foreign currency towards a liquidated Icelandic financial company in receivership should only be repaid by an ISK-equivalent amount as per the currency exchange rate registered on the date when winding-up proceedings were initiated; which was as per 22 April 2009 for the Landsbanki receivership. Moreover, it was believed the creditors had no legal right to claim compensation towards the Landsbanki receivership for any potential losses they may suffer, because of exchange rate fluctuations after 22 April 2009.[17] On 26 September 2013, the Icelandic Supreme Court however ruled against this initial law interpretation of the Landsbanki Receivership, concluding all creditors should be fully repaid with currency amounts equal to the denoted local currency of their claim; meaning that when repaid with other currencies, then valuation of this amount should be calculated by converting it to the claim's denoted currency, according to the foreign currency exchange rates registered by the Icelandic Central Bank on the repayment date. Thus ensuring that all creditors bare no currency exchange risks, with these risks -and potential financial burdens- instead to be upheld solely by the receivership.[18][19]

As the Receivership mainly holds bank assets valuated in foreign currencies, the repayment of claims is likewise expected to be conducted through partial repayments mainly in foreign currencies, equal to the available cash currency basket stemming from liquidated assets on the payment day. Because of the currency mix being more or less equal when comparing the Claims with the held Assets, the risk for currency exchange losses is expected to be relatively low for the receivership. The table below provides an overview of the currency composition of the first 3 partial repayments and how currency exchange rates were at the time compared to 22 April 2009.

Creditor repayment tranches for
those who hold "Priority Claims",
and ISK currency exchange rates
22 Apr 2009
(Winding-up proceedings)
2 Dec 2011
(1st repayment)
24 May 2012
(2nd repayment)
5 Oct 2012
(3rd repayment)
Total (bn)[14]
Fixed currency rates[17]
(ISK value of 1 currency unit)
Rate[20] Amount (bn)[14] Rate[20] Amount (bn)[14] Rate[20] Amount (bn)[14]
Canadian dollar (CAD) 105.5 120.1 (+13.8%) 0 (~ISK 0) 128.1 (+21.4%) 0 (~ISK 0) 126.9 (+20.3%) 0 (~ISK 0) 0 (~ISK 0)
European euro (EUR) 169.2 164.5 (-2.8%) 1.1 (~ISK 178) 164.9 (-2.5%) 0 (~ISK 0) 161.8 (-4.4%) 0.17 (~ISK 27) 1.27 (~ISK 205)
Icelandic kronur (ISK) 1 1 (0.0%) 10 (~ISK 10) 1 (0.0%) 0 (~ISK 0) 1 (0.0%) 0 (~ISK 0) 10 (~ISK 10)
Great Britain pounds (GBP) 191.1 191.3 (+0.1%) 0.74 (~ISK 138) 205.9 (+7.7%) 0.85 (~ISK 172) 201.4 (+5.4%) 0.15 (~ISK 30) 1.74 (~ISK 340)
US dollar (USD) 130.7 121.8 (-6.8%) 0.71 (~ISK 84) 131.3 (+0.5%) 0 (~ISK 0) 124.4 (-4.8%) 0.19 (~ISK 23) 0.90 (~ISK 107)
Total repayment value in ISK (bn)a - - 410 - 172 - 80 648b

Note:
aCalculated as ISK-equivalent repayment value for the receivership by the entity of the FX 22 April 2009 valued claims, while adjusting for currency exchange rate fluctuations happening on each payment date.[14] For the example for the second repayment tranch, all creditors with claims in pounds received 1:1 repayment with cash in pounds; meaning that the repayment to these creditors had an ISK-equivalent account value then being 1:1 proportional with the ISK/Pound-rate on 22 April 2009. Contrary to this, the creditors with claims in euros/US dollars also received cash in pounds - but now at a time when these currencies had lost value against pounds - and thus the ISK-equivalent account value then was stronger with the same percentage compared to what the currencies had weakened against the pound; meaning that the repayment to these creditors had an ISK-equivalent account-value then with a relatively higher value for the receivership than 1:1, because of repaying US dollar and euro claims with a relatively stronger Pound currency compared to the 22 April 2009 registered exchange rates. Or to put in different words, the receivership by conducting the second repayment three years later than 22 April 2009 actually gained some extra positive income through exchange rate improvements for the specific cash currency (pound) involved in this repayment tranch. The applied method to calculate ISK-equivalent account values for the repayments, is in full compliance with the supreme court ruling, saying that all creditors shall be repaid by cash amounts equal to their claim as per its denoted currency, so when repaid with other currencies, then the value of this shall be booked according to the currency exchange rate registered at the repayment date.
b ISK 14bn was returned in 2012 to the receivership from ESCROW accounts, as some of the remaining disputed claims got settled by the court in its favor. Thus the net total got reduced from ISK 662bn to 648bn.
[14]

How capital controls impact creditor repayment edit

Iceland elected a new government in April 2013, which as one of their top priorities wanted to negotiate a debt haircut towards foreign creditors of the three failed Icelandic banks now in receivership, as part of a deal to lift the long enforced (since November 2008) capital controls.[21] As the current capital controls only ban a swap/exchange of ISK denominated assets to foreign currency,[22] and as 97% of the Landsbanki receivership total assets are held only in foreign currency, this new Icelandic initiative will, however, most likely not affect the repayment scheme for the priority claim creditors in the Landsbanki receivership - who at the moment are forecasted to be fully repaid by the first 91.2% of the receivership assets. So even if the current capital controls remain in force at an indefinite time horizon, it will only be the last 3.2% of the assets (ISK 49/1531bn) that remain to be frozen or trapped in Iceland and can not be directly repaid, which then only would negatively impact the return rate for the creditors with general claims.[14]

The only minor risk for the receivership's "priority claim creditors" seems to be, that the receivership might face political demands to extend the maturity of its owned Glacier bonds towards the New Landsbanki, as part of the Icelandic government's overall capital control abolition initiative, which would then delay liquidation of this specific asset.[23] The nicknamed Glacier bonds, concern two bonds with a total value of ISK 297bn (€1.76bn), that currently are due for yearly repayments in foreign currency from New Landsbanki to the Landsbanki receivership, during the period 2014-2018.[14] These specific repayment transfers are by some people speculated to be impossible, if the capital controls gets abolished, as such abolishment would be expected to drain the foreign capital reserves held by New Landsbanki; and thus a deal to remove capital controls is speculated will also need to imply a prolonged maturity (or repayment agreement) for these bonds.[24]

The Icelandic government intends somehow to route the saved money from the negotiated debt haircut for creditors belonging to the receivership estates of Kaupthing and Glitnir, into a national household debt relief fund, enabling a 20% debt relief for all household mortgages. Experts from IMF however belief, that any potentially saved money from a negotiated deal, would be eaten up by the additional costs the government will need to pay in the short term, for implementing the abolishment of capital controls. In July 2013, Standard & Poors recommended Iceland drop the debt relief initiative, as they also believe it would only result in increased debt for the government - making it even more difficult to lend at credit markets, and the debt relief initiative was forecasted also to ignite high inflation pressures along with risk for the arrival of a new economic recession equal to a GDP detraction of 10%.[25] The Icelandic government has appointed a task force to present proposals on how to achieve the government's goals, with a reporting deadline in November 2013.[26][27]

New creditor repayment restrictions edit

On 12 March 2012, the Icelandic government amended - by Act No 17/2012 - the existing Act No 87/1992 on Foreign Exchange, so that paragraph five of Article 13n now represents new currency restrictions for repayment of foreign currency to creditors in any receivership estates.[28][29] In that regard, it shall be noted that all of the first 4 repayment tranches repaid by the Landsbanki Receivership were exempted from this amended law, because it only involved available cash stemming from liquidation conducted ahead of 12 March 2012.[15] All future repayment tranches will however be impacted by the amended law, which stipulates that the Icelandic minister of finance and minister of banking have to agree on exemptions granted by the Icelandic Central Bank for all future claim repayments stemming from companies with a larger balance sheet than ISK 400bn, even if it only involves a transfer of foreign currency. This means, that the Icelandic state now potentially also can block any further repayment of foreign currency to the creditors of the Landsbanki receivership. No court has yet judged, if this extended power of the Icelandic State, also decides the pace of foreign currency repayments, and not only ISK currency repayments are legal or illegal.[30]

Another new repayment restriction under consideration is that the Icelandic government on 1 October 2013 presented a proposal for their 2014 budget law, to include a new 0.145% tax on all transfers from estates of failed financial companies.[31] Some lawyers however have the opinion, that this kind of tax on failed companies could be seen as an illegal expropriation by the Icelandic state. If the Icelandic government passes this proposed law, it will almost with certainty become challenged in a lawsuit by the receivership estates behind the three failed Icelandic banks.[30]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Annual Report 2007" (PDF). Landsbanki. Retrieved 2008-05-08.
  2. ^ a b The Financial Supervisory Authority - Iceland, News: Based on New Legislation, the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority (IFSA) Proceeds to take Control of Landsbanki to ensure Continued Commercial Bank Operations in Iceland (07.10.2008) 2008-10-10 at the Wayback Machine (in English)
  3. ^ "Kepler Capital Markets sold to management and staff through a management-led buy-out (MBO)" (Press release). 19 December 2008.
  4. ^ "icesave.co.uk Homepage". Icesave. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  5. ^ Teather, David (2008-10-07). "Iceland government seizes control of Landsbanki". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2008-10-07.
  6. ^ . The Press Association. Archived from the original on October 12, 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  7. ^ . Agence France-Presse. 8 October 2008. Archived from the original on 10 October 2008. Retrieved 2008-10-08.
  8. ^ BBC News. Rescue plan for UK banks unveiled. Retrieved 2008-10-08
  9. ^ The Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008 2008-12-12 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ FME.is - News 2009-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ (PDF). Supreme Court of Iceland. 28 October 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 May 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  12. ^ (PDF). Supreme Court of Iceland. 28 October 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2013. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  13. ^ "Verdicts of the Supreme Court of Iceland in disputes concerning UK and Dutch wholesale deposits". LBI. 28 October 2011. Retrieved 21 March 2013.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k (PDF). Landsbanki receivership (LBI). 2 October 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  15. ^ a b "Partial payments to creditors". LBI hf (Landsbanki receivership). 13 September 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
  16. ^ "News announcement from LBI hf. - Creditors Meeting". LBI hf (Landsbanki receivership). 2 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  17. ^ a b c (PDF). Landsbanki receivership (LBI). 28 November 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2013. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  18. ^ "Þriðjudaginn 24. September 2013: Nr. 553/2013" (in Icelandic). Hæstiréttur Íslands (Supreme Court of Iceland). 24 September 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  19. ^ "Supreme Court ruling regarding FX rates/partial Payments". Landsbanki Receivership. 26 September 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  20. ^ a b c "Valutakurser (currency exchange calculator)". Norges Bank. Retrieved 20 March 2013.
  21. ^ "Iceland's creditors braced for losses". Financial Times. 2 May 2013. Archived from the original on 11 December 2022. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  22. ^ "Iceland Lacks Currency for Easy Exit of Krona Creditors". Bloomberg. 30 April 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  23. ^ "Sigrún Davíðsdóttir's Icelog: Aspects of capital controls in Iceland and Cyprus and the long time damaging effect". 23 July 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  24. ^ "Sigrún Davíðsdóttir's Icelog: The plan for abolishing capital controls is… er, a "no-plan"". 12 September 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  25. ^ "S&P warns Iceland over debt write-off plan". Financial Times. 26 July 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  26. ^ "Iceland Keeps Western Europe's Highest Rate as Krona Stable". Bloomberg. 21 August 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
  27. ^ . Bloomberg. 20 September 2013. Archived from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 20 September 2013.
  28. ^ "Law on Foreign Exchange (Law no.87, 17 November 1992) - consolidated version" (in Icelandic). Althingi. 5 April 2013.
  29. ^ "Act amending the Exchange Act, no.87/1992, as amended" (in Icelandic). Althingi. 13 March 2012.
  30. ^ a b "Sigrún Davíðsdóttir's Icelog: Iceland: capital controls, government action – and (possible) creditor counteractions". 2 October 2013. Retrieved 2 October 2013.
  31. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-10-05. Retrieved 2013-10-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links edit

  • Official site
  • Mobile site
  • Landsbanki companies grouped at OpenCorporates

landsbanki, this, article, about, icelandic, bank, failure, 2008, current, bank, international, school, formerly, known, little, angels, international, school, with, acronym, lais, musashi, international, school, tokyo, literally, national, bank, also, commonl. This article is about the Icelandic bank up to its failure in 2008 For current bank see Landsbankinn For the international school formerly known as Little Angels International School with the acronym LAIS see Musashi International School Tokyo Landsbanki literally National Bank also commonly known as Landsbankinn literally The National Bank which is now the name of the current rebuilt bank here called New Landsbanki was one of the largest Icelandic commercial banks that failed as part of the 2008 2011 Icelandic financial crisis when its subsidiary sparked the Icesave dispute On October 7 2008 the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority took control of Landsbanki and created a new bank for all the domestic operations called Nyi Landsbanki new Landsbanki so that the domestic bank could continue to operate the new bank continued to operate under the Landsbanki name in Iceland 2 Landsbanki hfCompany typePrivate 2003 2008 Government owned corporation prior to 2003 IndustryBankingFoundedReykjavik Iceland 1885 commenced operations on 1 July 1886 DefunctEntered into receivership 7 October 2008 awaiting dissolution remaining assetsSuccessorNBI hfHeadquartersReykjavik IcelandKey peopleBjorgolfur Gudmundsson Chairman of the board Halldor J Kristjansson co CEO Sigurjon TH Arnason co CEO Number of employees2 770 2007 1 Websitelandsbanki is Prior to its failure the bank was one of the largest Icelandic banks with assets of ISK 3 058 billion in December 2007 and a market capitalization of ISK 383 billion It has been in operation since 1885 and had been instrumental in the economic development of business and industry in Iceland From 1927 to 1961 the bank acted as the central bank until it was replaced by the Central Bank of Iceland although this interest was primarily directed towards note issuance rather than monetary policy The bank had been state owned and was privatized in stages between 1998 and 2003 Landsbanki had positioned itself as Iceland s primary provider of general and specialized financial services to individuals corporate entities and institutions The bank had the country s most extensive branch network with 40 branches and sub branches At the end of 2006 Landsbanki provided close to 40 of corporate lending in Iceland and for around 60 of companies listed on the OMX Iceland Stock Exchange Landsbanki was their principal bank or one of two banks with whom they did business The leading provider of M amp A derivatives equity and fixed income services It started to expand overseas in 2000 through a number of acquisitions and organic growth the expansion would lead to the creation of its Icesave subsidiary in 2006 which would ultimately seal its fate Contents 1 History 1 1 International expansion 1 2 Icesave 1 3 2008 financial crisis 2 Sponsorship of sports Landsbankadeildin 3 Landsbanki liquidation and repayment of claims 3 1 How capital controls impact creditor repayment 3 2 New creditor repayment restrictions 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksHistory editMain article History of Landsbanki In establishing Landsbanki the Icelandic parliament hoped to boost monetary transactions and encourage the country s nascent industries Following its opening on 1 July 1886 the bank s first decades of operation were restricted by its limited financial capacity it was little more than a savings and loan society Following the turn of the 20th century however Icelandic society progressed and prospered as industrialization finally made inroads and the bank grew and developed in parallel to the nation In the 1920s Landsbanki became Iceland s largest bank and was made responsible for issuing its banknotes After the issuing of banknotes was transferred to the newly established Central Bank of Iceland in 1961 Landsbanki continued to develop as a commercial bank expanding its branch network in the ensuing decades While still publicly owned it went through a state directed merger with Samvinnubanki Cooperative Bank Liberalisation of financial services beginning in 1986 opened up new opportunities which the bank managed to take advantage of despite some economic adversity In 1997 Landsbanki was incorporated as a limited liability company and the ensuing privatization finally concluded in 2003 Landsbanki then operated as a privately owned bank competing in a free market with substantial international activities added to its traditional Icelandic operations citation needed International expansion edit The relatively limited size of the Icelandic market prompted Landsbanki the first among Icelandic commercial banks to expand and diversify outside of Iceland when it acquired the London based Heritable Bank in 2000 In 2005 Landsbanki acquired three Europe securities houses Teather amp Greenwood located in London and Edinburgh Kepler Capital Markets headquartered in Paris and Merrion Capital Group in Dublin These subsidiaries dealt in securities and prepared equity research in London Paris Frankfurt Zurich Nyon 25 km from Geneva Milan Madrid and Amsterdam Landsbanki s own branches in London and Amsterdam specialized in structured finance and commercial finance asset based lending while Landsbanki Luxembourg handled private banking and wealth management as well as corporate services On 9 August 2007 Landsbanki completed its acquisition of UK investment bank Bridgwell plc The operations of Teather amp Greenwood were combined with those of Bridgewell under the brand name Landsbanki Securities UK The acquisition of Bridgewell made Landsbanki the second largest broker to listed companies on the London Stock Exchange measured by the number of clients In December 2008 Kepler Capital Markets is sold to management and staff through a management led buy out MBO 3 Icesave edit Main article Icesave dispute A deposit program for the UK market Icesave was launched in October 2006 An easy access online savings account Icesave became an instant success transforming Landsbanki s balance sheet and funding profile Since launched Icesave grew rapidly and on 31 March 2007 Icesave deposits totaled 2 8 bn with over 80 000 accounts opened A key factor in Icesave s appeal to savers was its interest rate guarantee The gross Annual Equivalent Rate of Interest AER paid on balances over 250 was guaranteed to exceed the Bank of England Base Rate by at least 0 25 until 1 October 2009 and thereafter not to be lower than the Bank of England Base Rate until 1 October 2011 As a result Icesave quickly became the market leader in internet deposit savings accounts in the UK in terms of interest rates Icesave operated in the Netherlands from May 2008 until October 2008 On 7 October 2008 the Icesave UK website announced We are not currently processing any deposits or any withdrawal requests through our Icesave internet accounts We apologize for any inconvenience this may cause our customers We hope to provide you with more information shortly 4 and Icesave was declared in default on 8 October 2008 taking Landsbanki with it in its fall 2008 financial crisis edit Main article 2008 2011 Icelandic financial crisis On October 7 2008 the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority took control of Landsbanki A press release by the IFSA states that all of Landsbanki s domestic branches call centers ATMs and internet operations will be open for business as usual and that all domestic deposits are fully guaranteed 2 The Guardian reported that the Government had moved quickly to use the sweeping powers granted by the Reykjavik parliament the night before 5 The country s financial regulator said on Tuesday that Landsbanki s branches would open as usual and that all domestic deposits were fully guaranteed The next day the United Kingdom Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling announced that his government would foot the entire bill for British Icesave savers estimated at 4 billion 6 7 and that he was taking steps to freeze the assets of Landsbanki using the financial freezing orders provisions of the Anti terrorism Crime and Security Act 2001 8 Under the Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008 passed on 8 October 2008 Her Majesty s Treasury froze the assets of Landsbanki in the UK and assets belonging to the Central Bank of Iceland and the Government of Iceland relating to Landsbanki 9 On 9 October 2008 the domestic Icelandic branch was split off into the NBI Nyi Landsbanki New Landsbanki and on 27 October 2008 the inability to render payment of deposits was declared for the remaining parts of Landsbanki 10 Sponsorship of sports Landsbankadeildin editLandsbanki s sponsorship of football was an important aspect of the Bank s marketing and image policy In September 2005 an agreement was concluded with the Football Association of Iceland under which the Icelandic premier league for both men and women will be called the Landsbanki Premier League Landsbankadeildin for the next four seasons The financial backing for football was however primarily directed towards supporting sports for children and youth divisions Landsbanki liquidation and repayment of claims editOn 28 January 2013 the EFTA Court cleared Iceland of all charges meaning that no loan agreement will be settled between the Icelandic state and the UK and the Netherlands to guarantee their claim for repayment of Icelandic minimum deposit guarantees worth 4 0bn plus accrued interests This claim will however still exist towards the Landsbanki receivership as a so called First priority claim and will be met in full if the receivership succeeds to liquidate assets with a value equal to or in excess of this first priority liability The combined deposit repayment claims from retail Icesave customers in the Netherlands and Great Britain including both the minimum depositor guarantees and the deposit values in excess of the Icelandic guarantee were at first hand covered respectively by the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme FSCS and by De Nederlandsche Bank DNB due to the inability unwillingness for other Icelandic stakeholders to step in and ensure guarantee immediate coverage for these claims On 28 October 2011 the Supreme Court of Iceland ruled that the UK FSCS and the Dutch DNB combined deposit repayments of respectively ISK 852 1bn 4 459bn and ISK 282 3bn 1 668bn should be repaid by the Landsbanki receivership as priority claims pursuant to Article 112 of Act No 21 1991 on Bankruptcy and noted these mentioned figures included contractual interest rates for the UK part and some extra penalty interest rates 6 for the Dutch part for the period from 8 October 2008 until 22 April 2009 11 12 Together these two claims amounts to ISK 1134 4bn 6 704bn which is equal to 86 of all priority claims towards the Landsbanki receivership Among the other priority claims are also ISK 145 4bn deposit repayment claims equal to 11 of all priority claims submitted directly by more than 200 wholesale Icesave customers in the Netherlands and Great Britain who initially received no repayment from their national authorities but will now get repayment on equal terms with equal priority status from the Landsbanki receivership 13 As of 30 June 2013 the total value of the assets in the Landsbanki receivership including the already repaid part of the claims covered ISK 1531bn 9 1bn which was above the total amount of the priority claims at ISK 1325bn 7 8bn The final overall value for the assets is however still subject to change as the receivership for various reasons has been granted extra time to liquidate all remaining assets until 2018 at a pace equal to approximately ISK 100bn per year Repayment to the creditors happens step by step at the same pace as the liquidation of assets happens The repayments so far happened through four tranches in 2011 2013 which already included a full repayment of all minimum deposit guarantees due to their first priority status within the priority claims 14 As of 12 September 2013 the Landsbanki receivership had through liquidation of the first half of its assets managed to repay the first 53 9 ISK 715 2bn of all the priority claims 15 16 According to the latest evaluation of the planned recovery of asset values it is expected all Priority claims will have been fully repaid by the end of 2017 14 Any additional claims for accrued interests after 22 April 2009 due to the delayed repayment of priority claims will only be treated as secondary General claims and thus only be repaid once all of the Priority claims have been repaid in full and then only to the extent it is possible on an equal footing together with all the other remaining ISK 1677bn 9 9bn of General claims towards the Landsbanki receivership 17 Status for claims towards the Landsbanki receivership as of 30 June 2013 14 Claim type Amount bn ISK Accepted Settled1 bn ISK Repaid bn ISK Remaining Liability bn ISK Proprietary Interest 4 9 100 4 9 0 0 Administrative Expense 8 5 100 6 1 2 4 0 Guarantee Claims 58 0 100 58 0 0 0 Priority Claims 1325 4 99 1 0 647 6 677 9 General Claims 1677 4 61 5 0 0 1677 4 Total Claims 3074 2 78 6 69 0 650 0 2354 2 Note 1 Liability was not repaid by cash from liquidated assets but got settled by other means According to the Landsbanki Receivership s initial interpretation of the Icelandic law the creditor claims in foreign currency towards a liquidated Icelandic financial company in receivership should only be repaid by an ISK equivalent amount as per the currency exchange rate registered on the date when winding up proceedings were initiated which was as per 22 April 2009 for the Landsbanki receivership Moreover it was believed the creditors had no legal right to claim compensation towards the Landsbanki receivership for any potential losses they may suffer because of exchange rate fluctuations after 22 April 2009 17 On 26 September 2013 the Icelandic Supreme Court however ruled against this initial law interpretation of the Landsbanki Receivership concluding all creditors should be fully repaid with currency amounts equal to the denoted local currency of their claim meaning that when repaid with other currencies then valuation of this amount should be calculated by converting it to the claim s denoted currency according to the foreign currency exchange rates registered by the Icelandic Central Bank on the repayment date Thus ensuring that all creditors bare no currency exchange risks with these risks and potential financial burdens instead to be upheld solely by the receivership 18 19 As the Receivership mainly holds bank assets valuated in foreign currencies the repayment of claims is likewise expected to be conducted through partial repayments mainly in foreign currencies equal to the available cash currency basket stemming from liquidated assets on the payment day Because of the currency mix being more or less equal when comparing the Claims with the held Assets the risk for currency exchange losses is expected to be relatively low for the receivership The table below provides an overview of the currency composition of the first 3 partial repayments and how currency exchange rates were at the time compared to 22 April 2009 Creditor repayment tranches forthose who hold Priority Claims and ISK currency exchange rates 22 Apr 2009 Winding up proceedings 2 Dec 2011 1st repayment 24 May 2012 2nd repayment 5 Oct 2012 3rd repayment Total bn 14 Fixed currency rates 17 ISK value of 1 currency unit Rate 20 Amount bn 14 Rate 20 Amount bn 14 Rate 20 Amount bn 14 Canadian dollar CAD 105 5 120 1 13 8 0 ISK 0 128 1 21 4 0 ISK 0 126 9 20 3 0 ISK 0 0 ISK 0 European euro EUR 169 2 164 5 2 8 1 1 ISK 178 164 9 2 5 0 ISK 0 161 8 4 4 0 17 ISK 27 1 27 ISK 205 Icelandic kronur ISK 1 1 0 0 10 ISK 10 1 0 0 0 ISK 0 1 0 0 0 ISK 0 10 ISK 10 Great Britain pounds GBP 191 1 191 3 0 1 0 74 ISK 138 205 9 7 7 0 85 ISK 172 201 4 5 4 0 15 ISK 30 1 74 ISK 340 US dollar USD 130 7 121 8 6 8 0 71 ISK 84 131 3 0 5 0 ISK 0 124 4 4 8 0 19 ISK 23 0 90 ISK 107 Total repayment value in ISK bn a 410 172 80 648b Note aCalculated as ISK equivalent repayment value for the receivership by the entity of the FX 22 April 2009 valued claims while adjusting for currency exchange rate fluctuations happening on each payment date 14 For the example for the second repayment tranch all creditors with claims in pounds received 1 1 repayment with cash in pounds meaning that the repayment to these creditors had an ISK equivalent account value then being 1 1 proportional with the ISK Pound rate on 22 April 2009 Contrary to this the creditors with claims in euros US dollars also received cash in pounds but now at a time when these currencies had lost value against pounds and thus the ISK equivalent account value then was stronger with the same percentage compared to what the currencies had weakened against the pound meaning that the repayment to these creditors had an ISK equivalent account value then with a relatively higher value for the receivership than 1 1 because of repaying US dollar and euro claims with a relatively stronger Pound currency compared to the 22 April 2009 registered exchange rates Or to put in different words the receivership by conducting the second repayment three years later than 22 April 2009 actually gained some extra positive income through exchange rate improvements for the specific cash currency pound involved in this repayment tranch The applied method to calculate ISK equivalent account values for the repayments is in full compliance with the supreme court ruling saying that all creditors shall be repaid by cash amounts equal to their claim as per its denoted currency so when repaid with other currencies then the value of this shall be booked according to the currency exchange rate registered at the repayment date b ISK 14bn was returned in 2012 to the receivership from ESCROW accounts as some of the remaining disputed claims got settled by the court in its favor Thus the net total got reduced from ISK 662bn to 648bn 14 How capital controls impact creditor repayment edit Iceland elected a new government in April 2013 which as one of their top priorities wanted to negotiate a debt haircut towards foreign creditors of the three failed Icelandic banks now in receivership as part of a deal to lift the long enforced since November 2008 capital controls 21 As the current capital controls only ban a swap exchange of ISK denominated assets to foreign currency 22 and as 97 of the Landsbanki receivership total assets are held only in foreign currency this new Icelandic initiative will however most likely not affect the repayment scheme for the priority claim creditors in the Landsbanki receivership who at the moment are forecasted to be fully repaid by the first 91 2 of the receivership assets So even if the current capital controls remain in force at an indefinite time horizon it will only be the last 3 2 of the assets ISK 49 1531bn that remain to be frozen or trapped in Iceland and can not be directly repaid which then only would negatively impact the return rate for the creditors with general claims 14 The only minor risk for the receivership s priority claim creditors seems to be that the receivership might face political demands to extend the maturity of its owned Glacier bonds towards the New Landsbanki as part of the Icelandic government s overall capital control abolition initiative which would then delay liquidation of this specific asset 23 The nicknamed Glacier bonds concern two bonds with a total value of ISK 297bn 1 76bn that currently are due for yearly repayments in foreign currency from New Landsbanki to the Landsbanki receivership during the period 2014 2018 14 These specific repayment transfers are by some people speculated to be impossible if the capital controls gets abolished as such abolishment would be expected to drain the foreign capital reserves held by New Landsbanki and thus a deal to remove capital controls is speculated will also need to imply a prolonged maturity or repayment agreement for these bonds 24 The Icelandic government intends somehow to route the saved money from the negotiated debt haircut for creditors belonging to the receivership estates of Kaupthing and Glitnir into a national household debt relief fund enabling a 20 debt relief for all household mortgages Experts from IMF however belief that any potentially saved money from a negotiated deal would be eaten up by the additional costs the government will need to pay in the short term for implementing the abolishment of capital controls In July 2013 Standard amp Poors recommended Iceland drop the debt relief initiative as they also believe it would only result in increased debt for the government making it even more difficult to lend at credit markets and the debt relief initiative was forecasted also to ignite high inflation pressures along with risk for the arrival of a new economic recession equal to a GDP detraction of 10 25 The Icelandic government has appointed a task force to present proposals on how to achieve the government s goals with a reporting deadline in November 2013 26 27 New creditor repayment restrictions edit On 12 March 2012 the Icelandic government amended by Act No 17 2012 the existing Act No 87 1992 on Foreign Exchange so that paragraph five of Article 13n now represents new currency restrictions for repayment of foreign currency to creditors in any receivership estates 28 29 In that regard it shall be noted that all of the first 4 repayment tranches repaid by the Landsbanki Receivership were exempted from this amended law because it only involved available cash stemming from liquidation conducted ahead of 12 March 2012 15 All future repayment tranches will however be impacted by the amended law which stipulates that the Icelandic minister of finance and minister of banking have to agree on exemptions granted by the Icelandic Central Bank for all future claim repayments stemming from companies with a larger balance sheet than ISK 400bn even if it only involves a transfer of foreign currency This means that the Icelandic state now potentially also can block any further repayment of foreign currency to the creditors of the Landsbanki receivership No court has yet judged if this extended power of the Icelandic State also decides the pace of foreign currency repayments and not only ISK currency repayments are legal or illegal 30 Another new repayment restriction under consideration is that the Icelandic government on 1 October 2013 presented a proposal for their 2014 budget law to include a new 0 145 tax on all transfers from estates of failed financial companies 31 Some lawyers however have the opinion that this kind of tax on failed companies could be seen as an illegal expropriation by the Icelandic state If the Icelandic government passes this proposed law it will almost with certainty become challenged in a lawsuit by the receivership estates behind the three failed Icelandic banks 30 See also edit nbsp Banks portal Glitnir Kaupthing Bank Central Bank of Iceland Icesave disputeReferences edit Annual Report 2007 PDF Landsbanki Retrieved 2008 05 08 a b The Financial Supervisory Authority Iceland News Based on New Legislation the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority IFSA Proceeds to take Control of Landsbanki to ensure Continued Commercial Bank Operations in Iceland 07 10 2008 Archived 2008 10 10 at the Wayback Machine in English Kepler Capital Markets sold to management and staff through a management led buy out MBO Press release 19 December 2008 icesave co uk Homepage Icesave Retrieved 2008 10 07 Teather David 2008 10 07 Iceland government seizes control of Landsbanki The Guardian London Retrieved 2008 10 07 Darling s pledge to Icesave savers The Press Association Archived from the original on October 12 2008 Retrieved 2008 10 08 Britain vows to protect savers Agence France Presse 8 October 2008 Archived from the original on 10 October 2008 Retrieved 2008 10 08 BBC News Rescue plan for UK banks unveiled Retrieved 2008 10 08 The Landsbanki Freezing Order 2008 Archived 2008 12 12 at the Wayback Machine FME is News Archived 2009 01 05 at the Wayback Machine FSCS vs Landsbanki receivership case nr 340 2011 PDF Supreme Court of Iceland 28 October 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 27 May 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2013 DNB vs Landsbanki receivership case nr 341 2011 PDF Supreme Court of Iceland 28 October 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2013 Verdicts of the Supreme Court of Iceland in disputes concerning UK and Dutch wholesale deposits LBI 28 October 2011 Retrieved 21 March 2013 a b c d e f g h i j k LBI financial information at 30 06 2013 PDF Landsbanki receivership LBI 2 October 2013 Archived from the original PDF on 4 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 a b Partial payments to creditors LBI hf Landsbanki receivership 13 September 2013 Retrieved 13 September 2013 News announcement from LBI hf Creditors Meeting LBI hf Landsbanki receivership 2 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 a b c LBI financial information as of 30 09 2012 PDF Landsbanki receivership LBI 28 November 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2013 Retrieved 20 March 2013 THridjudaginn 24 September 2013 Nr 553 2013 in Icelandic Haestirettur Islands Supreme Court of Iceland 24 September 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Supreme Court ruling regarding FX rates partial Payments Landsbanki Receivership 26 September 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 a b c Valutakurser currency exchange calculator Norges Bank Retrieved 20 March 2013 Iceland s creditors braced for losses Financial Times 2 May 2013 Archived from the original on 11 December 2022 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Iceland Lacks Currency for Easy Exit of Krona Creditors Bloomberg 30 April 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Sigrun Davidsdottir s Icelog Aspects of capital controls in Iceland and Cyprus and the long time damaging effect 23 July 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Sigrun Davidsdottir s Icelog The plan for abolishing capital controls is er a no plan 12 September 2013 Retrieved 12 September 2013 S amp P warns Iceland over debt write off plan Financial Times 26 July 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Iceland Keeps Western Europe s Highest Rate as Krona Stable Bloomberg 21 August 2013 Retrieved 9 September 2013 Iceland Premier Says No Date to Lift Controls video interview Bloomberg 20 September 2013 Archived from the original on 21 September 2013 Retrieved 20 September 2013 Law on Foreign Exchange Law no 87 17 November 1992 consolidated version in Icelandic Althingi 5 April 2013 Act amending the Exchange Act no 87 1992 as amended in Icelandic Althingi 13 March 2012 a b Sigrun Davidsdottir s Icelog Iceland capital controls government action and possible creditor counteractions 2 October 2013 Retrieved 2 October 2013 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 05 Retrieved 2013 10 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link External links editOfficial site Kepler Capital Markets Official site Mobile site Landsbanki companies grouped at OpenCorporates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Landsbanki amp oldid 1221813871, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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