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Anglo Irish Bank

Anglo Irish Bank was an Irish bank headquartered in Dublin from 1964 to 2011.[1] It began to wind down after nationalisation in 2009.[2] In July 2011 Anglo Irish merged with the Irish Nationwide Building Society, forming a new company named the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation. Michael Noonan, the Minister for Finance stated that the name change was important in order to remove "the negative international references associated with the appalling failings of both institutions and their previous managements".[3]

Not to be confused with Allied Irish Banks.

Company type

1964 (1964)

1 July 2011 (2011-07-01)

Sean FitzPatrick (former chairman), Alan Dukes (post-nationalisation chairman), Mike Aynsley (post-nationalisation group CEO)

0 (July 2011); 1500 (2006)

Anglo Irish mainly dealt in business and commercial banking, and had only a limited retail presence in the major Irish cities. It also had wealth management and treasury divisions. Anglo Irish had operations in Austria, Switzerland, the Isle of Man, the United Kingdom, and the United States.


The bank's heavy exposure to property lending, with most of its loan book being to builders and property developers, meant that it was badly affected by the downturn in the Irish property market in 2008.[4] In December 2008, the Irish government announced plans to inject €1.5 billion of capital for a 75% stake in the bank, effectively nationalising it.[5][6] The Dublin and London Stock Exchanges immediately suspended trading in Anglo Irish's shares, with the final closing share price of €0.22 representing a fall of over 98% from its peak.[7][8][9]


On 16 January 2009 the then Taoiseach Brian Cowen stated that it was "business as usual" at Anglo Irish Bank, and people should be reassured that the bank is solvent.[10] Between June and September 2009, the Minister for Finance provided €4 billion in capital. In a statement on 30 March 2010, a day before Anglo Irish Bank reported its financial results, the Minister of Finance Brian Lenihan announced an injection of €8.3 billion into the bank, noting that a further €10 billion may be required at a later stage to cover future losses and ensure an adequate capital base.


Since the nationalization of Anglo Irish Bank a number of controversies have arisen over certain business practices and loans, including loans to directors and loans to people associated with Brendan Murtagh, EMPG, and the QUINN group.


On 31 March 2010 Anglo Irish Bank reported results for the 15 months to December 2009. Losses for the period were €12.7 billion, with an operating profit before impairment of €2.4 billion and an impairment charges of €15.1 billion driving the overall result. It is the largest loss in Irish corporate history.[11] Total assets declined to €85.2 billion at the end of 2009 from €101.3 billion in September 2008.


The European Commission allowed the Irish government on 10 August 2010 to temporarily grant €10 billion to Anglo Irish Bank – this included an additional €1.4 billion sought by Ireland to allow the nationalised bank meet its regulatory capital requirements in light of increased costs associated with transferring loans to the National Asset Management Agency.[12][13]


In 2011 the accounts for UK savers were moved to the Allied Irish Bank (GB).

Financial results[edit]

On 31 March 2010, Anglo Irish Bank reported results for the 15 months to December 2009. Loss for the period were €12.7 billion, with an operating profit before impairment of €2.4 billion and an impairment charges of €15.1 billion driving the overall result. Total assets declined to €85.2 billion at the end of 2009 from €101.3 billion in September 2008.


With the substantial capital investment in the Bank by the government offsetting the provisions, the Core Tier 1 and total regulatory capital were €5 billion and €8 billion respectively at the end of 2009 versus risk weighted assets of €73 billion.


Anglo Irish Bank is the largest contributor of assets to Ireland's "bad bank", the National Asset Management Agency. It expects to transfer loans with a nominal value of €35.6 billion to NAMA over 2010 which would see the risk-weighted-assets fall to €43 billion.


In Anglo Irish Bank's 2009 Annual Report, referring to the QUINN group and related companies, it stated that the "High Court in Ireland appointed two joint provisional administrators to a significant corporate borrower of the Group. The Group is closely monitoring the situation and assessing the potential implications of this development which may have a negative impact on impairment charges in 2010."

1964 – Anglo Irish Bank was established in Dublin.

1971 – Anglo Irish listed on the stock exchange.

1988 – Anglo Irish acquired Irish Bank of Commerce.

1995 – Anglo Irish acquired Royal Trust Bank (Austria), a bank with a 100-year history, from and renamed it Anglo Irish Bank (Austria). Anglo Irish also acquired a loan portfolio from Allied Dunbar.

Royal Bank of Canada

1996 – Anglo Irish acquired Ansbacher Bankers, which was established in Dublin in 1950.

1998 – Anglo Irish acquired (Austria) and combined it with its existing Austrian operations.

Crédit Lyonnais

1999 – Anglo Irish acquired Smurfit Paribas Bank, a joint-venture that had helped establish in Dublin in 1983. Anglo Irish also bought a loan portfolio from Bayerische Hypo- und Vereinsbank.

Banque Paribas

2001 – Anglo Irish acquired Banque Marcuard Cook & Cie. in , Switzerland, and renamed it Anglo Irish Bank (Suisse).

Geneva

2005 – Chief Executive Seán FitzPatrick stepped down to assume the role of chairman. David Drumm replaced him as CEO.

2007 – In January, it was reported that bought a 5% stake of Anglo Irish Bank for US$750 million. In July 2008 Quinn converted investments in the bank to ordinary shares, increasing his family's stake to 15%.

Seán Quinn

2007- Later in the same January, consultants named Anglo Irish Bank as the best-performing bank in the world over the past five years in a piece of research published to coincide with the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.[41][42]

Oliver Wyman

2008 – In September, Anglo Irish sells Anglo Irish Bank Austria (AIBA) to Swiss bank: Valartis Bank A.G.[44]

[43]

2008 – In December, both FitzPatrick, the chairman, and Drumm, the CEO, resigned (see ).

above

2009 – , after receiving a fee of over US$11 million, said that the bank was "financially sound", 11 days before nationalisation.

Merrill Lynch

2009 – The Irish Government nationalised Anglo Irish Bank at which point the and the London Stock Exchange delisted the bank. On 19 January the Board of Directors resigned to allow the Government to appoint a new board.

Irish Stock Exchange

7 September 2009 – appointed as new Group Chief Executive.[45]

Mike Aynsley

2010 – appointed Chairman

Alan Dukes

18 March 2010 – Former chairman is arrested for fraud.

Sean FitzPatrick

31 March 2010 – At €12.7 billion, Anglo posts the largest loss in Irish corporate history.

[11]

2 June 2010 – Irish Minister of Finance, Brian Lenihan, announced a €2bn cash injection for Anglo Irish Bank.

[46]

8 September 2010 – Lenihan announced the separation into two entities.

[18]

30 September 2010 – the Irish Government announces a total estimate of the eventual cost of the Anglo Irish bailout as at least €29.3 billion, while also announcing that two other banks, AIB and Irish Nationwide, will require additional funding

[47]

31 March 2011 – For the year 2010 Anglo Irish Bank announced a €17.7 billion loss, breaking its own record for the highest corporate loss in Irish history.

[1]

20 April 2011 – Anglo Irish Bank signage removed from all the Bank's buildings across the world in a coordinated effort.

[48]

14 October 2011 – Anglo Irish Bank officially changed its name to Limited[49]

Irish Bank Resolution Corporation

26 January 2012 – The High Court was told a total of 11 are investigating the sinister goings-on at Anglo: Mr Justice Peter Kelly found it "extraordinary" that more police were not involved.[50][51]

Gardaí

24 June 2013 – The newspaper released "secret recordings" which contained recorded telephone conversations between senior manager John Bowe, who had been involved in negotiations with the Central Bank (of Ireland), laughing and joking as he tells another senior manager, Peter Fitzgerald, how Anglo was luring the State into giving it billions of euros.[52][53]

Irish Independent

List of companies of Ireland

Media related to Anglo Irish Bank at Wikimedia Commons

Official site

grouped at OpenCorporates

Anglo Irish Bank companies