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Economy
In reply to the discussion: Weekend Economists Piece for Peace April 3-5, 2015 [View all]Demeter
(85,373 posts)12. Andorra on the brink of Europe's next banking crisis
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/banksandfinance/11500130/Andorra-on-the-brink-of-Europes-next-banking-crisis.html
Tiny principality has been rocked by allegations of money laundering in its oversized banking sector... The country has for many years enjoyed the benefits of European borders without the restrictions of EU membership, allowing light-touch regulation that has brought in tourism and wealthy expats from its bordering countries. However, in the last three weeks, the state has been gripped by a banking crisis that threatens to take it to the brink. Bankers have been thrown in jail, savers deposits have been restricted, and the countrys government is scrambling to convince powerful regulators thousands of miles away that the country is not a haven for tax evasion.
On Tuesday March 10, the US Treasury Departments financial crime body, FinCEN, accused Banca Privada dAndorra (BPA), the countrys fourth-largest bank, of money-laundering. The authority said corrupt highlevel managers and weak antimoney-laundering controls have made BPA an easy vehicle for thirdparty money-launderers. Three senior managers at the bank accepted bribes to help criminals in Russia, Venezuela and China, to funnel money through the Andorran system, according to FinCEN....The next day, the state took charge of BPA, dismissing three directors. On the Friday, the banks chief executive, Joan Pau Miquel, was arrested and detained. Mr Miquel remains in a jail cell in La Comella, the countrys only prison, with a capacity of 145. At BPA, the Andorran authorities have installed new management. After international banks cut off links, withdrawals were capped at 2,500 (£1,830) a week, a limit many people are maxing out.
Banco Madrid, the Spanish subsidiary of BPA acquired as part of an expansion spree in recent years, filed for administration on Wednesday. The Andorran government insists that BPA is an isolated case, saying it is committed to transparency and that the rest of the sector is clean. For its sake, it had better be right, but many experts fear this is not the case.
The states banks have assets under management 17 times bigger than the economy, and the sector accounts for a fifth of GDP almost all of the rest is from tourism. Were its banks to get into trouble, Andorra, which is not a member of the eurozone but uses the single currency on an informal basis, would have no way of bailing them out. In short, the country faces a catastrophe if its banks fall apart. The crisis is a classic example of how countries seeking to welcome financial services by promising a hands-off approach to regulation, can become dangerously vulnerable to them.
Andorras exposures to its banks provoke echoes of Iceland and Cyprus both of which suffered painful economic crises when their lenders fell into trouble. But unlike Cyprus, which received a last-minute bail-out, Andorra has no central bank to act as a lender of last resort: if its banks go under, it goes under...The crisis has now led Standard & Poors, one of the three major ratings agencies, to downgrade the value of the principalitys sovereign debt.
AND THERE'S STILL MORE
Tiny principality has been rocked by allegations of money laundering in its oversized banking sector... The country has for many years enjoyed the benefits of European borders without the restrictions of EU membership, allowing light-touch regulation that has brought in tourism and wealthy expats from its bordering countries. However, in the last three weeks, the state has been gripped by a banking crisis that threatens to take it to the brink. Bankers have been thrown in jail, savers deposits have been restricted, and the countrys government is scrambling to convince powerful regulators thousands of miles away that the country is not a haven for tax evasion.
On Tuesday March 10, the US Treasury Departments financial crime body, FinCEN, accused Banca Privada dAndorra (BPA), the countrys fourth-largest bank, of money-laundering. The authority said corrupt highlevel managers and weak antimoney-laundering controls have made BPA an easy vehicle for thirdparty money-launderers. Three senior managers at the bank accepted bribes to help criminals in Russia, Venezuela and China, to funnel money through the Andorran system, according to FinCEN....The next day, the state took charge of BPA, dismissing three directors. On the Friday, the banks chief executive, Joan Pau Miquel, was arrested and detained. Mr Miquel remains in a jail cell in La Comella, the countrys only prison, with a capacity of 145. At BPA, the Andorran authorities have installed new management. After international banks cut off links, withdrawals were capped at 2,500 (£1,830) a week, a limit many people are maxing out.
Banco Madrid, the Spanish subsidiary of BPA acquired as part of an expansion spree in recent years, filed for administration on Wednesday. The Andorran government insists that BPA is an isolated case, saying it is committed to transparency and that the rest of the sector is clean. For its sake, it had better be right, but many experts fear this is not the case.
The states banks have assets under management 17 times bigger than the economy, and the sector accounts for a fifth of GDP almost all of the rest is from tourism. Were its banks to get into trouble, Andorra, which is not a member of the eurozone but uses the single currency on an informal basis, would have no way of bailing them out. In short, the country faces a catastrophe if its banks fall apart. The crisis is a classic example of how countries seeking to welcome financial services by promising a hands-off approach to regulation, can become dangerously vulnerable to them.
Andorras exposures to its banks provoke echoes of Iceland and Cyprus both of which suffered painful economic crises when their lenders fell into trouble. But unlike Cyprus, which received a last-minute bail-out, Andorra has no central bank to act as a lender of last resort: if its banks go under, it goes under...The crisis has now led Standard & Poors, one of the three major ratings agencies, to downgrade the value of the principalitys sovereign debt.
AND THERE'S STILL MORE
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