Ad Hoc Capital Injections

Cyprus: Laiki Bank Capital Injection, 2012

Announced: May 25, 2012

Purpose

To cover a capital shortfall at Laiki Bank after it failed to privately raise the needed capital

Key Terms

  • Announcement Date
    May 25, 2012
  • Operational Date
    June 30, 2012
  • Date of Final Capital Injection
    June 30, 2012
  • End Date
    The government of Cyprus began the process of resolving Laiki Bank on March 25, 2013
  • Source(s) of Funding
    Unfunded bond issued by the government of Cyprus
  • Administrator
    Laiki Bank requested capital from the government, which then coordinated the capital injection
  • Size
    EUR 1.8 billion
  • Capital Characteristics
    New special class of ordinary shares
  • Bail-in Terms
    Bondholders received a voluntary exchange offer in May, at the same time as the capital injection; depositors were spared, but in 2013, uninsured depositors were transferred to the liquidating legacy bank
  • Outcomes
    The government of Cyprus resolved Laiki Bank a year after the capital injection and sold it to the Bank of Cyprus, which it also restructured; the government wrote off its entire investment in Laiki Bank
  • Notable Features
    Laiki Bank received ELA from the CBC throughout 2012. The government, lacking access to capital markets, paid for the new equity with an unfunded, renewable, 12-month zero-coupon sovereign bond; the ultimate bail-in of uninsured depositors was unusual

Key Design Decisions

Purpose1

Part of a Package1

Administration1

Governance1

Communication1

Treatment of Creditors and Equity Holders1

Capital Characteristics1

Source and Size of Funding1

Timing1

Restructuring Plan1

Treatment of Board and Management1

Other Conditions1

Regulatory Relief1

Exit Strategy1

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Taxonomy

Intervention Categories:

  • Ad Hoc Capital Injections

Institutions:

  • Laiki Bank

Countries and Regions:

  • Greece

Crises:

  • European Soverign Debt Crisis