Ad-Hoc Emergency Liquidity

Sweden: Carnegie Investment Bank AB Emergency Liquidity Program, 2008

Announced: October 27, 2008

Purpose

to “reduce the risk of a serious disruption to the financial system” and help what was seen as a solvent bank with liquidity issues partially created by the financial crisis (Riksbank 2008a, 1)

Key Terms

  • Announcement Date
    October 27, 2008
  • Operational Date
    October 27, 2008
  • Termination Date
    Collateral transferred to the NDO on November 10, 2008
  • Legal Authority
    Chapter 6, Section 8 of the Sveriges Riksbank Act
  • Administrator
    Riksbank, later by the National Debt Office
  • Peak Authorization
    SEK 5 billion
  • Peak Outstanding
    SEK 2.4 billion
  • Collateral
    Carnegie and Max Matthiessen were pledged as collateral along with bonds, claims against subsidiaries of Carnegie, and claims relating to repo transactions
  • Haircut/Recourse
    No information
  • Interest Rate and Fees
    Riksbank repo rate plus 150 basis points
  • Term
    No set end date
  • Part of a Package
    Debt guarantees, deposit guarantees
  • Outcomes
    Collateral was transferred to the NDO on November 10, 2008; Carnegie and Max Matthiessen were sold in February 2011 to private equity groups; a surplus was generated for the Swedish taxpayer
  • Notable Features
    The NDO took over the bank after the regulator revoked its license; the regulator then reinstated the license. The Riksbank required holding company D. Carnegie to post all shares and subsidiaries in Carnegie and Max Matthiessen to back the loan

Key Design Decisions

Purpose1

Part of a Package1

Administration1

Governance1

Communication1

Source and Size of Funding1

Rates and Fees1

Loan Duration1

Balance Sheet Protection1

Impact on Monetary Policy Transmission1

Other Conditions1

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Key Program Documents

Taxonomy

Intervention Categories:

  • Ad-Hoc Emergency Liquidity

Countries and Regions:

  • Sweden

Crises:

  • Global Financial Crisis