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Dublin: 10 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

Ireland’s cost of borrowing falls as NTMA formally issues new bonds

The body that manages Irish debt has formally issued new bonds to replace the promissory notes.

A statue on the side of Treasury Buildings, the home of the NTMA.
A statue on the side of Treasury Buildings, the home of the NTMA.
Image: Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland

THE COST of borrowing for the Irish government has fallen today, as the markets get their first chance to offer a response to the deal eliminating Ireland’s promissory note obligations with new government bonds issued instead.

The yield on an 8-year Irish bond – the closest to a benchmark 10-year bond that Ireland currently has in public circulation – fell well below 4 per cent today, its first time under this threshold for several years.

This evening Ireland would be able to borrow on an 8-year basis at 3.84 per cent, down from 3.98 per cent this morning.

By comparison, Spain would pay 4.81 per cent to borrow on the same basis, while Italy would pay 3.90 per cent. Germany would pay merely 1.22 per cent to borrow over the same period.

The fall came as the National Treasury Management Agency, the body which manages Ireland’s debts on the Government’s behalf, confirmed details of the new bonds which had been issued in lieu of the promissory notes – and that the promissory notes were no more.

“The Minister for Finance’s liability under the Promissory Notes has been discharged and the Promissory Notes cancelled,” it said in a statement.

The new bonds – eight in total – fall due in 2038 and every two years between 2041 and 2053, with an interest margin of between 2.50 and 2.68 per cent – plus the ‘Euribor’, the rate at which European banks lend to each other – on each one.

Euribor, as of today, stands at 0.372 per cent – meaning that the bonds carry a real interest rate of about 3 per cent on average.

The bonds will pay interest every six months, with the Central Bank making most of the profit – meaning the money ultimately ends up back in state coffers anyway.

More: Gilmore: Change in promissory note terms is “very, very significant”

Read: Here’s how the IBRC deal takes €1bn off next year’s Budget

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Comments (28 Comments)

  • This must be the most measured and realistic comments debate session on a topical issue for a very long time on The Journal. Fills my heart with hope! :-)

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  • Nydon 08/02/13 #

    Any chance we could borrow some extra and lend on to Spain at say 4.50?

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  • No negative post yet from regular Journal naysayers! What’s going on?!

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    • Their having their dinner! Be here soon!

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    • New world order

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    • Soaps are on

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    • Buck, you mean those with different opinions than u.

      We’re u one of the happy back slappers after 2008 bank guarantee.
      I was one of those negative folks, re blanket aspect, perhaps if people didn’t close there minds so easily they would start putting all the pieces of this planned economic attack on our country.
      By the end of this year a bond market collapse will happen, which will prob lead to a currency war, some countries have already started, Japan, china. North Korea.
      So any gains we make here are short term, and the rigged game goes on, need proof “libor”. This ran from top to bottom if nearly all the big banks, sooner u realise the banks and those who control them don’t give a fook about you

      Wake up

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    • If you think one of the greatest capitulations in history, by a shower of meek little men, who masquerade as a government is something to celebrate, then you actually deserve to be pitied. This is the same shower of meek little men who lied and conned their way to power, with statements such as “not one more cent”. Meek little men that admit they never even tried to get the Anglo debt written down. A debt that the meek little men stated only last year, isn’t our debt. Yes it’s a great day to celebrate.

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    • Thank you for your pity punch! I’m sure you’ll be quite satisfied when your theory proves correct!

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    • I blame the government, the Catholic Church and Twink………

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  • I hope no one is fiddling the Euribor as well!

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  • If this is such a good deal, and for all I’ve read despite níl achievement on the capital, it seems to be, why was the promissory note deal ever considered as a solution? Was it punishment from Europe? Why didn’t the govt leverage the liquidation of Anglo, burning bond holders etc in 2008 or since.

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    • John
      The Government of 2008 had a disinterested Taoiseach and a completely illiterate (fiscally) Minister for Finance who just bumbled from day to day without anyone taking a brave or a correct decision. They saved Anglo Irish because so many of their Party financiers were doing business there and they never really understood the gravity of the decisions they were taking.
      Worse than this was their arrogant behavior towards Europe which built up an enormous level of anger which ultimately presented itself to the new Government of Fine Gael and Labour as hostility.
      That was the first task facing Enda Kenny and his Cabinet.
      What a great job they have done since and from here they will now move to separate Bank debt from Sovereign. We should wish them well with that!

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    • We’ve gone from having the pressure of a loan shark on our back to having a long term credit arrangement that will never really squeeze the country to death, but we must outrace by being strong and determined with our ability to grow Ireland.

      Sadly, the reason to acknowledge the Kenny/Noonan solution as a good one is that they got it sorted into a fair re-arrangement rather than a windfall of writedown.

      But the alternative would have been a disaster.

      Fools, heavily present on this forum, would have wanted to go to Europe, all guns blazing, telling them to f-off, it’s not my personal debt, we’re defaulting.

      Europe would have said, politely, “ok go fvck yourselves little Ireland, we will iron ring you – all Irish funds are frozen in europe, no wire of funds out of ireland will be recognised, passengers leaving will be searched for cash. Every euro in paddy’s naive pocket is invalid and we are switching off the 50billion of liquidity we are currently providing.
      We let your banks and your State borrow billions to invest in the bottleworks, a dubai tower in D4 and apartments in the middle of nowhere but apparently you were halfwits and now want to plead the intellectually incapacited card, it wasn’t your fault?”

      We need to thank FG for being boring, straightlaced conservatives getting a tough job done while morons all over the land moan about unachievable and irrelevant ideals of utopian nirvana because their politician riles them up into a fever of illogical anger.

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    • Hey Richard, if this treacherous decision by your kind to turn The debts of gamblers into sovereign is such a great deal, then explain to me why the most decimated party in the history of this state has become the most popular again?

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    • You obvious didn’t read the detail about the FF leading the polls party. It was conducted during the Magdalene Apology Fiasco & before the ECB promissory deal

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    • Is that what you want David?? FF back?? Really?

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  • This is brilliant, I wish I could borrow a few hundred k now and then pay myself back in 40 years!! How can u argue with capitalism/debt markets when u can get away with this type of sht – happy days….

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  • Grand so. I just ordered my new veyron and put the deposit down on a 5.4 million pound house on aylsbury road.

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  • The Minister of Finance Michael Noonan is to be congratulated. FF put the country in this mess. No foresight! Sad!

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  • MOD 09/02/13 #

    Ah come on this is fantistic news, bond rates dropping, i must tell my 3 kids that they may not owe so much as they think

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  • Pre election promises to take a hard line on bankers and protect frontline services, post election realities are a polar opposite!

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    • TBH… I voted for FG to pretty much do what they are doing! Get the ecomony turned, reduce our burden and get our ecomonic control back. If they can also achieve ecomonies of scale in the public sector and cut down on social welfare fraud…Thats a bonus!!! I also think you will find a hard line is being taken on bankers…

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  • Is appointing KPMG to liquidate Anglo Irish a good choice?

    Further details by searching in Google for ‘KPMG Hanna Windle Swindle’

    Cheers

    A Taxi Driver

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  • A nation in Bondhood.

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