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Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann: Germany's central bank won't accept Irish government bonds as collateral from May 1. Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

German central bank 'to stop taking Irish bonds as collateral'

A German newspaper report says the Bundesbank won’t take Irish, Greek or Portuguese bonds from banks any more.

GERMANY’S CENTRAL BANK has reportedly decided not to accept Irish government bonds as collateral when offered by its national banks later this year.

The Frankfurter Allegemeine Zeitung reports that the Bundesbank has decided not to accept bonds from Ireland, Greece or Portugal – the three Eurozone countries currently being funded by the EU-IMF.

Though the move will have little practical implications – German banks looking to access short-term funds will simply be told to present some other kind of asset as collateral – but may indicate a growing policy divide among Europe’s central banks.

It may also indicate that any further discussions on reorganising Ireland’s banking debts – where any deal would be reliant on the approval of the European Central Bank’s governing council – could yet prove to be very difficult.

While the European Central Bank itself had briefly stopped accepting Greek bonds as collateral – openly acknowledging that as it agreed a default, its government bonds were not worth their stated value – it resumed accepting them a few days later.

The FAZ report said the Bundesbank’s new regime would take effect from May 1, and that the matter had the approval of the ECB’s governing council.

(h/t He3 of Politics.ie)

Explainer: What’s reportedly being discussed in talks on Ireland’s bank debt?

Read: At least someone’s making money: ECB profits quadrupled last year

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16 Comments
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    Mute Shane Walsh
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    May 24th 2012, 9:18 AM

    Not good at all! I look forward to the day when we start seeing these major corporations taking on people rather than letting them go.

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    Mute mcbab
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    May 24th 2012, 9:26 AM

    Did you not hear the announcement from Intel about their expansion? Take note Journal.ie.

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    Mute Diarmaid Twomey
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    May 24th 2012, 9:58 AM

    Just remember folks these are the same guys urging a yes vote, who ll cut jobs here and drop us in an instant just to save a few cent. NOT the type of people whose opinion should be trusted on sovereign affairs! Deeply sad news, let’s hope the loss of jobs here is small.

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    Mute Peter
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    May 24th 2012, 11:21 AM

    This is just to do with supply and demand, HP is going down as it has not diversified to meet the competition.. The saved money may be invested back into the company and hopefully improve it..

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    Mute Diarmaid Twomey
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    May 24th 2012, 12:20 PM

    So would it be fair to say that supply and demand will remain the same regardless of whether we are on board this packed metaphorical train? If that’s the case, and as you point out below, Irelands democratic wish won’t make a blind bit of notice to FDI investment and retraction in Ireland? More spoof so from Yes side?

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    Mute Peter
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    May 24th 2012, 3:03 PM

    Well your right there about FDI whether we vote yes or no, no difference,

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    Mute Siobhan Shove On Lynch
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    May 24th 2012, 11:19 AM

    There “hiring” alright, 40+ hrs a week for unpaid “work experience”.

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    Mute Jason Moore
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    May 24th 2012, 5:27 PM

    Jesus can we have one story were someone doesn’t bring up the stability treaty or government.

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    Mute Patrick Moran
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    May 24th 2012, 9:27 AM

    This is bad news. But am I crazy or did I recently read somewhere that HP were actually taking on staff ??

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    Mute Virgil Sollozzo
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    May 24th 2012, 9:55 AM

    They seem to hire a lot of their engineers etc through a independent subsidiary called HP CDS this allows them to offer lower terms and less benefits as opposed to normal HP engineers.

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    Mute Tomas O Beag
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    May 24th 2012, 11:30 AM

    Stability !!!! Yeah right.

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    Mute Peter
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    May 24th 2012, 12:07 PM

    This has nothing to do with the treaty.. If industry X goes bust it’s because of the market shifts

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