|
Wednesday 10th March 2010 |
Text too small? |
Trading banks will no longer have access to government-guaranteed wholesale funding after the scheme - a response to the 2008 global financial crisis - closes on April 30, Finance Minister Bill English announced today.
"The wholesale funding facility was set up in November 2008 when the liquidity crisis had hit global markets," he told the New Zealand Australia Investment Forum in Auckland.
"It helped our banks access funding during that crisis, but international market conditions have improved - and continue to improve in 2010. New Zealand banks are now raising funds without using the guarantee, which was always envisaged as a temporary measure for extraordinary times."
The Australian wholesale funding guarantee will end on March 31 and other countries are also winding down their schemes.
The wholesale guarantee facility is separate from the retail deposit guarantee scheme, which is being extended on new, more onerous terms to financial institutions with credit ratings from October 13.
The scheme saw 24 guarantee certificates issued, covering $10.3 billion of borrowing by banks, and netted almost $290 million in fees for the government, which was never called on to pay out on what was essentially a government insurance scheme.
"Banks in New Zealand are now successfully raising funds in the wholesale market without using the wholesale guarantee and we don't expect there will be any further use of the facility between now and the end of April," English said.
Businesswire.co.nz
No comments yet
Devon Funds Morning Note - 18 March 2026
TRA - Turners updates earnings guidance
March 18th Morning Report
MCY - Mercury opens $220m geothermal expansion
PYS - PaySauce undertakes Minimum Holding buyback
March 17th Morning Report
Meridian Energy monthly operating report for February 2026
MCY - Mercury considers Green Bond offer
March 16th Morning Report
Metro Performance Glass FY26 Market Update