Central Bank has sold off 70% of IBRC-linked bonds

Bank has sold €17.5bn of the bonds to NTMA since 2014

The Central Bank has now sold off 70 per cent of €25 billion of Government bonds it received in February 2013 under a restructuring of so-called Anglo Irish promissory notes. Photograph : Matt Kavanagh
The Central Bank has now sold off 70 per cent of €25 billion of Government bonds it received in February 2013 under a restructuring of so-called Anglo Irish promissory notes. Photograph : Matt Kavanagh

The Central Bank on Thursday sold a further €500 million of bonds linked to the restructuring five years ago of the State's bailout of the now-defunct Anglo Irish Bank.

This means the Central Bank has now sold off 70 per cent of €25 billion of Government bonds it received in February 2013 under a restructuring of so-called promissory notes, which had been used by the State during the financial crisis to rescue Anglo. The bank was subsequently renamed Irish Bank Resolution Corporation (IBRC).

The Central Bank has sold €17.5 billion of the bonds since 2014, including Thursday's transaction, to the National Treasury Management Agency (NTMA), which has immediately cancelled the notes.

The Central Bank has been able to make large profits selling the bonds at a premium to the price at which they were issued, due to government bond yields across the euro zone falling dramatically since 2013. However, the NTMA has had to raise borrowings in global markets to finance the purchases.

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Collateral

IBRC had been using the promissory notes as collateral for emergency Central Bank funding up until February 2013, when it was put into liquidation. As part of the liquidation deal, the State replaced the notes with long-term bonds of up to 40 years in duration.

The Central Bank has been coming under pressure from the European Central Bank to sell the bonds as quickly as possible in order to ease concerns that the financing amounts to monetary financing, which is prohibited in the euro zone.

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan

Joe Brennan is Markets Correspondent of The Irish Times