Friday 6 May 2011

IL&P Shareholders - Unite!

Dear Fellow Shareholder in Irish Life & Permanent,

We are a shareholder in Irish Life & Permanent Group Holdings plc (IL&P) and are reaching out to you as a fellow shareholder.

As you know, the situation of the IL&P shareholders has deteriorated markedly following the recent stress tests on the PTSB Bank – the Prudential Capital Assessment Review (PCAR) and the Prudential Liquidity Assessment Review (PLAR), which were completed by the Central Bank of Ireland (CBI) in March 2011. The PCAR/PLAR capital requirements for IL&P exceeded by far the most pessimistic analyst forecasts. The IL&P Management appeared shocked at the outcome of the stress tests. So what happened? Well, let me put it in the context of the following FACTS:
  1. Fact: PTSB Bank is NOT insolvent. PTSB Bank is currently entirely solvent and adequately capitalised to deal with the most likely macroeconomic scenario, as well as a realistic worst case scenario.
  2. Fact: PTSB Bank does NOT NEED anywhere close to €4bn extra capital (even though it is REQUIRED to raise the €4bn forcefully imposed as a result of the stress tests).
  3. Fact: The Irish State will NOT single-handedly save IL&P by bailing it out: Firstly, IL&P does NOT need bailing out. Secondly, IL&P is not being saved -- this entirely viable two-pillar business is being unduly dismantled just in case an entirely unrealistic, made up scenario materialises. And thirdly, the Irish State will merely cover 56% of the unneeded €4bn capital requirement that the Irish Authorities have themselves made up -- the remaining 44% (more than €1.7bn) will be covered collectively by the IL&P shareholders.
In this context, we believe the present IL&P share price collapse has effectively resulted from fears that the Irish Authorities may want to improperly disenfranchise current shareholders and grossly violate shareholder ownership rights via an interlinked and carefully crafted string of inequitable government measures. 

Let me illustrate this very briefly on the following simple example:

Imagine that, while you are fully solvent, the Irish Authorities forced you personally into an ARTIFICIAL bankruptcy-like position by imposing on you an unrealistic requirement to hold at all times 16-times the amount of money that you really NEED to support yourself in a realistic worst-case scenario.

But that would not be the end of it ...

Then, the Irish Authorities would force you to sell your house, your car and all your valuables in order to cover a large 44%-part of this artificial and unneeded financial requirement that the Authorities have MADE UP for you in the first place.

But that would still not be the end of it ...

Then, the Irish Authorities would say: "You cannot just be in the artificial bankruptcy-like state that the Authorities have created for you -- the Government will provide the remaining 56% of the unneeded capital requirement that the Authorities have MADE UP for you (and that you have not yet covered yourself by having sold your house, your car and all your valuables) -- but "in return", the Government will become the exclusive owner of almost all the assets that you still have left in your ownership. It does not matter that you have covered 44% of the artificial financial requirement -- we, the Government, disregard this contribution of yours (the contribution that the Government has forced you to make) and the Government will now be the owner of more than 90% of all your assets left (after the sale of your house, your car and all your valuables)".

And, by the way, to make you feel better, the Irish Authorities would also say "the Government are doing all this in the best interest of the country and its financial system, as well as to satisfy a prudent image of the Irish State".

How would you call such a behaviour by the Irish Authorities?

Well, that absurd scenario illustrates pretty much EXACTLY what may be happening to the IL&P shareholders!

However, we believe that, together, the shareholders can influence the difficult situation for the better. On the website www.ilpshareholders.com, we delineate how we see the situation and what we believe we can do together to improve it. Please go this website.

If you would like to reach out to other IL&P shareholders and make public comments, please post your views on this blog for IL&P shareholders.

Thank you for your consideration and feedback.

Sincerely,

Piotr Skoczylas

Managing Director and Fund Manager
Scotchstone Capital Fund Ltd

Email:  enquiries@scotchstone-capital.com
Phone: + 356 2788 8840

11 comments:

  1. You are absolutely right with your arguments.

    While I understand that the shareholders of Irish Life & Permanent must do everything to ease the burden on the Irish taxpayers, I do not want to be oust by the Irish government based on capital requirements that were calculated based on unrealistic assumptions.

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  2. Hi
    I also fully agree with your view. As a swedish shareholder in IL&P I will feel totally fooled by the irish finance authorities if the state ends up with 90+% of the shares. I have bought shares in IL&P. The potential need for capital is in PTSB, not in IL&P!. If we are forced to sell Irish life, these money MUST be considered as shareholder capital going into PTSB. If not, I believe that basic rules of shareholding are gone. I am suprised that IL&P management is so quite of the bisarr situation. I would like them to be much more open what they think. I want to know if they feel the same as me and many other shareholders. Irish media should also pay more attention to this situation.

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  3. Dear All,

    I think we as shareholders have a simple and elegant solution to the situation. We should demand a proportional split of Irish Life and Permanent into Irish Life and Permanent TSB. Thus each shareholder of IL&P will receive 1 share of Irish Life and one share of Permanent TSB bank per one share of IL&P. All the bailout issues are concerning only Permanent TSB. I see no major legal obstacles to do so (I believe that the regulated cannot dictate the shareholders what to do with their shares as it would be a violation of private property rights) and I believe that the proposal will meet over 90% of shareholders support. The only thing we need is to raise such question with the company and initiate EGM on he proposal. I believe the legal procedure to split the company may take very short time given that IL&P already has holding structure when the insurance company and the bank are separate legal entities. Please let know to the company of such a proposal.

    Sergey Arinin, shareholder
    arinin.sergey(at)gmail.com

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  4. Shareholders or their proxies should attend AGM and hold board of IL&P to account. No re-election for them. At a minimum we should try to get one of our own on the board.

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  5. I am not a shareholder, but I agree that what is happening is bad for the shareholders, the borrowers and the taxpayers. I have discussed it in more detail on askaboutmoney.com

    http://www.askaboutmoney.com/showthread.php?t=154605

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  6. We are shareholders with 9 mil shares. All activities of Irish authorities are directed to nationalization of ILP and confiscation of assets of existing shareholders.
    First, we have to be sure if the existing management wants to protect the shareholder’s interests or not. If it is readdy to start legal action and other measures.
    Management can take following measures and to prove that the amount of 4 bn euro additional capital is not neccesary:
    1. Finish action with morgage trackers till the end of June
    2. Sell English assets of 7,5 bn eur at discount price till the end of June
    3. Debt for equity for 1,2 subordinated bondholders or discounted buy back - till the end of June.
    With these measures, the amount of 4 bn euro would be significantly decreased in the first half report 2011. Also, the ratio loan/deposit, would be decreased.
    With this result, ask from the Irish authority and EU, the additional 6 months deadline for sales of Irish assurance and additional emission of ordinary shares.
    Management did not take any action until now and we think they do it in the Irish authorities interest.
    The Irish authorities intention is to overtake Irish TSB and then, merge it with AIB and ESB in first pillar bank.

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  7. These bank stress tests looks like a joke, 6 months back they said ILP only need bove 200 million now they are saying it needed 2 billion,after 1st bank stress results i bought 7000 ILP shares,they cheated me with the false information,Irish govt is a joke with no credibility...If i loose my money , i will file case in a high court,all share holders must unite and fight together.

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  8. Hi,
    Does anyone know when we have all the answers to this mess? When is it fully decided from the dep. of finance, ILP mamangement etc. how small our share will be in the new PTSB?

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  9. i had 40,000 ILP shares and i sold them yesterday with a significant loss. that was my hard earned money just evaporated. can anyone suggest if i should have kept it till the end. now i'm with second thoughts.

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  10. I would like to say one thing. There are few blogs in this list which are not having option to leave comments on them. What should i do on such sites. Plz guide. Once you can’t leave comment on that site then a back linking will not be created. you can check first five site in this list and you will find such site.
    Well, then also thanx a lot for such a valuable post. Keep it up.
    Dirk Kettlewell

    ReplyDelete
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    ReplyDelete