Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland

All public companies in the European Union, including Ireland’s major banks, were required to adopt IAS 39 for their annual accounting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2005. Under the “incurred loss” model of IAS 39, banks could set aside reserves for loan losses only when objective evidence...

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Main Authors: Arwin G. Zeissler, Andrew Metrick
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:http://som.yale.edu/download-ypfs/2014-4B-V1-Ireland-and-Iceland-in-Crisis-B-Decreasing-Loan-Loss-Provisions-in-Ireland.pdf
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spelling ftrepec:oai:RePEc:ysm:ypfswp:57245 2023-05-15T16:49:46+02:00 Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland Arwin G. Zeissler Andrew Metrick http://som.yale.edu/download-ypfs/2014-4B-V1-Ireland-and-Iceland-in-Crisis-B-Decreasing-Loan-Loss-Provisions-in-Ireland.pdf unknown http://som.yale.edu/download-ypfs/2014-4B-V1-Ireland-and-Iceland-in-Crisis-B-Decreasing-Loan-Loss-Provisions-in-Ireland.pdf preprint ftrepec 2020-12-04T13:37:11Z All public companies in the European Union, including Ireland’s major banks, were required to adopt IAS 39 for their annual accounting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2005. Under the “incurred loss” model of IAS 39, banks could set aside reserves for loan losses only when objective evidence existed that a loan was impaired, not in anticipation of future losses. As a result, Irish banks saw their aggregate reserve for bad loans drop from 1.2% of loan balances at the end of 2000 to only 0.4% by 2006-2007, just before the collapse of the banking industry caused loan losses to soar. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, financial regulators and accounting bodies recognized the weakness of the pro-cyclical incurred loss model. As a result, they have proposed alternative “expected loss” models that allow reserves for expected losses to be built up over the life of a loan in a counter-cyclical fashion. Systemic Risk, Financial Crises, Financial Regulation Report Iceland RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
institution Open Polar
collection RePEc (Research Papers in Economics)
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language unknown
description All public companies in the European Union, including Ireland’s major banks, were required to adopt IAS 39 for their annual accounting periods beginning on or after January 1, 2005. Under the “incurred loss” model of IAS 39, banks could set aside reserves for loan losses only when objective evidence existed that a loan was impaired, not in anticipation of future losses. As a result, Irish banks saw their aggregate reserve for bad loans drop from 1.2% of loan balances at the end of 2000 to only 0.4% by 2006-2007, just before the collapse of the banking industry caused loan losses to soar. In the aftermath of the global financial crisis, financial regulators and accounting bodies recognized the weakness of the pro-cyclical incurred loss model. As a result, they have proposed alternative “expected loss” models that allow reserves for expected losses to be built up over the life of a loan in a counter-cyclical fashion. Systemic Risk, Financial Crises, Financial Regulation
format Report
author Arwin G. Zeissler
Andrew Metrick
spellingShingle Arwin G. Zeissler
Andrew Metrick
Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
author_facet Arwin G. Zeissler
Andrew Metrick
author_sort Arwin G. Zeissler
title Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
title_short Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
title_full Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
title_fullStr Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
title_full_unstemmed Ireland and Iceland in Crisis B: Decreasing Loan Loss Provisions in Ireland
title_sort ireland and iceland in crisis b: decreasing loan loss provisions in ireland
url http://som.yale.edu/download-ypfs/2014-4B-V1-Ireland-and-Iceland-in-Crisis-B-Decreasing-Loan-Loss-Provisions-in-Ireland.pdf
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation http://som.yale.edu/download-ypfs/2014-4B-V1-Ireland-and-Iceland-in-Crisis-B-Decreasing-Loan-Loss-Provisions-in-Ireland.pdf
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