Wednesday 15th October 2008 |
Text too small? |
New Zealand's government tightened rules on how deposit guarantees will apply
to finance companies, curbing their ability to strip out funds and giving the
state more power to probe their operations.
The release
today from the Treasury and the Reserve Bank comes after media reports that
the scheme, announced by Finance Minister Michael Cullen on Oct. 12, could be
open to abuse.
In a joint statement Governor Alan Bollard and acting Treasury head Peter Bushnell
said “a number of policy issues are arising that are being addressed”
as the scheme is put into place.
Companies rated below BB or unrated would be charged a fee to belong to the
scheme, based on the cumulative growth in the book since Oct. 12. New entrants
are required to have at least a BBB- rating: investment grade.
Those that join the scheme will have to agree to additional reporting requirements
and submit to government appointed inspectors.
A fee of 300 basis points per annum will be charged monthly to finance companies
that are rated below BB or are unrated.
No comments yet
PaySauce Quarterly Market Update - September 2024
October 2nd Morning Report
Rua Releases Annual Report for Year Ended 30 June 2024
SCL - Settlement of orchard sales
The Warehouse Group 2024 ASM and Director Nominations
AIR - Update on Chief Operational Integrity and Safety Officer
Comvita Limited - Annual Report 2024
September 27th Morning Report
Spark announces departure of Finance Director
FBU - Retail Entitlement Offer Opens