Cyprus Strikes Deal, Avoids Bankruptcy

Those holding largest deposits will take a hit
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 24, 2013 9:04 PM CDT
Cyprus Strikes Deal, Avoids Bankruptcy
A private security officer, center, guards a branch of a Bank of Cyprus in the city of Limassol, Cyprus, early Monday.   (AP Photo/Pavlos Vrionides)

Crisis averted, for now. Cyprus has secured a package of rescue loans in tense, last-ditch negotiations, two EU diplomats said, saving the country from a banking system collapse and bankruptcy. The cash-strapped island nation needs a $13 billion bailout to recapitalize its ailing lenders and keep the government afloat. The European Central Bank had threatened to cut crucial emergency assistance to the country's banks by Tuesday without an agreement.

The finance ministers of the 17-nation eurozone accepted the plan reached in 10 hours of negotiations in Brussels between Cypriot officials and the so-called troika of creditors: the International Monetary Fund, the European Commission, and the ECB. Under the plan, Cyprus' second-largest bank, Laiki, will be restructured and holders of bank deposits of more than 100,000 euros will have to take losses, the diplomats said. They did not elaborate on how much large deposit holders would lose. Cyprus resisted pressure by creditors to also unwind the country's largest lender, Bank of Cyprus, the diplomat said. (More Cyprus stories.)

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