Allied Irish Reports $15 Billion Annual Loss
     By REUTERS
  Published: April 12, 2011    
               DUBLIN (Reuters) — 
Allied Irish Banks  aimed to put the “collective madness” of a homegrown property bubble  behind it on Tuesday with a jaw-dropping annual loss of 10.4 billion  euros, or about $15 billion, and a plan to cut more than 2,000 jobs.         
  
    A former stock market darling with international ambitions, 
Allied Irish Banks has been effectively nationalized and saved from collapse by a bailout from the 
European Central Bank after being shut out of debt markets and losing 22 billion euros in deposits last year.        
 There were further “slight” deposit outflows this year, mainly from  overseas corporate funds, but recent stress tests that require the bank  to raise 13.3 billion euros in capital and an overhaul of the sector had  stopped that outflow. “The news of the bank’s recapitalization has been  viewed positively by the market and we hope that that now represents a  turning point and we can now rebuild the bank from here,” the executive  chairman, David Hodgkinson, told the state broadcaster, RTE.        
 
Much of the 13.3 billion euros is expected to come from state coffers  although the bank is expected to generate some capital from buying back  2.6 billion euros in subordinated debt at a discount.        
 Dublin has pledged to shrink its banking system as part of a bailout by the 
European Union and the 
International Monetary Fund and Allied Irish Banks will be one of two so-called “pillar banks” left.        
 Allied Irish Banks is hoping that 2010 will mark the nadir in terms of  group losses but has said that it is too early to call the peak. The  monetary fund slashed its 2011 growth forecast for the Irish economy to  0.5 percent from 0.9 percent on Monday, underlining the challenge ahead.         
 Dublin has put a price of 70 billion euros on drawing a line under its  banking crisis and Allied Irish Banks is second only to Anglo Irish in  the burden it is putting on recession-weary taxpayers.        
 A charge of 6 billion euros, representing 5.25 percent of loans, against  potential losses helped drive bank’s loss, a company record, and more  than four times higher than the 2.3 billion euros shortfall generated in  2009.        
 Allied Irish Banks said the scale of losses going forward would be  different and that it hoped to return to profit on an operating level in  2012 and possibly on a net basis too.        
 
Analysts said the bank had taken a lot of pain up front.        
 “
They are hoping that 2010 is the peak,” Oliver Gilvarry, head of research at Dolmen Securities, said.        
 ”There is no sense in not coming out and putting as much forward as you  can in 2010 numbers when everyone is expecting the numbers to be poor.”