Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2024 All Rights Reserved

Where will 1.6 billion euro from bankrupt CorpBank go?

Photo: library

Following five months of tense waiting and permanent protests against the sluggish ways of competent authorities, a quarter million individual depositors and 6000 companies can at long last take their money back from the collapsed Corporate Commercial Bank (CCB) plus up to 100,000 euro in savings guaranteed by the law. Nine banks have started the pay-out of deposits and in a single day have paid back savings worth 500,000 euro to their owners.

The question that experts are asking now however is where the huge (at least for Bulgaria) financial resources worth 1.6 billion euro will go. True, the money won’t leave the former bank at once, because depositors have been given five years to reclaim their savings. It is however clear that only few will leave their money frozen. CorpBank depositors have got a few options for their cash thanks to the Bulgarian Deposit Insurance Fund and the huge financial support that the state has provided for it by filling its reserves at the cost of fresh public debt.

One option for depositors is to draw cash from banks. The banks who service CorpBank customers however report that this is not a popular scenario and that only 1% of depositors have opted for it. Most probably, this is no good news for the economy, given that a few analysts expected that this money could get out on the market and boost consumption on the eve of the Christmas holidays acting as a lifebelt to waning businesses.

The second option is the transfer of savings to another, more reliable bank. It seems that most depositors have chosen to act exactly this way. This implies that fresh amounts of money will enter Bulgarian banks, make them healthier, add to their quite good liquidity and stabilize the banking system. Lenders have not rejoiced at this super liquidity though, and have moved to lower interests on deposits. On the other hand so much money concentrated in the banks will get lenders into lowering interests on loans too, so that they could profit from the fresh resources they are getting. At the end of the day, this amount will land in the country’s economy.

English Daniela Konstantinova




Последвайте ни и в Google News Showcase, за да научите най-важното от деня!
Listen to the daily news from Bulgaria presented in "Bulgaria Today" podcast, available in Spotify.

More from category

NSI: Bulgaria Records Second Consecutive Month of Deflation

According to data from the National Statistical Institute, Bulgaria experienced a monthly inflation rate of -0.2% in May 2024 . Year-on-year inflation from May 2024 compared to December 2023 stands at 0.4%, while the average annual inflation rate for the..

published on 6/14/24 4:55 PM

Businesses expect the authorities to streamline the process of importing of foreign workers

The demographic crisis in this country is advancing at a rapid rate, holding back the development of businesses, but this is a tendency observed in other countries as well. Because of their good qualifications, Bulgarian workers find work in many..

updated on 6/14/24 12:03 PM

The World Bank lowers Bulgaria's GDP growth forecast by 0.3%

The World Bank predicts a more moderate improvement in Bulgaria's economic growth in 2024 and 2025. In its latest report "Global Economic Prospects" the institution expects a slight acceleration in Bulgaria's GDP growth from 1.8% in 2023 to 2.1% in..

published on 6/12/24 10:48 AM