The Cypriot finance minister has ordered all the country's banks to remain closed until Thursday, the country's central bank announced.
Just hours before the announcement late Monday, the central bank
said all but two country’s largest banks would open on Tuesday
morning.
The postponement could be a sign that the country's banks are even lower on cash than they believed at the end of last week.
On Monday, Cyprus reached a $13 billion bailout deal with
international lenders aimed at avoiding a potential financial
collapse, but forcing the country’s second largest bank Cyprus
Popular Bank Pcl (CPB) to be restructured, with people holding over
€100,000 in their accounts facing substantial loses.
A "bad bank" is to be created to deal with uninsured deposits and
the lender's badly performing loans. The guaranteed deposits are to
be transferred to the nation's biggest financial institution, the
Bank of Cyprus.
But deposits over €100,000 are to remain frozen until it is
clarified to what extent those deposits will be forced to take
losses. Analysts estimate that people may face up to a 40 percent
decrease in their savings.
Scheherazade S. Rehman, Professor of International Finance at George Washington University, says Cyprus is setting a dangerous precedent by securing a bailout at the cost of its ordinary citizens.
“Clearly the Europeans and the IMF have broken one of the most basic terms of financial crisis management, and that is safeguarding the small saver,” she said. “What they’ve done is put the fear of God into small savers about their own local banks. And that is the beginning of the end for any financial market. Especially for foreign investors coming into those markets. No one is going to be putting money into local southern banks anymore.”
The European Central Bank on Monday said it would continue
offer emergency liquidity assistance aimed at "restoring
the viability of the Cypriot financial system," as people stood
in line to withdraw anything they could from the bank
machines.
The deal with the international lenders has angered Moscow, as Russian citizens hold some 20 billion euros in Cypriot banks. Dmitry Medvedev equated the deal to "the stealing of what has already been stolen continues."
Cyprus hoped to get aid from Russia. However, the two-day negotiations between Cyprus's finance minister and his Russian counterpart last week failed as Moscow said it would not help out Cyprus before it agrees a bailout deal with the EU.
Now that a deal has been struck with international lenders,
Russian President Vladimir Putin has asked the government to
restructure a 2.5 billion euro loan to Cyprus.