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Ministry for Foreign Affairs

Government of Iceland replies to the Statement in Intervention of the European Commission in the Icesave case

Tim Ward aðalmálflytjandi Íslands
Tim Ward aðalmálflytjandi Íslands


The Government of Iceland has submitted its Reply to the Statement in Intervention of the European Commission in the Icesave case to the EFTA Court. This marks the end of the written part of the proceedings in this case. An oral hearing is scheduled to be held in Luxembourg on Tuesday 18 September 2012.

In its Statement the Commission largely supported the EFTA Surveillance Authority's  arguments concerning the Deposit Guarantee Directive (obligation of result) and alleged discrimination. The Commission also rejected that force majeure was applicable in the case.

In its Reply, the Government strongly objects to the Commission's arguments. The main elements of the Government's response are the following:

1.  The extent of the obligation on the State.

The Authority's original case was that “should all else fail” the State itself would be responsible for compensating depositors.  Iceland contends that in its Reply, however, the Authority sought to distance itself from this position, arguing that there is no obligation upon the State to use its own funds where a bank failure occurs on such a scale that a deposit-guarantee scheme is unable to compensate depositors.  The Commission also claims that there is no obligation on the state to finance the deposit guarantee scheme, there is only an obligation of result to ensure that the guarantee scheme is capable of ensuring minimum compensation for depositors and that it is a matter of discretion of the State how to ensure that result.

Iceland claims that this reasoning shows a lack of understanding of the limits of a deposit-guarantee scheme.    There is no possibility to ensure commercial financing of a deposit guarantee scheme in the case of large scale banking crisis. If the State is obliged to ensure that deposit-guarantee scheme will be able to pay compensation, it will ultimately be required to use its own resources.

2. Rules on state aid

The Commission seems to remain of the view that financial support for deposit guarantee schemes should be notified under EU's state aid rules. Such assistance would therefore not be allowed without prior approval of the Commission, or the Authority with regard to the EFTA states. Iceland points out that this position is inconsistent with an obligation to ensure compensation is paid in all cases, as such assistance would fall outside the scope of state aid rules if there was an obligation to finance the deposit guarantee scheme under the Deposit Guarantee Directive.

3. Should the new banks carry the costs?

The Commission proposed that the Icelandic Government could have let the new restructured banks bear the costs of financing the deposit guarantee scheme.   Iceland considers that this proposal is completely unrealistic.

The liabilities of the Icelandic deposit guarantee scheme represented around 30% of the new banks total assets at the end of 2008.  Had they been required to finance the guarantee schemes' obligations, they would have had negative equity of around ISK 419 bn as of year end 2008, and would not have satisfied the conditions for a banking licence or the regulatory requirements of the Financial Supervisory Authority.  The reality is that without the injection of further funds, the banks would have no choice but to turn to the regulator and become subject once again to the Emergency Act, with the attendant damage to the Icelandic economy and financial markets.

Thus, overall, the  reality is that the new banks could not possibly have met those liabilities without a large injection of further resources from the State, which was the owner of the new banks until end of the year 2009,  if the State had been in a position to do so.

4. Discrimination

The Commission supports the Authority's claims on discrimination but in Iceland's submission, does not succeed in answering the essential objection to the claim: the Directive governs deposit-guarantee schemes, but does not require the equal treatment of depositors in all other respects.

The Commission also argues that the discrimination by the Icelandic state between depositors in the Icelandic and overseas branches cannot be justified, in part because it was not necessary:  the new banks could have made contributions to the guarantee fund to enable it to fulfil its obligations.   Iceland has explained why it considers this proposal to be wholly unworkable.

Accordingly, the Government maintains that the case should be dismissed.

The Government´s Reply to the Statement in Intervention submitted by the European Commission in the Icesave-case

Opinion of the Financial Supervisory Authority of 11 June 2012

Opinion of the Central Bank of Iceland of 18 June 2012



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