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Ratings placed on Negative Watch include the entities' 'B' Long-term Issuer Default Ratings (IDRs) and the 'c' (BOC, CPB) and 'cc' (HB) Viability Ratings. A full list of rating actions is provided at the end of this comment [see full press release].
Such losses would be part of an agreement the Eurogroup (European Union finance ministers) reached with Cypriot authorities on Saturday March 16, 2013 as a precondition to provide EUR10 billion in financial assistance to Cyprus. Initially, Cyprus agreed to impose 'levies' of 9.99 per cent on all deposits over €100,000 and of 6.75 per cent on deposits below that level, although subsequent news flow suggests that these thresholds may be subject to change, with a view to protect smaller deposits.
Rating drivers and sensitivities - IDRs, SRs and SRFs
The Negative Watches will be resolved after a decision by the Cypriot parliament on the above extraordinary measures, which could come as early as today. The crystallisation of such significant losses on depositors would constitute a restricted default (RD) under Fitch's rating definitions, in which case the IDRs would be downgraded to 'RD'. The banks' Support Ratings and Support Rating Floors would also be downgraded to '5' and 'No Floor'.
Rating drivers and sensitivities – senior debt
Although senior debt securities are not currently the subject of the levy deliberations and so would not automatically be downgraded upon the imposition of a deposit levy, their ratings have also been placed on Negative Watch to reflect the heightened risk of some form of negative rating action or default under Fitch's definitions because of the crisis in the Cypriot banking sector.