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The Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive 2014/49 also referred to as DGS Directive or DGSD is a Directive in EU law that requires bank customers' deposits are guaranteed by member states up to €100,000.
The Deposit Guarantee Scheme (DGS) The Deposit Guarantee Scheme (DGS) protects depositors in the event of a bank, building society or credit union authorised by the Central Bank of Ireland being unable to repay deposits. Deposits up to EUR 100,000 per person per institution are protected.
The ELG Scheme provides for an unconditional and irrevocable State guarantee for certain eligible liabilities (including deposits over the €100,000 limit of the Deposit Guarantee Scheme) of up to five years in maturity incurred by participating institutions from the date they joined the scheme until the closure of the Scheme on certain terms ...
The National Asset Management Agency Bill, in its current format, applies to the six financial institutions which were covered by the Irish government's deposit guarantee scheme. Those institutions were Bank of Ireland, Allied Irish Banks, Anglo Irish Bank, EBS, Permanent TSB and Irish Nationwide.
On the same day the deposit guarantee was announced, Rudd also announced a guarantee on those financial institutions' wholesale borrowing for terms up to 5 years. [42] [43] The scheme required the institution to pay a fee for the guarantee [44] and was withdrawn on 31 March 2010. [45]
It includes rules on capital requirements, improved deposit guarantees schemes and the management of failing banks. European Banking Supervision - the EU's supranational bank supervisory regime consisting of the European Central Bank in cooperation with national competent authorities.
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