Once they go into admin who will own hearts, the new bank?This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
View Poll Results: What's your preferred outcome from the financial problems over at Yam land?
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Results 8,491 to 8,520 of 47452
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23-02-2013 07:30 PM #8491
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23-02-2013 07:33 PM #8492This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
these clowns have no idea how business works do they??
Whatever we think of Charlie Green he's done nothing wrong here. They're rooked, he offered them a deal. They took it so that is that.
Stupid Hearts fuds.
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23-02-2013 07:40 PM #8493
Senior News Reporter
Saturday 23 February 2013
VLADIMIR Romanov is at the centre of a new scandal in Lithuania after it emerged his sister was given a large salary at his insolvent bank as it slid into financial meltdown.
VLADIMIR Romanov is at the centre of a new scandal in Lithuania after it emerged his sister was given a large salary at his insolvent bank as it slid into financial meltdown.
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brian donnelly
Hearts are in a dire financial position and the collapse of owner Romanov's Ukio Bankas in his homeland has led to renewed fears over the football club's future.
After details emerged of the payroll at Romanov's bank, the controversial businessman is under further pressure.
<p>A Lithuanian TV documentary uncovered evidence that Tynecastle chief Romanov paid his sister Olga Gonaruk a monthly salary of £11,275 – enormous by Lithuanian standards – for being "head of administration".</p>< p>It also emerged that Romanov's bank paid for her exotic holidays over the years to places including Brazil to watch the World Basketball Championships.</p>< p>However, his sister had her assets seized last month, which included an enormous house and vast amounts of land, along with two properties in Vilnius.</p>< p>The documentary revealed that several other Romanov family members and friends were paid vast sums from his Ukio bank, before it finally hit the rocks this week.</p>< p>When questioned about the payments, the Hearts chief snapped: "Listen, you can go to hell."</p>< p>Ukio Bankas administrator Adam Audickas said: "I can't confirm the actual wage figures to the people concerned, but it is in the region that has been mentioned.</p>< p>"I don't want to comment any further."</p>< p>Mr Audickas also declined to reveal details of the relationship between Ukio Bankas and sister company UBIG, owner of Hearts.</p>
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Finance
A Lithuanian TV documentary uncovered evidence that Tynecastle chief Romanov paid his sister Olga Gonaruk a monthly salary of £11,275 – enormous by Lithuanian standards – for being "head of administration".
It also emerged that Romanov's bank paid for her exotic holidays over the years to places including Brazil to watch the World Basketball Championships.
However, his sister had her assets seized last month, which included an enormous house and vast amounts of land, along with two properties in Vilnius.
The documentary revealed that several other Romanov family members and friends were paid vast sums from his Ukio bank, before it finally hit the rocks this week.
When questioned about the payments, the Hearts chief snapped: "Listen, you can go to hell."
Ukio Bankas administrator Adam Audickas said: "I can't confirm the actual wage figures to the people concerned, but it is in the region that has been mentioned.
"I don't want to comment any further."
Mr Audickas also declined to reveal details of the relationship between Ukio Bankas and sister company UBIG, owner of Hearts.
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23-02-2013 07:51 PM #8494This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
So Vlads sister was 'head of administration'? Quite apt i would say.
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23-02-2013 08:32 PM #8495This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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23-02-2013 08:58 PM #8496This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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23-02-2013 09:41 PM #8497This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
These guys are tools of the first order!!
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23-02-2013 09:52 PM #8498
Had to wonder at the reference to Vlad's sister's 11k+ monthly wage being "enormous by Lithuanian standards". I would have thought it was inflated by most people's standards....
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23-02-2013 10:41 PM #8499This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I am not sure of Lith insolvency law, but if it is similar to UK law, Hearts will be seen as an asset of UBIG. (I know, I know). Those assets will come under the control of the administrator, whose job it is to manage the business and assets to the benefit of UBIG's creditors.
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23-02-2013 10:50 PM #8500This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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23-02-2013 10:54 PM #8501This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
However, on the basis of many years experience, I can definitely say that the investment they made in Gorgie has reaped them untold riches.
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23-02-2013 11:15 PM #8503This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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23-02-2013 11:20 PM #8504This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-02-2013 10:11 AM #8505
http://mobile.bloomberg.com/news/2013-02-24/lithuanian-siauliu-bankas-agrees-to-assume-insolvent-ukio-assets.html
Link from phone so may not work. The pertinent part reads....
"Bankruptcy proceedings are planned to recover remaining assets of Ukio, including property in Scotland and elsewhere, for creditors, among whom the deposit-insurance fund will be the largest, according to the Bank of Lithuania."
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24-02-2013 10:12 AM #8506
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http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-0...io-assets.html
Lithuanian Siauliu Bankas Agrees to Assume Insolvent Ukio Assets
Siauliu Bankas AB (SAB1L), the Lithuanian lender part-owned by the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, will assume the insured deposits of insolvent Ukio Bankas AB (UKB1L) in a deal that will almost double its size.
Siauliu will take over 2.7 billion litai ($1 billion) of Ukio deposits and assets of the same value, according to a contract signed last night with Ukio’s administrator and the state deposit-insurance fund, the Siauliai, Lithuania-based lender said in an e-mailed statement. The EBRD will grant Siauliu a 20 million-euro ($26 million) 10-year subordinated loan to strengthen its capital base for the expansion, it said.
Siauliu, which had assets of 2.9 billion litai on Dec. 31, will overtake Danske Bank A/S to become Lithuania’s fifth-largest bank by assets, after local units of Nordic lenders SEB AB, Swedbank AB, DNB ASA and Nordea Bank AB. The transaction will reduce payouts from the Baltic nation’s deposit insurer to 800 million litai, which the government plans to lend the fund.
“The achieved agreement will result in new and bigger possibilities of growth for our bank’s clientele, staff and shareholders, while the entire banking system in Lithuania will become stronger and even more competitive,” Siauliu Chairman Algirdas Butkus said in the statement.
Renewing Services
The contract, which the Lithuanian government and central bank supported, obliges Siauliu “to renew banking services for the customers of Ukio Bankas in the shortest time possible,”the Bank of Lithuania said in a separate e-mailed statement.
The Bank of Lithuania suspended Ukio’s activities Feb. 12 and appointed an administrator, saying the lender was insolvent after risky lending to related companies. Just over a year after the collapse of Snoras Bankas AB, the government was eager to avoid another bankruptcy that would test the state deposit-insurance fund.
The agreement “has ensured stability in the sector,”Sylvia Gansser-Potts, the EBRD director for financial institutions, said in an e-mailed statement.
The preliminary value of the assets transferred to Siauliu, determined by auditor KPMG Baltic, may be revised in three months after a more detailed assessment, in which case the liabilities of the parties to the contract will also be revised, the central bank said.
Bankruptcy proceedings are planned to recover remaining assets of Ukio, including property in Scotland and elsewhere, for creditors, among whom the deposit-insurance fund will be the largest, according to the Bank of Lithuania.
The EBRD owns 19.6 percent of Siauliu, which after Ukio’s collapse is Lithuania’s only publicly traded bank. Siauliu shares rose 10 percent to 0.267 euro in Vilnius on Feb. 13, when the lender announced plans to negotiate for Ukio’s assets, and closed at that same level on Feb. 22.
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24-02-2013 10:13 AM #8507This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-02-2013 10:14 AM #8508This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-02-2013 10:22 AM #8509This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
It might be bollock freezing and snowing down here but I am going to roll about in my back back garden in my Hibs strip to celebrate before heading to the pub.
"I did not need any persuasion to play for such a great club, the Hibs result is still one of the first I look for"
Sir Matt Busby
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24-02-2013 10:32 AM #8510This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Vlad would have spent some of his own money to get the bank started, but for years he's been playing with other peoples money, whether in the form of small local cash deposits to leveraging the bank's 'credit' rating to secure foreign loans and finance.
Because of Vlad running the bank by himself, he was never going to get any guarantees in this country to operate, hence the Caste Street branch never got off the ground. Years ago one of the credit rating agencies put Ukio Bankas at the lowest rating they could because of the control Vlad had over every monetary aspect of its operation. 'Loan' cash to UBIG, and the trail of the money starts to get difficult to follow.
In turn of course any profits made by Ukio/UBIG could be squirrelled away to 'business' operations in various tax havens. In the initial offer document for HoMFC there were listed quite a few offshore companies in places such as the Cayman Islands. I would imagine Vlad has put quite a bit into these bolt holes over the years in case a situation like we're seeing now happening.
All very similar to Robert Maxwell for me .
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24-02-2013 10:36 AM #8512
It was such a jolly good idea for the Hearts fans to chip in just before Christmas to 'save' the club from something which is going to happen anyway!
If I ever needed a new conservatory built, just before the bank came to repossess my home, I'd make a phone call to the Merchiston Hearts Supporters Club, I'm sure they'd rally round.
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24-02-2013 10:39 AM #8513This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-02-2013 11:11 AM #8514
It amazes me how the Hearts fans are doing nothing to save their club right now. We had Hands Off Hibs they have a Sale On Scones.
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24-02-2013 11:17 AM #8515
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This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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24-02-2013 11:43 AM #8516This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I sincerely hope they are proven wrong on all counts.
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24-02-2013 11:53 AM #8517
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Will these smelly ****s just not die .one city one clib ggtth
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24-02-2013 12:10 PM #8518This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
As a side note, it's almost exactly 2 years since he ordered himself a wee jet plane so he could tour his empire. He's flown into a wee bit of turbulence since then
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24-02-2013 12:22 PM #8519
Don't want to pour any cold water on the Thread which has a lovely cosy warmth to it today, or come over like a brokeback poster, but what will the New Bank mean by " intending to liquidate the property assets in Scotland ....... "
Could it simply mean sell them off to the highest bidder ?
Step forward some maroon cardigan wearing consortium !
Will somone please allay these groundless fears.
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24-02-2013 12:36 PM #8520This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Finish the season? They'll be lucky to finish the week.
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