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Previously on "National Australia Bank announces 10% recovery on AAA debt"
Wouldn't it be far simpler and safer to offer a fixed term 50% reduction in repayments and interest to the high risk sub prime borrowers in default.
I'm damned if I'd write off 90% just to get a quick (10%) return on a bad debt.
They have only "written it off" in Balance sheet terms.
They still hold the paper that may, or may not, be worth that 10% so will be quids in if it is worth more.
This is tax move. You create the loss in a bad year to save some tax in that year. But if the money does come in when times are better, you pay the extra tax out of a good year's results.
Wouldn't it be far simpler and safer to offer a fixed term 50% reduction in repayments and interest to the high risk sub prime borrowers in default.
I'm damned if I'd write off 90% just to get a quick (10%) return on a bad debt.
But then again, if these idiots were stupid enough to build dodgy portfolios on sub prime bad risk clients/borrowers, perhaps it is too much to ask for a bit of common sense.
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