Latest update: 20/10/2008 
- financial crisis - Netherlands

Dutch state to pump €10bn into troubled ING
The cash-strapped Dutch bank ING has succeeded in negotiating a 10-billion euro injection from the government. ING on Friday announced an expected 500-billion euro quarterly loss due to the financial crisis.

The Dutch government announced Sunday that it would inject 10 billion euros (13.4 billion dollars) into ING, one of the world's 20 biggest banks, in the latest rescue global finance crisis rescue.
   
The move came two weeks after the government put 16.8 billion euros into the rescue of Dutch-Belgian bank Fortis.
   
"It is a large sum that we are injecting into a healthy business and that is why we can look into the future with confidence," Dutch Finance Minister Wouter Bos told a press conference announcing the injection.
   
"The Dutch government realises that it is an unusual intervention into the banking system," he said. "The government has said that it would exclude no measure to protect savers."
   
The accord between ING, which manages about 630 billion euros of assets, the finance ministry and the Netherlands central bank came after ING on Friday announced that it expected a 500-million-euro net loss in the third quarter because of the turmoil and asset depreciation.
   
Its share price fell 27.5 percent amid market rumours about difficulties at the bank.
   
Under the rescue, ING could be made to pay 150 percent of the amount put into the company, or after three years transform the figure into shares.
   
All of the bank's top managers have given up their annual bonuses and if any leaves none will receive a payment of more than one year of their salary, the minister said.
   
Bos said on October 9 that his government would put 20 billion euros into the campaign against the financial crisis. It has already guaranteed 200 billion euros of inter-bank loans.
   
He indicated that more money was available if needed. "We never said that this sum was limited," he said.
   
The government will earn a minimum of 8.5 percent interest out of any dividends awarded by the bank, Bos said. The figure could go as high as 25 percent.
   
"The injection will strengthen ING. Market conditions have changed, the market is going through turbulence and we accept the consequences," said the bank's chairman Michel Tilmant.
   
"We are delighted with the state aid," he said.
   
ING says it has 85 million customers and 130,000 staff around the world, making one of the top 20 banks in the global rankings.
   
It was a pioneer in "direct banking" -- the use of telephones and the Internet to control bank accounts.
   
The bank said it had a turnover of 76.6 billion euros in 2007 and net profit of 9.24 billion euros.
   
Fortis was dismantled this month, with its Dutch assets nationalised by the Netherlands government and its Belgian and Luxembourg activities sold to French bank BNP Paribas.
   
Shares in Fortis resumed trading last Tuesday, massively down after the rescue.
   
The company said in a statement that it has undergone a "complete metamorphosis." It said that it would postpone publishing third quarter results as "unravelling" its operations would take time.
   
Fortis shareholders are to sue three former company bosses in a Netherlands court for fraud, their lawyer said.
 

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