So they have a deal. They wind up one bank instead of two and instead of raiding the deposits of all people in all banks in Cyprus, they just hammer everyone in One bank who has more than the EU deposit guarantee level.
I wonder if most of the Russian investors are in the other banks. Or are most of the Russian investors in this bank and this is punishment for Moscow not stepping up with a solution.
However it goes, it will fix nothing. Just delay and delay and delay the inevitable. Well at least until after September. The press reports that the Cypriot president told the Troika he'd step down if they didn't agree. Good on him, the last thing they want is an election. If anything is clear from the Greek and Italian debacles, is that the EU And ECB prefer to work though unelected appointees in the current administration rather than face the wrath of the people.
This will fix nothing in Cyprus. They still have the debt, they still have broken banks, all they gained was a little time.
The precedent set, yet again, though, is this. French and German EU institutional investors have been protected from default.
It's good to strip this kind of thing back down to basics and understand where the pressure is coming from. Every move, since this crisis began, has been to protect EU and Eurozone investors in sovereign debt. Everyone else, global investors in sovereign debt or other debt have had to take losses. But France and Germany and the ECB??? NO, that's not allowed to happen.
Eventually this house of cards will fall. It may not be for a few years but the short termism to get Merkel through her election will have consequences which will not go away. It will be interesting side viewing if nothing else.