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| Legal Forum for advice on any Legal matters you have or have had related to life in Italy and moving to Italy. |
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I do hope that someone can help.
I have some unredeemed italian postal bonds that were left to me by my mother. They are pre war and in beautiful condition. They range in value but they were never cashed in because of a family disagreement and as more than one signature was needed to cash them in it was not done. The bonds term of investment was up in the 1970's. Does anyone know if they are of any value as antiques or if it is possible to cash them in? Yvonne
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http://nonnasrecipes.blogspot.com/ |
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Hi Juliancoll,
You've got them. I've tried to Google them for info in Italian and in English but I'm not getting very far. I have seen some on ebay but they are cashed ones, and, as these are not, in theory they should still have a value, I am lothed to let them go for nothing. I do hope that you can find out more than I have been able to. Yvonne
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http://nonnasrecipes.blogspot.com/ |
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This describes the 'scam' - [although it was legal, so probably is not strictly a scam]
Financial trades Why didn't I think of that? Dec 16th 2004 From The Economist print edition Were these the best financial trades ever carried out? ………In 1992 when the Italian government changed its previously lax rules on withholding tax for Eurobonds. At that time some specialist teams in London and other big financial centres did nothing but seek out tax arbitrages: by buying this bond here and moving it there,...........Among them was Ludovico Filotti, who worked for Barings. In 1993Mr Filotti was on holiday in Italy. Reading the local newspaper, something caught his eye. An advertisement was encouraging companies to buy bonds issued by Italy's Post Office. These bonds were postal savings bonds, rather like Britain's national savings certificates, and carried the guarantee of the Italian state. Mr Filotti was curious: normally such bonds would only be for retail investors, so he wondered on what terms companies could invest. Back in Britain, he sent his Italian father the equivalent of £100 and asked him to nip down to a post office to buy a bond certificate so that he could study the small print on the bond. What he found was encouraging. The postal bonds were “zero coupon”, that is, unlike most bonds, which pay annual interest instalments, they would pay nothing until they matured, so investors would have to wait a set period before pocketing their returns and recovering their original investment. The bonds promised a return of three times the initial investment after 12 years—a rate equivalent to 9.6% a year. Back at his bank, Mr Filotti explained his discovery to a colleague, John Hunter, who realised that this highly attractive rate would be even more so if the equally juicy rates on Italian-government bonds were to fall. ....[and]......., in the summer of 1996, interst ratesstarted to fall dramatically. Suddenly, the Post Office trade was on. Mr Hunter persuaded his new employer, a big Japanese bank, to buy $50m of the postal bonds. Mr Filotti, who had also gone to work at the same Japanese bank, flew to Italy and, escorted by police, carried a banker's draft for the equivalent of $50m into a post office. Queuing up alongside pensioners claiming their modest weekly infusion, he exchanged the draft for a savings bond. Soon the certificate was safely lodged in London. Mr Hunter, however, was unable to persuade his conservative masters to go further. No matter: he sold the idea for the trade, first to a single rival bank, then to several others. This set off a mad rush to buy the bonds before the opportunity disappeared. Bankers flew in droves to Italy, jostling to be in front of each other in the queue. In double-quick time UBS bought over $1 billion-worth of the bonds. CSFB bought the most, but, according to International Financing Review, a trade magazine, later gave back its profits when the Italian government threatened to withhold lucrative mandates for privatisations. Nomura made the biggest single purchase, plonking down $1.1 billion on the counter of a bemused clerk, who duly filled out a certificate for more than a trillion lire. Of course, it could not last. After $3.6 billion of the bonds had been issued in the space of a few days, the Italian government suddenly put a ceiling on the amount that could be bought and made threats to the banks' future fee income. Too bad. Mr Hunter, however, is now the chief executive of Brains, a specialist broker that tries to make money by selling clever ideas to other traders.
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Alan |
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Quote:
Being pre-war you'll likely have a few adjustments to get to "modern" lira. |
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Sorry, but this was all I could find. It may be worth contacting them to find out more. Good luck.
Repubblica Italiana Buono Postale Fruttifero 250.000 Lire - Italian Postal Money Order |
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Try this.
Italia.gov.it Google "Repubblica Italiana Buono Postale Fruttifero" and see what else comes up. |
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