Iceland ends capital controls after over eight years of restrictions

13 Mar, 2017

Iceland's finance ministry said on Sunday that in the coming week it would lift the remaining capital controls that have been in place since the financial crisis in 2008, easing restrictions on households and businesses.
"The removal of the capital controls, which stabilised the currency and economy during the country's unprecedented financial crash, represents the completion of Iceland's return to international financial markets," it said in a statement.
The changes take effect on Tuesday and will affect individuals, firms, and pension funds. The government started dismantling capital controls last year by easing restrictions for local residents.
Iceland's Central Bank said in a separate statement that it had entered an agreement to purchase offshore crown assets for close to 90 billion Icelandic crowns ($836 million) at an exchange rate of 137.5 crowns per euro.
Iceland has been locked in a dispute with funds that owned more than $1 billion worth of krona-denominated assets that were frozen by the Icelandic authorities.
The central bank said remaining offshore crown holders will be invited to sell their assets to the central bank at the same exchange rate over the next two weeks.
The ministry said holders that do not sell will not be able to move their assets.
The funds have waged a fight in Icelandic courts and at the European Free Trade Association's Surveillance Authority to get a better rate than Iceland offered investors in an auction last year.
The ministry said it had also adjusted regulations and introduced special reserve requirements for new foreign currency inflows to prevent a repeat of "hot money" destabilising the financial system.

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