save$72244$ - definizione. Che cos'è save$72244$
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Cosa (chi) è save$72244$ - definizione

DISPUTE BETWEEN THE ICELANDIC STATE AND FOREIGN DEPOSITORS
Ice Save; Ice save; Ice-save; Ice-Save; Icesave; IceSave
  • [[Alistair Darling]], UK [[Chancellor of the Exchequer]] during the Icesave dispute
  • Icelandic financial crisis]]. Even in April, the problems of the Icelandic banking sector were one of the topics of discussion between the two Prime Ministers.
  • Over 80,000 people signed an online petition against Britain's use of "anti-terrorism legislation" against Landsbanki, under the theme "Icelanders are NOT terrorists". Many sent in satirical images such as this one as part of the protest.
  • Icesave logo

Save percentage         
GOALIE STATISTIC IN ICE HOCKEY
SV%; Save Percentage; Sv pct
Save percentage (often known by such symbols as SV%, SVS%, SVP, PCT) is a statistic in various goal-scoring sports that track saves as a statistic.
God Save the Queen         
  • "God Save the Queen" sung by the public at [[St Giles' Fair]], [[Oxford]], 2007
  • "God Save the King" performed with each of its three verses.
  • The phrase "God Save the King" in use as a rallying cry to the support of the monarch and the UK's forces during the [[First World War]]
  • Percival Price performs "''[[O Canada]]''" and "''God Save the King''" on the [[Peace Tower]] [[Carillon]], 1927
  • [[Stratford-upon-Avon Town Hall]] (built 1767), bearing the painted slogan, "God Save the King".
NATIONAL ANTHEM OF THE UNITED KINGDOM AND ROYAL ANTHEM OF MANY COMMONWEALTH REALMS
God Save The Queen; God Save The King; British national anthem; God save the Queen; God Save the Queen/King; GSTQ; God Save the Queen (Queen song); God Save the king; God Save the queen; God save our king; God Save Our King; British National Anthem; GSTK; National Anthem of the United Kingdom; God save the King; God Save the Queen (song); God save the queen; UK anthem; UK national anthem; United Kingdom national anthem; God save king; God Save The King-Emperor; National anthem of the United Kingdom; National anthem of the United kingdom; National anthem of Great Britain; The British national anthem; God Save the King/Queen; God Save the King!; Royal anthem of the United Kingdom; Royal anthem of Canada; G-d Save the Queen; God Save Great George our King; British anthem; God Save the King-Emperor; National anthem of Tokelau; National anthem of the British Virgin Islands; National anthem of Montserrat; National anthem of the Turks and Caicos Islands; National anthem of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; National anthem of Ascension Island; National anthem of Tristan da Cunha; U.K. anthem; God Save The Queen/King; God save the king; God Save Our Gracious Queen; God Save Our Gracious King; Canadian royal anthem; Royal anthem of the Bahamas; Royal anthem of Australia; Royal anthem of Antigua and Barbuda; Royal anthem of New Zealand; Royal anthem of Tuvalu; Royal anthem of Solomon Islands; Royal anthem of the Solomon Islands; Royal anthem of Saint Kitts and Nevis; E te Atua Tohungia te Kuini; God Save our Queen; National anthem of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland; God Save the Monarch; God Save the Queen; GTSQ; God Save the King / God Save the Queen; God Red die Koning; God Red die Koningin; Dieu Sauve le Roi; Dieu Sauve la Reine; UK National Anthem; The UK National Anthem; United Kingdom National Anthem; National Anthem of the UK
(or King)
¦ noun the British national anthem.
Save (baseball)         
  • San Diego Padres]] teammates after a save in 2009
CREDITED TO A PITCHER WHO FINISHES A GAME FOR THE WINNING TEAM UNDER CERTAIN PRESCRIBED CIRCUMSTANCES
Saves (baseball statistics); Save (baseball statistics); Blown save; Save opportunity; SVOP; Save (sport); Save opportunities; Tough save; Save situation; Save percentage (baseball)
In baseball, a save (abbreviated SV or S) is credited to a pitcher who finishes a game for the winning team under certain prescribed circumstances. Most commonly a pitcher earns a save by entering in the ninth inning of a game in which his team is winning by three or fewer runs and finishing the game by pitching one inning without losing the lead. The number of saves or percentage of save opportunities successfully converted are oft-cited statistics of relief pitchers, particularly those in the closer role. The save statistic was created by journalist Jerome Holtzman in 1959 to "measure the effectiveness of relief pitchers" and was adopted as an official Major League Baseball (MLB) statistic in 1969. The save has been retroactively tabulated for pitchers before that date. Mariano Rivera is MLB's all-time leader in regular-season saves with 652, while Francisco Rodríguez earned the most saves in a single season with 62 in 2008.

Wikipedia

Icesave dispute

The Icesave dispute was a diplomatic dispute between Iceland, and the Netherlands and the United Kingdom that began after the privately owned Icelandic bank Landsbanki was placed in receivership on 7 October 2008. As Landsbanki was one of three systemically important financial institutions in Iceland to go bankrupt within a few days, the Icelandic Depositors' and Investors' Guarantee Fund (Tryggingarsjóður) had no remaining funds to make good on deposit guarantees to foreign Landsbanki depositors who held savings in the Icesave branch of the bank.

When Landsbanki was placed into receivership by the Icelandic Financial Supervisory Authority (FME), 343,306 retail depositors in the UK and Netherlands that held accounts in the "Icesave" branch of Landsbanki lost a total of €6.7bn of savings. Because no immediate repayment was expected by any Icelandic institutions, the Dutch and British national deposit guarantee schemes covered repayment up to the maximum limit for the national deposit guarantees – and the Dutch and British states covered the rest.

The dispute centred on the demand by the British and Dutch states that the Icelandic state should repay the Icelandic minimum deposit guarantees (up to €20,887 per account holder), equal to £2.35bn (€2.7bn) repaid to the UK and €1.3bn repaid to the Netherlands. The Icelandic state refused to take on this liability on behalf of the guarantee fund. Originally this was because the state lost funding access at credit markets due to the Icelandic financial crisis, but later proposed bilateral loan guarantees for repayment were rejected by Icelandic voters in two separate referendums. The Icesave disputes and associated referendums sparked a nationalist backlash in Iceland, which some scholars have attributed as a factor in reducing support in Iceland for EU accession.

The Icesave bill 1 was the first negotiated loan agreement, attempting to define the repayment terms for these two loans. It was enacted on 2 September 2009 but was not accepted by the governments of UK and Netherlands, due to a unilaterally attached term added by the Icelandic parliament which limited Iceland's repayment guarantee only to 2024, with automatic cancellation of any potential owing still existing beyond this year. Instead, UK and Netherlands then counter proposed a new version of the loan agreement, referred to as Icesave bill 2, where no time limit was included for the Icelandic state's repayment guarantee. This was at first accepted by the Icelandic parliament, but the Icelandic president refused to enact the law and referred approval to a referendum being held on 6 March 2010, where voters subsequently rejected the law.

After the rejection of Icesave bill 2, renewed negotiations started on the terms for the repayment agreement. The negotiations resulted, in December 2010, in an adjusted agreement named Icesave bill 3, with better terms for Iceland. This included the removal of a previous creditor priority issue, a lower 3% interest rate, an interest moratorium until 1 October 2009, and a possible extension of the "repayment window" up to 30 years. When the Icesave bill 3 was put to a referendum in April 2011, it was again rejected, by 59% of Icelandic voters. After analysing the election result, stakeholders decided not to attempt negotiation of a further improved Icesave bill 4, but instead to refer the case to the EFTA Court as a legal dispute.

On 28 January 2013, the EFTA Court cleared Iceland of all charges, meaning that Iceland was freed from the disputed obligation for deposit guarantees worth €4.0bn (ISK 674bn) plus accrued interest to UK and the Netherlands. This caused shock, as some legal experts had suggested the EFTA Surveillance Authority would win. The repayment claim still existed as a claim on the Landsbanki receivership, who one year earlier had been ordered by the Supreme Court of Iceland to repay confiscated deposits (including minimum deposit guarantees) as priority claims, totaling ISK 852bn (£4.46bn, €5.03bn) to the UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme and ISK 282bn (€1.67bn) to De Nederlandsche Bank. By January 2016, the Landsbanki receivership had, through liquidation of assets, repaid all the priority claims.