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		Deposit insurance Luxembourg   
         
		Switzerland has a privately operated deposit insurance system called 
		Deposit Protection of Swiss Banks and Securities Dealers. It 
		guarantees up to CHF 100 000 per bank customer per bank. Membership is 
		compulsory for all banks and securities dealers that are regulated by 
		the Swiss Financial Market Supervisory Authority (FINMA). See the 
		list of members of the Deposit Protection of Swiss Banks and Securities 
		dealers at http://www.einlagensicherung.ch/en/bankkunden-link/bankkunden-unterzeichner.htm 
		 
		It had covered depositors in 1993 in the case of the failure of Spar- 
		und Leihkasse Thun SLT, Thun. The next cases happened in 2007 with the 
		liquidation of AB FIN SA (a securities dealer) in Lugano and with 
		Kauphting (Luxembourg) SA, Geneva branch which was closed on October 9, 
		2008. Clients of this bank received the payments (at the time up to CHF 
		30 000 per customer) within three weeks. 
		 
		For further information see the FAQ at http://www.einlagensicherung.ch/en/bankkunden-link/bankkunden-faq.htm 
		 
  
		
			
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					  Deposit insurance can be 
					in two forms. There is implicit deposit insurance , where 
					there are no stated rules but depositors have assurances 
					implied by governments’ action either through precedence or 
					stated intention. Then there is explicit deposit protection, 
					where the terms and conditions of the scheme are explicitly 
					stated in a statute. The scheme provides a legally 
					enforceable guarantee on all, or a portion of the principal, 
					and in some cases the interest, on a deposit. Under an 
					explicit scheme, the statute states categorically the types 
					of deposits that are covered in the event of bank failures. 
					Table 1 shows countries with explicit and implicit deposit 
					insurance schemes. It should be noted that some countries 
					continuously modify their schemes in response to 
					developments in their financial system. 
					 
					The types of institutions covered are also influenced by the 
					objectives of the scheme. Where the objective is to protect 
					the entire banking system, as is the case with Jamaica, the 
					legislation requires that all banks be covered. Where the 
					aim is broad, most types of deposits are covered. Table 2 
					shows the main features (date established, whether the 
					scheme is voluntary or compulsory, types of deposits covered, 
					coverage limit, funding and premium base) of explicit 
					deposit protection schemes in a number of countries. 
					 
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