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					   Which deposits are 
					guaranteed under the Deposit Guarantee Scheme in Slovenia? 
					1. What is a guaranteed deposit? 
					 
					A guaranteed deposit of an individual depositor (a private 
					individual, a private individual independently engaged in 
					business activities, a sole trader or a legal entity that 
					does not satisfy the criteria for being classed as a large 
					or medium-size enterprise) at a bank is the net deposit as 
					at the day that bankruptcy proceedings are initiated against 
					the bank up to a total of EUR 100,000. 
					 
					The net deposit is the sum or total balance of all the 
					deposits of an individual depositor, minus any unpaid and 
					overdue liabilities to the bank or savings bank. 
					 
					Example 1: 
					Janez has a transaction account at a bank in which he 
					currently holds EUR 1,530, and a 3-year deposit in the 
					amount of EUR 2,000 (maturing on 12 January of next year). 
					At the same bank he recently raised a car loan of EUR 5,000, 
					the first instalment of which in the amount of EUR 330 
					should have been paid three days ago, but he forgot.  
					Calculation of Janez’s guaranteed deposit:  
					1,530 + 2,000 - 330 = EUR 3,200  
					The pertaining interest up to the day of the bank’s 
					bankruptcy would also be added to this sum. 
					 
					Example 2: 
					A company classed as a small business has the following at a 
					bank: a transaction account in which it currently holds EUR 
					11,530 and a 3-year deposit in the amount of EUR 200,000 (maturing 
					on 12 January of next year). It recently raised a loan at 
					the same bank in the amount of EUR 500,000 to purchase 
					machinery, but failed to pay one instalment of EUR 3,330 on 
					time.  
					Calculation of the company’s guaranteed deposit:  
					11,530 +200,000 - 3,330 = EUR 208,200 
					Given the aforementioned limit on the total guaranteed 
					deposit, the company would be entitled to the payment of the 
					guaranteed deposit in the amount of EUR 100,000 (or the full 
					amount, in the event of a bankruptcy no later than 31 
					December 2010, including the pertaining interest). The 
					remainder is automatically registered as a claim in the 
					bankruptcy proceedings against the bank. 
					 
					2. Are all types of deposit guaranteed under the scheme in 
					Slovenia? 
					 
					Deposits based on a current account, savings deposits, cash 
					deposits, and certificates of deposit and bills, provided 
					that they are issued as registered securities and are 
					registered in the name of the relevant person, are all 
					covered by the guarantee. 
					 
					A depositor’s other claims against the bank are also classed 
					as deposits for the purpose of the guarantee . The law 
					defines them as money remaining in an account or positive 
					balances that are the result of ordinary banking 
					transactions that the bank must repay in accordance with 
					current legal and contractual terms. 
					 
					3. Are there deposits that are not guaranteed? 
					 
					Yes, the following deposits are not covered by the guarantee: 
					 
					deposits deriving from bonds and other registered debt 
					securities other than certificates of deposit and bills, 
					where they are registered to a name,  
					deposits which, due to their characteristics, are taken into 
					consideration in the calculation of the banks' own funds,
					 
					deposits arising out of transactions for which the holder of 
					the deposit has been convicted by final judgment for the 
					criminal offence of money laundering,  
					bearer deposits and deposits that are in any way anonymous 
					or for which the depositor cannot be identified because the 
					bank does not have the information about the deposit holder 
					at its disposal. Substantively these are deposits registered 
					to the bearer, and password-activated deposits from the past, 
					where the identification of the deposit holder has not yet 
					been made.  
					It is recommended that all depositors who are holders of 
					anonymous deposits or deposits for which the bank did not 
					require basic registration information when being opened 
					contact their banks and provide their information. Only in 
					this way can such deposits be covered by the guarantee, once 
					the other conditions are met.  
					4. Are the deposits of all depositors guaranteed? 
					 
					No. The following deposits are not covered by the guarantee: 
					 
					deposits of other banks and financial corporations invested 
					in their own name and for their own account,  
					deposits of central governments, central banks and local 
					governments, and deposits of legal entities that are funded 
					directly or indirectly by central government or local 
					government budgets,  
					deposits of legal entities that are classed as large or 
					medium-size enterprises under the ZGD-1, or that satisfy the 
					relevant criteria for the same (the same applies to sole 
					traders’ deposits),  
					deposits of shareholders in the bank that hold at least 5% 
					of the bank’s capital or voting rights,  
					deposits of legal entities that are subsidiaries of the 
					bank,  
					deposits of all types of fund (undertakings for collective 
					investment [open and closed investment funds]), pension 
					funds’ deposits and deposits in insurance corporations’ 
					assets covering technical provisions.  
					5. Are deposits at all banks guaranteed? 
					 
					Yes, deposits at all banks and savings banks providing 
					banking services in Slovenia are covered by the guarantee. A 
					public notice of the Bank of Slovenia and the Slovenian 
					Banking Association about the deposit guarantee is published 
					at the premises of banks and savings banks 
					(http://www.zbs-giz.si/system/file.asp?FileId=3166). The law 
					stipulates that: 
					 
					deposits at banks and savings banks established in Slovenia 
					that have obtained a Bank of Slovenia authorisation to 
					provide banking services are guaranteed under the Deposit 
					Guarantee Scheme in Slovenia;  
					deposits at banks from Member States that provide banking 
					services in Slovenia directly or through a branch are 
					guaranteed under the deposit guarantee scheme in the country 
					in which the bank is established;  
					deposits at a branch of a bank from a third country (a bank 
					established in a country outside the EEA) that holds a Bank 
					of Slovenia authorisation to establish a branch are 
					guaranteed either under the deposit guarantee scheme in the 
					country in which the bank is established or by means of 
					mandatory participation in the Deposit Guarantee Scheme in 
					Slovenia as required by the Bank of Slovenia. There are no 
					branches of a bank of a third country in Slovenia at 
					present.  
					Banks covered by the Deposit Guarantee Scheme in Slovenia 
					display a sticker marked “Banka Slovenije: Dovoljenje za 
					opravljanje bančnih storitev” (Bank of Slovenia: 
					Authorisation to Provide Banking Services). 
					 
					Branches of banks of Member States do not display the 
					sticker, because they have obtained the authorisation to 
					provide banking services in their home country. 
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