Cyprus’s Central Bank said on Monday it would extend an inquiry into the banking crisis that has crippled the island to fully cover Cyprus Popular Bank CPBC.CY, nationalised last year after heavy exposure to Greece.

A central bank-commissioned probe leaked last week showed the island’s largest bank, Bank of Cyprus BOC.CY, failed to provide regulators with timely information about its exposure to Greek sovereign debt which saddled the bank with huge losses.

“It is expected to be completed in the next few months,” Demetriades told lawmakers in parliament.

Under a 10 billion euro bailout deal, Cyprus will wind down Popular, with some of its assets transferred to Bank of Cyprus. Bank of Cyprus will also slap depositors with heavy losses to pay for its own recapitalisation needs.

Demetriades said a clear picture of Bank of Cyprus’s requirements would be known by the end of June.

The first instalment of the investigation, by consultants Alvarez and Marsal, drew criticism that it did not focus on the role of Popular in the crisis, which was kept on a funding lifeline for months as Cyprus attempted to negotiate terms of a bailout.

When the European Central Bank threatened to pull its aid to Popular, Cyprus buckled and agreed to accept tough bailout terms.

The inquiry would focus on the purchase of Greek bonds and expansion strategies pursued by Popular in previous years, Demetriades said.

In Bank of Cyprus’s case, the inquiry was focused on the circumstances leading to its heavy, loss-making exposure to Greek government bonds.

The consultants also said they had discovered evidence of a “mass deletion of data” on one computer and “unnecessary delays” in getting information from the bank.

Reuters

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