Timeline of the Icelandic financial crisis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a timeline of the Icelandic financial crisis which began in earnest in mid September 2008. The combined assets of the three largest Icelandic banks amounted to ten times the country's total gross domestic product (GDP) at the time of their collapse. Two-thirds of the banks liabilities were denominated in a foreign currency. When the world's credit markets dried up, the banks were unable to refinance their loans and the government, as a lender of last resort, was unable to offer backing to the privately owned banks.
- 15 September Lehman Brothers bank goes bankrupt in the US, instantly freezing money markets around the world.
- 25 September The chairman of the board of Glitnir bank, Thorsteinn Már Baldvinsson, meets with Central Bank of Iceland Governor, David Oddsson, to explain the severe financing difficulties the bank has encountered. The bank requests lender of last resort financing from the Central Bank.
- 26 September Prime Minister of Iceland Geir Haarde, who is traveling abroad, is informed of the situation and advised to return to Iceland.
- 27–28 September Talks continue over the weekend between the bank, the Icelandic government and the Central Bank.
- 29 September The Icelandic government announces that it will nationalise Iceland's third-largest bank, Glitnir, with the purchase of a 75% stake for €600 million. This is an agreement between the government of Iceland and the owners of Glitnir, according to the Central Bank of Iceland. The government states that it does not intend to hold ownership of the bank for a long period, and that the bank is expected to carry on operating as normal. According to the government the bank "would have ceased to exist" within a few weeks if it had not intervened. The ownership transfer never went through, however, as the Financial Supervisory Authority (FME) takes Glitnir over before the initial plan of the Icelandic government to purchase a 75% stake in the bank had been approved by the shareholders of the bank.