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German Banks Pay Millions to Settle Claims by Insolvent Signa
German Banks Pay Millions to Settle Claims by Insolvent Signa

Bloomberg

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

German Banks Pay Millions to Settle Claims by Insolvent Signa

Helaba and other German lenders have paid millions of euros in recent weeks to settle claims by the administrator of former real estate tycoon Rene Benko's Signa Prime Selection AG. Helaba paid €26 million ($30 million) at the end of May as part of an out-of court settlement, Signa Prime's insolvency administrator said in a report to creditors dated Monday. Other payments include €3 million received from Deutsche Pfandbriefbank AG and €2.1 million from Bayerische Landesbank.

Julius Baer faces US$156 million loan loss charge
Julius Baer faces US$156 million loan loss charge

Business Times

time21-05-2025

  • Business
  • Business Times

Julius Baer faces US$156 million loan loss charge

[ZURICH] Julius Baer Group said it's booking another large loss from property developments it helped finance, just as the Swiss wealth manager is emerging from a crisis triggered by its exposure to Rene Benko's Signa real estate empire. The Zurich-based bank disclosed late Tuesday (May 20) that it's taking a loan-loss charge of US$156 million related to its private debt business and selected positions in its mortgage operation. As part of a review of its credit portfolio, Baer is discussing writing down a loan related to a real estate project in the German city of Hanover that's on the cusp of default and is also facing a loss from another development, Bloomberg reported earlier on Tuesday, citing people familiar with the matter. The report prompted the company to release an interim management statement ahead of schedule. That report showed assets under management of 467 billion Swiss francs (S$731.7 billion), a 6 per cent decrease from the end of 2024, according to a statement, as the strong Swiss franc had a currency impact of 28 billion francs. The bank posted net new money of 4.2 billion francs for the same period, coming from clients in Asia and Western Europe, it said. The bank also said it was on track to achieve the additional 110 million francs in cost savings it announced in February, and that this was expected to start benefiting profitability later this year. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up 'We expect investors to react negatively to disappointing net new money,' Citigroup analyst Nicholas Herman wrote in a note to clients, adding that the loan loss is also 'disappointing on several levels.' 'This follows a series of mis-steps prior to the arrival of CEO Stefan Bollinger,' he said, citing the Signa loss, the attempt to acquire Swiss rival EFG, flows and interest margins. Chief risk officer Oliver Bartholet will retire, the bank added, in another departure from the executive board since loans to defunct property tycoon Rene Benko helped cut 2023 profit in half. Bartholet will hand over his responsibilities on July 1 to Ivan Ivanic, who joined Julius Baer in February as chief credit officer. The executive board, which was slashed to five from 15 following the arrival of newly appointed chief executive officer Stefan Bollinger, will be expanded to include a chief compliance officer, with an announcement 'in due course.' Bollinger and chairman Noel Quinn, HSBC Holdings' former CEO, are seeking to clean up the balance sheet and set the firm back on a growth path. The two are expected to present a strategy update in June as they look to shore up investor confidence. Baer, Switzerland's second-largest listed wealth manager, wrote off US$700 million in loans and shut down its private-debt business after Benko's conglomerate unravelled in late 2023. The wealth manager said it has made progress on the wind-down of its private-debt loan book, with the remaining notional exposure now well below 0.2 billion Swiss francs, a more than 50 per cent reduction since the end of 2024, it said. The remaining book stands at 0.4 per cent of the total loan book, according to the statement. Last week, it emerged that Julius Baer has been ordered to hand over 4.4 million Swiss francs because of alleged failings in money-laundering controls. The previously undisclosed 'enforcement proceeding' is separate from an existing Finma probe into the Benko fallout. BLOOMBERG

Julius Baer Faces $156 Million Loan Loss Charge
Julius Baer Faces $156 Million Loan Loss Charge

Bloomberg

time20-05-2025

  • Business
  • Bloomberg

Julius Baer Faces $156 Million Loan Loss Charge

Julius Baer Group Ltd. is facing another large loss from property developments it helped finance, just as the Swiss wealth manager is emerging from a crisis triggered by its exposure to Rene Benko's Signa real estate empire. As part of a review of its credit portfolio, Baer is discussing writing down a loan related to a real estate project in the German city of Hanover that is on the cusp of default and is also facing a loss from another development, according to people familiar with the matter. Full impairments of those projects are expected to contribute to a loan loss charge of about 130 million Swiss francs ($156 million), said the people, asking not to be identified because the information is private.

Austria suspects woman helped fallen property tycoon Benko hide assets
Austria suspects woman helped fallen property tycoon Benko hide assets

Reuters

time09-05-2025

  • Business
  • Reuters

Austria suspects woman helped fallen property tycoon Benko hide assets

VIENNA, May 9 (Reuters) - Austrian prosecutors said on Friday they had placed a woman under investigation on suspicion of helping property tycoon Rene Benko hide assets from administrators and creditors dealing with his real estate group Signa's collapse. Benko has been in custody for more than three months as the Central Prosecutors' Office for Economic Crimes and Corruption (WKStA) continues its investigation into whether assets that should have gone towards paying back creditors were hidden in a trust of which his immediate family are beneficiaries. Benko has denied the allegations made against him. The WKStA said it had carried out raids in relation to the case on Friday at two locations in Tyrol, the mountainous state in western Austria where Benko lived and founded Signa. The reason for the raids was that the existing investigation was broadened to include the woman, it said, without naming her. "She is suspected of having helped Signa founder Rene Benko conceal valuable items, thus putting them beyond the reach of administrators and creditors, thereby preventing or reducing the satisfaction of creditors," the WKStA said in a statement. "She is thus suspected of having contributed to the possible criminal offence of insolvency fraud," it added. It did not say whether she had been detained. Benko, 47, became a billionaire by tapping low interest rates to rapidly expand his business, acquiring stakes in prestigious properties from Britain's Selfridges department stores to the Chrysler Building in New York. When the tide turned, Signa became the biggest casualty of Europe's property downturn and Benko went bankrupt. Key parts of his empire entered insolvency proceedings or went into liquidation, with administrators trying to salvage what they could of creditors' investments.

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