NPL&REO News

Brazil’s Caixa Económica Federal plans to sell real estate to repay public debt

Under new management, the biggest state-owned bank in Brazil, Caixa Economica Federal,plans to restructure itself by selling distressed real estate and equity stakes in subsidiaries.

Chief executive officer Pedro Guimaraes is overseeing this planned asset sales by the State-owned bank to repay perpetual bonds issued by the Brazilian government that total approximately $R 40 billion ($11 billion).

Caixa has assets valued at R$ 1.3 trillion, and all extraordinary gains from asset sales “will be used to repay that debt,” Guimaraes said in an interview with Bloomberg.

Guimaraes has approached investors focused in distressed real estate to gauge their interest in buying assets that Caixa has seized. The bank valued its portfolio of seized assets, mostly defaulted mortgages, at nearly R$ 8 billion as of September, more than any other Brazilian bank.

Caixa also may sell some non-distressed real estate assets, including all or part of 15 buildings in Brasilia, where the bank is based, and seven buildings on Paulista Avenue in Sao Paulo.

In recent years, the bank has struggled with low returns on assets and controversy, including allegations that Caixa officials have loaned money in exchange for bribes.

The new CEO of Caixa plans dual listings in Brazil and New York to sell minority stakes in bank subsidiaries in the insurance and bank-card businesses.  Guimaraes said the bank’s lottery and asset-management subsidiaries will go public in 2020. The bank could collect R$ 15 billion in proceeds from the four sales.

Among other plans, Caixa would auction the right to use its 26,000 offices – the largest branch network in the Brazilian banking industry – to sell insurance and card-processing products that generate fees for the bank.

Caixa has a loan portfolio valued at R$ 694 billion, which has grown nearly 10-fold over the past 10 years, largely because of efforts by previous administrations of the national government to provide low-cost credit through state-owned banks.

The Brazilian government supported that effort by lending Caixa $40 billion through a perpetual bond issue.

Original Story:  The Real Deal | Mike Seemuth / Bloomberg
Photo: Caixa Econômica Federal
Edition: Prime Yield

Caixa Económica Federal aims to raise R$3.9 billion through subsidiary listings

State-owned Brazilian bank Caixa Economica Federal is hoping to raise R$15 billion through the listing of four of its subsidiaries, chief executive Pedro Guimaraes told newspaper O Globo in an interview published on Saturday.

The bank aims to list its insurance, asset management, lottery and credit card subsidiaries in the second half of 2019 or first half of 2020, Guimaraes said. In January, he had said they could be listed within 12 months.

The company had previously disclosed that it plans to sell minority stakes in the subsidiaries through listings in Sao Paulo and New York.

Original Story:CNBC | Reuters
Photo: Caixa Econômica Federal
Edition:Prime Yield

 

NPL’s sales from Brazil’s top banks gain momentum in 2019

The credit recovery market in Brazil is seen gaining momentum in 2019 with the country’s largest banks expected to put 40 billion Brazilian reais of non-performing loans (NPL) up for sale, Valor Econômico reported, citing forecasts from managers who specialize in bad loan trading

Banks put about 30 billion reais in face value of delinquent loans up for sale in 2017 and 2018 each, according to the report.

The projected uptick is based on Caixa Econômica Federal’s plans to revisit the market this year after a court ruling suspended such sales for the state-run bank in mid-2016. The company is reportedly in the final stages of securing approval to resume the sales.

The strategy of Brazilian banks has reportedly been to partner with managers who specialize in debt recovery and sell the oldest tranches of their nonperforming retail loan portfolios.

In October 2018, Banco Bradesco SA agreed to purchase 65% of asset manager RCB Investimentos SA’s NPL servicing platform in Brazil. In doing so, it joined fellow Brazilian lenders Itaú Unibanco Holding SA, Banco Santander (Brasil) SA and Banco do Brasil SA, all of which either own or have stakes in similar asset recovery firms.

«Selling portfolios is more a matter of efficiency and focus» as opposed to revenue, Valor quoted Eurico Fabri, Bradesco’s vice president of retail banking, as saying.

Although Brazil’s debt recovery market is expected to grow this year, current unemployment levels suggest improvement will only solidify in the years to follow as the country’s economic situation continues to improve.

Original Story: S&P Global Intelligence| David Feliba
Photo: FreeImages.com/CesarFermino
Edition: Prime Yield

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