NPL&REO News

Santander sold Cerberus the €600 million “Project Tagus”

Santander Portugal closed the sale of the €600 million “Project Tagus” to an affiliate of US Cerberus Capital Management.

According to information gathered by the Portuguese news platform ECO, the transaction was closed in December 2018; having a positive impact of € 50 million for the bank’s results last year.

This portfolio comprises toxic assets belonging to former Popular Portugal bank, having sparked the interest of Apollo, Bain Capital and Arrow Global.

During the bank’s results presentation, CFO Manuel Preto explained that these real estate assets and loans became Santander Totta’s property with the integration of Popular Portugal at the end of 2017. «We tried to quickly alienate these assets, because we believe the bank’s management should be focused on granting new credit to the economy and not managing portfolios which are already adequately provisioned and which do not add much to the bank’s results», quotes the same source.

Original Story: Iberian Property | Ana Tavares 
Photo: Santander
Edition:Prime Yield

Eurozone banks shed €30bn of NPL in 3rdquarter

The euro zone’s top banks shed some € 30 billion worth of unpaid loans (NPL) in the third quarter of 2018, in a new sign that European Central Bank pressure to clean up their balance sheets is bearing fruit.

The ECB wants banks to sell or provision for the bad debt they’ve inherited from the last recession so they can focus on extending fresh credit and are better prepared to withstand any new downturn.

ECB data showed NPL and advances held by the euro zone’s 107 top banks fell to € 627.7 billion, or 4.17% of the total, in the three months to September.

That was down from € 657.15 billion, or 4.40% of the total, and the end of the second quarter.

Large falls were seen in Cyprus, Italy, Greece, Portugal and Spain, and also in Germany. Even though, soured credit inherited from the last recession still accounted for a fifth of the loan book of Cypriot banks and for 40% of bank credit in Greece.

Original Story:Reuters | Francesco Canepa
Photo: FreeImages.com/Szymon Szymon
Edition:Prime Yield

Greece: Political storm, NPLs delay issue

Greece’sFinance Ministry is putting off the issue of a five-year bond, which is all set-in technical terms, until the domestic political dust settles and the effort to reduce the credit sector’s bad-loan stock results in a breakthrough.

The anticipated conclusion of the parliamentary process over the Prespes agreement will remove one of the two main obstacles blocking Greece’s return to the money markets, but the issue of the nonperforming loans still needs to be resolved before a new bond issue.

The milestone that Finance Minister Euclid Tsakalotos has set for the process to start in the markets is the submission to the European Commission’s Directorate General for Competition (DG Comp) of the plan for the reduction of banks’ NPLs processed by the Hellenic Financial Stability Fund and presented by the minister to the creditors’ mission chiefs this week.

The government expects that to give the markets a strong signal that the process of bringing NPLs down to a more manageable level is under way.

The government hopes to have the plan submitted before the end of February, as Brussels’s approval will formally open the way for the implementation of the HFSF blueprint, granting political points to the ruling party ahead of the general election. As Fitch stressed this week, the NPL reduction plan could be a game changer for the sector, decisively helping toward the restoration of confidence.

The planning of the Public Debt Management Agency provides for the issue of a five-year paper whose value will not exceed 2-3 billion euros. Analysts estimate that the interest rate could come to 3.5-3.75%, noting the favourable climate in the markets that the government should make the most of.

As Swiss daily Neue Zuericher Zeitung noted, the hunt for yields has resumed internationally, and the next one to benefit from that could be Greece, following the recent issues by Italy, Ireland, Portugal and Spain. After all, the secondary market rate of Greece’s five-year bond has dropped to six-month lows in the last 10 days.

Original Story:Ekathimerini |Eleftheria Kourtali
Photo: FreeImages.com/Takis Kolokotronis
Edition:Prime Yield

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