September
11, 2014 6:01 pm
Banco Espírito Santo secretly
lent funds to controlling shareholder
By Miles
Johnson in London and Peter Wise in Lisbon / http://www.leituras.eu/out.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ft.com%2Fintl%2Fcms%2Fs%2F0%2F8e00b1d6-399c-11e4-93da-00144feabdc0.html%3Fsiteedition%3Dintl%23axzz3D32LqY00
Banco Espírito
Santo secretly lent money to its controlling shareholder for two years,
documents have revealed – raising fresh questions over the Bank of Portugal’s
supervision of a lender that went on to suffer one of Europe’s largest
financial collapses.
BES, then Portugal ’s largest listed bank, routed
undeclared loans to Espírito Santo International (ESI) – then indirectly its 25
per cent shareholder – through Panama ,
the documents show. BES did not declare the loans to ESI in its accounts at the
time.
This
exposure to the bad debt of the Espírito Santo family-owned ESI resulted in BES
being rescued in August. But while Bank of Portugal said then that it had
detected “fraudulent funding” involving non-financial Espírito Santo Group
companies, it had not been known until now that a scheme routing loans through Panama had been
in place for several years.
Fallout
from the BES scandal has already prompted changes at the Bank of Portugal,
which this week replaced the official in charge of prudential supervision of
banks.
“The Bank
of Portugal has failed to learn the lessons of previous bank failures,” a Lisbon banker said on
Thursday. “Supervision has been too soft. The rules that exist on paper have
not been effectively put into practice.”
Earlier
this month, KPMG, the external auditor for BES, and the Bank of Portugal
exchanged recriminations over when KPMG first alerted the central bank to the
full extent of the losses that precipitated BES’s collapse.
The Bank of
Portugal declined to comment, while representatives for ESI, which filed for
bankruptcy protection in July, were unavailable for comment. BES’s suspect Panama
operations are now under investigation as part of a forensic audit commissioned
by the central bank from PwC, people familiar with the probe said.
Although
the Bank of Portugal said in May that it had detected accounting issues at ESI,
up until BES’s collapse it repeatedly assured investors that the lender was
insulated from the problems of the Espírito Santo family’s holding companies.
In June, the bank sold €1bn of new shares. Investors who subscribed to the sale
were wiped out within two months.
Ricardo
Salgado, chief executive officer of Banco Espirito Santo SA, pauses during a
television interview in Lisbon ,
Portugal , on
Tuesday, March 6, 2012. Portugal
has been unable to sell debt due in more than a year since it was given a 78
billion-euro ($102.8 billion)bailout in May 2011, following Greece and Ireland .
Documents
seen by the Financial Times show that between 2012 to 2014 BES extended credit
lines to a small bank in Panama owned by its holding company, Espírito Santo
Financial Group, which then used the money to buy the debt issued by ESI.
While BES
in its previous annual reports noted it had credit exposure to ES Bank Panama , it did
not detail that any of these loans were being used to lend to ESI or other
companies linked to the Espírito Santo family.
This led to
the bank increasing its hidden exposures to the troubled companies that would
eventually cause it to report a €3.6bn loss at the end of July.
The
Espírito Santo-linked bank in Panama
existed almost exclusively to buy up debt issued by ESI, and its subsidiaries
Rioforte and Espírito Santo Irmãos, according to a report written by the
administrators of ES Bank.
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