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		Analysis: Greensill's funding problems could cause broad ripples
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		 [March 04, 2021]  By 
		Tom Bergin 
 LONDON (Reuters) - A funding crisis at 
		Greensill Capital could spill over to some of its high-risk borrowers 
		and lead to losses for insurers and banks that have done business with 
		the UK-based supply chain finance firm if its clients default, according 
		to several industry experts and a review of public filings.
 
 Greensill, backed by Softbank Group Corp's Vision Fund, helps companies 
		spread out the time they have to pay their bills. The loans, which 
		typically have maturities of up to 90 days, are securitized and sold to 
		investors, allowing Greensill to make new loans.
 
 Earlier this week, Greensill's primary source of funding came to an 
		abrupt halt. Swiss bank Credit Suisse Group AG and asset manager GAM 
		Holdings AG suspended redemptions from funds that held most of their 
		around $10 billion in assets in Greensill notes over concerns about 
		being able to accurately value them.
 
		
		 
		Greensill is preparing to file for bankruptcy and is also in talks to 
		sell large parts of its business to private equity firm Apollo Global 
		Management Inc, a source close to Greensill said on Wednesday. But 
		Apollo is not planning to bail out Greensill's borrowers and does not 
		even want to provide loan arrangement services to Greensill's riskier 
		clients, two sources close to the talks said, because of the financial 
		and reputational risks.
 While Greensill did not name Apollo, it confirmed on Tuesday it was in 
		talks with "a leading global financial institution" to buy its business. 
		Apollo, Softbank and Credit Suisse declined to comment.
 
 The uncertainty about what happens over the next few days could ripple 
		through Greensill's clients and other financial institutions.
 
 For the company's clients, an inability of Greensill to continue funding 
		them may mean having to repay debts soon and finding alternative sources 
		of financing in the near term, according to four experts in short term, 
		inventory-backed - or 'supply chain' - financing of the type Greensill 
		offers.
 
 That could be especially problematic for its higher-risk clients, which 
		may struggle to raise funds elsewhere or have to pay much more for the 
		financing.
 
 "If you have just a single source for this kind of capital, you may have 
		to scramble around," said Craig Jeffrey, of consultancy Strategic 
		Treasurer, near Atlanta, which advises clients on supply chain finance.
 
 Any inability of borrowers to pay could, in turn, lead to losses for 
		credit insurers that have sold protection against defaults on Greensill 
		securities bought by the Credit Suisse funds. And if those insurers 
		don't pay up, investors could sue Credit Suisse to cover their losses, 
		said Thorsten Beck, finance professor at the University of London. 
		Analysts at Morgan Stanley said in a research note this week that even 
		if the Swiss bank doesn't face direct financial losses, it would face 
		reputational damage from the crisis.
 
 In addition, a bank owned by Greensill in Germany, which keeps the 
		company's short-term loans on its balance sheet before they are 
		securitized and sold to Credit Suisse, could also be on the hook for 
		losses if the sudden withdrawal of credit prompts any defaults on debts 
		it was temporarily holding, according to ratings reports and published 
		accounts.
 
 On Wednesday, Germany's financial regulator Bafin filed a criminal 
		complaint against Bremen-based Greensill Bank saying the lender could 
		not provide evidence of receivables it said it had purchased from 
		metals-to-finance group GFG Alliance.
 
 In a statement to Reuters, Greensill Capital spokesman James Doran said 
		talks were ongoing with a suitor on a deal for parts of its business 
		which could help preserve operations and jobs. "While the structure of 
		the new business is still being determined, we expect the transaction 
		will ensure the majority of Greensill clients will continue to be funded 
		in the same way as they currently are while also preserving a 
		substantial number of jobs."
 
 Greensill Bank always "seeks external legal and audit advice before 
		booking any new asset," Greensill Capital added. It declined to comment 
		on the specific Bafin allegation. GFG did not respond to requests for 
		comment about Greensill Bank.
 
		
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			Greensill Bank is pictured in downtown Bremen, Germany, July 3, 
			2019. REUTERS/Fabian Bimmer 
            
			 
SUPPLY CHAIN MODEL
 The supply chain lending model is usually seen as a relatively low-risk 
investment. But Greensill, formed in 2011 by former Citigroup banker Lex 
Greensill, has taken on some highly indebted customers, publicly available 
accounts for borrowers show. It has also lent money to fund fixed assets like 
buildings and factories, which are more typically funded via longer-term 
financing, the accounts show, whereas supply chain financing usually covers 
short-term debts like paying for inventory.
 
 One of its largest customers is GFG, run by Indian-British metals tycoon Sanjeev 
Gupta. GFG Alliance had to pay a 12% interest rate when it issued debt on public 
markets in 2019.
 
But Greensill said his business typically provided credit to businesses for 
around 4%, and could do so because investors would accept low returns as he 
ensured debts were backed by assets which would be quickly realized.
 Reuters could not learn the specific rate that Greensill charged GFG and how 
much of the Credit Suisse and GAM funds' assets are accounted for by GFG loans. 
Previous accounts for the funds and the companies involved show hundreds of 
millions of dollars of outstanding credit at any one time.
 
 GFG Alliance spokesman Andrew Mitchell said the group had alternative funders to 
Greensill.
 
 "GFG Alliance has adequate current funds and its plans to bring in fresh capital 
through refinancing are progressing well," he said, adding the troubled 
companies GFG bought were being turned around and were generating positive 
cashflow.
 
 GERMAN EXPOSURE
 
 Any customer defaults could also impact Greensill Bank in Bremen, Germany, a 
review of ratings reports and published accounts shows. The bank's exposure to 
GFG is unclear but its most recent capital requirements disclosures show that in 
2019, it took on over $1 billion in exposures in Macedonia, the Czech Republic 
and Romania, after GFG began doing business in these countries.
 
 Greensill Bank is largely funded by around 3 billion euros of deposits and 
depositors are protected by the bank's membership of the deposit protection fund 
of the Federal Association of German Banks.
 
 Greensill Bank declined to answer questions about its finances and neither it or 
Credit Suisse disclose its exposure to individual companies.
 
 Any losses to the Credit Suisse funds could also flow to multiple parties. 
Credit insurers have sold the Credit Suisse funds and Greensill protection 
against defaults on Greensill securities bought by the funds. While Greensill 
Capital is responsible for first losses on the funds to the tune of $1 billion, 
accounts show, insurers cover much of the rest, Credit Suisse said in January.
 
 
Credit Suisse declined to confirm whether the debts currently in the fund are 
covered by insurance and who covered them.
 Credit Suisse, too, is a creditor to Greensill. The Zurich-based bank has $140 
million in loans outstanding to the company, a source familiar with the matter 
said.
 
 Greensill declined to say if sale talks envisaged the potential buyer taking on 
its debts or those debts held by the Credit Suisse funds. Credit Suisse declined 
to comment on the debt.
 
 (Additional reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan and Carolyn Cohn in London and 
Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi in Zurich; Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Edward Tobin)
 
				 
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