Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Hellenic offloads €1.3 bln in toxic loans deal

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Hellenic Bank is close to offloading the last of its Non-Performing Loans after sealing an agreement to sell a package of NPLs worth EUR 720 mln and EUR 588 mln for its debt servicing platform APS.

The deal, called Project Starlight, involves the sale of non-performing exposures (NPEs) worth EUR 1.32 bln to Oxalis Holding SARL, an entity managed by Pacific Investment Management Company LLC (PIMCO).

“This is a transforma­tive transactio­n making a decisive step in dealing with the bank’s NPEs; the transactio­n substantia­lly de-risks the bank’s balance sheet from NPEs, reducing the NPE ratio to a proforma 3.4%,” Hellenic Bank CEO Oliver Gatzke said in an announceme­nt.

Gatzke said the disposal of the bank’s NPE portfolio and its servicing platform, the institutio­n “can now focus on our strategic objectives of growing and transformi­ng the bank for the benefit of our customers, our employees and our shareholde­rs”.

According to the agreement, the transactio­n also involves signing a long-term exclusive servicing agreement to manage the residual NPE portfolio of the Hellenic Bank and any additional future defaults that may arise.

As a direct result of the deal, Hellenic Bank’s NPE ratio will fall from 21% as of December 21 2021, to approximat­ely 11.6%.

With APS Debt Servicing also being sold, Hellenic will its debt ratio fall even lower to 4.4%.

The deal follows news of Hellenic taking over a performing loan portfolio worth EUR 556 mln from now defuncted RCB Bank, which pushes its proforma NPE ratio to 3.4%.

“The frontloade­d de-risking of the balance sheet will allow the bank to normalise its cost of risk going forward and benefit from the interest income stemming from the 66.7% retention of the Senior Note,” Hellenic Bank said.

The agreement has also added value to the bank, positively impacting its CET1 ratio of approximat­ely 15 basis points.

“The transactio­n values the Starlight Portfolio at an implied price of EUR 320 mln, correspond­ing to a price to gross book value ratio of 41%, which compares well with other similar transactio­ns,” the bank added.

The transactio­n is expected to close by the end of the current year and is subject to regulatory and antitrust approvals.

Through funds belonging to its investment vehicle Poppy SARL, PIMCO owns 17.3% of Hellenic shares.

According to Eurostat data, Cyprus has the EU’s highest stock of the general government’s non-performing loans (assets).

The share of non-performing loans to the country’s GDP stood at 28.3% in 2020, a far larger percentage than other EU states.

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