The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Troubled Latvian bank faces ECB deadline to avoid closure

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RIGA: The European Central Bank has set a deadline by yesterday for Latvia’s third-largest bank to plug a financing hole, the country’s finance minister said, as the Baltic state faced its worst financial difficulti­es in almost a decade.

Earlier, ABLV said it had asked for a 480 million euro (US$591 million) emergency loan from the country’s central bank as part of efforts to reopen for business after being forced to halt all payments in the face of money laundering accusation­s.

The request for credit comes amid frantic efforts by ABLV’s management to keep the bank afloat after US authoritie­s singled it out for money laundering and moved to block it from doing financial deals in dollars.

ABLV has denied any such wrongdoing.

“We want to give an opportunit­y ... for the bank to ensure its shortterm liquidity, so that it can continue operating,” the Baltic state’s finance minister, Dana ReiznieceO­zola, told a news website, Delfi. lv.

The ECB has imposed a moratorium stopping savers withdrawin­g their funds or making payments.

It declined to comment about the deadline.

In an interview with Reuters, a senior ABLV executive appealed for the group to be spared closure.

“We believe that the bank has a future, on the basis of a substantia­lly reduced business,” Vadims Reinfelds, deputy chief executive, said.

“What we are looking for here is a medium term or even longer term solution. If that is not possible, then resolution is the alternativ­e,” he said, referring to a possible winding down.

“The business can be restructur­ed without resolution,” Reinfelds said, adding the bank was solvent.

He warned the bank was ‘systemic’ – a reference to its significan­ce for the financial system and an indication that its problems could spill over to affect others.

The finance minister, however, played down such concerns.

The crisis at ABLV comes alongside a separate police investigat­ion into whether the head of Latvia’s central bank took a bribe of more than 100,000 euros.

Ilmars Rimsevics has dismissed the allegation­s and said he is the victim of a smear campaign, while the Ministry of Defence has suggested that disinforma­tion may be to blame.

The ministry did not say who was behind this but drew parallels with campaigns before the US elections in 2016.

Russia has denied it was behind those campaigns and says it does not meddle in elections in the West.

The episode has cast a shadow over Latvia, which belongs to the euro zone and whose top officials hold influentia­l posts both at the European Commission and European Central Bank. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Photo shows Governor of the Central Bank of Latvia Ilmars Rimsevics. The crisis at ABLV comes alongside a separate police investigat­ion into whether the head of Latvia’s central bank took a bribe of more than 100,000 euros. — AFP photo
Photo shows Governor of the Central Bank of Latvia Ilmars Rimsevics. The crisis at ABLV comes alongside a separate police investigat­ion into whether the head of Latvia’s central bank took a bribe of more than 100,000 euros. — AFP photo

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