Bangkok Post

Greensill crisis hits ‘saviour of steel’

German regulator freezes operations

- EDDIE SPENCE

Greensill Capital’s unravellin­g is piling pressure on the sprawling empire of a British industrial­ist known as the “saviour of steel.”

Sanjeev Gupta’s GFG Alliance, which spans steel, aluminium, renewable energy and banking assets around the world, owes much of its expansion to Lex Greensill’s eponymous firm that’s fighting to stave off a collapse.

GFG spent about $6 billion in just five years, targeting old, unwanted assets, with funding help from Greensill.

But with Greensill’s supply chain finance business crumbling, the question is what that means for Gupta.

By Wednesday, there were already signs of stress. Germany’s financial watchdog said it closed Greensill Bank AG after finding irregulari­ties in how the lender booked assets tied to Gupta.

Also, the Bank of England asked GFG’s Wyelands Bank to pay back retail depositors, prompting a fresh cash injection of £75 million ($105 million) from its shareholde­r.

The BoE took the step due to concerns with Wyelands’ business model and its exposure to the rest of the alliance, according to a person familiar with the matter, who asked not to be identified discussing private informatio­n.

In a statement on Wednesday, Gupta said that the bank was recapitali­sed following turmoil caused by Brexit and the pandemic, and that it planned to focus on “business advisory and connected finance” going forward.

GFG has never published a consolidat­ed set of accounts, making its financing near-impossible to track.

In October, Gupta told Bloomberg that Greensill was its biggest lender and that while it planned to diversify funding, the relationsh­ip with the financier would likely go from strength to strength.

“We’re very proud of our relationsh­ip with Greensill,” he said at the time.

The turmoil surroundin­g Greensill comes as Gupta’s businesses should be in a position to benefit from rallying commoditie­s markets.

Steel and aluminium prices have soared since the nadir of the Covid19 pandemic on rebounding Chinese demand and bets that vaccine roll-outs will help drive a global economic recovery.

A spokespers­on for GFG said the group had “adequate current funds” and that plans to secure new financing were progressin­g well.

The son of an Indian industrial­ist, Gupta moved to the UK when he was 13. He started a commodity-trading business, Liberty House, in 1992 while studying at Cambridge University.

While his foray into European steelmakin­g started in 2013, it was during the downturn of 2015 and 2016 that he really saw an opportunit­y to grow, snapping up distressed steel assets.

Gupta now owns aluminium smelters in France and Scotland, and steel mills in the United States, Australia, Romania and the Czech Republic.

His group of companies employs 35,000 people in 30 countries, according to its website. He also recently made a bold bid for the steel unit of Germany’s Thyssenkru­pp AG.

German regulator BaFin has been scrutinisi­ng Greensill Bank since last year, with concerns mostly related to its outsized exposure to Gupta.

Among the most serious findings of the probe was that the bank booked claims for transactio­ns that hadn’t yet occurred but which were accounted for as if they had, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

During an audit, BaFin found that Greensill Bank “was unable to provide evidence of the existence of receivable­s in its balance sheet that it had purchased from the GFG Alliance Group.”

GFG has been an early backer and client of Greensill’s firm.

Greensill said in a statement late Wednesday that it had received “extensive advice,” from law firms in the UK and Germany on how to classify the assets, and that it immediatel­y complied after BaFin advised it at the end of 2020 that it didn’t agree with its accounting.

“Greensill Bank has at all times been transparen­t with its regulators and auditors about its approach to classifyin­g assets and the methodolog­ies for determinin­g such classifica­tions,” a spokesman for the company said.

The question over what Greensill’s future holds for GFG is also starting to worry labour unions.

“The speculatio­n is very concerning and we are pressing the company for answers,” said Community, one of the biggest unions for the UK steel sector. “We are ready to work with the company and the government to secure jobs and safeguard the future of this crucial strategic business.”

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? A logo outside the Greensill Bank offices in Bremen.
BLOOMBERG A logo outside the Greensill Bank offices in Bremen.

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