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Thursday, February 12, 2015

Austria's 3rd Largest Bank Goes Full Bear Stearns: CEO Blames "Short Sellers" For Firm's Demise

You know it's bad when... you start blaming speculators. Very reminiscent of the "it's not us, we have a solid balance sheet, it's the short selling speculators"bullshit in the days before and after the stock crashes of American Insurance Group, Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers and Merrill Lynch; mere days after his bank's bonds crashed, the CEO of Raiffeissen Bank (Austria's 3rd largest) has stated (unequivocally) that "panic was created artificially," blaming short-sellers for his bank's demise.
RBI CEO Svelda tells DiePresse.com,
"This panic was created artificially to a certain degree.
 
25 percent of our free float was shorted. As some have speculated neatly on falling prices and our share beaten down properly.
 
And the whole thing because of an initial loss of 493 million euros?"
Yep all short-sellers...
http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user3303/imageroot/2015/02/20150211_rafa_0.jpg
 
Nothing to do with worries about Swiss Franc mortgages... As Bloomberg reports, Raiffeisen had a total of 4.3 billion euros of Swiss franc loans outstanding as of September 2014, according to estimates by Moody’s Investors Service.
The largest part of these are in Poland, where the franc has appreciated 17 percent against the zloty since Jan. 14, threatening to push up defaults on the bank’s 2.9 billion euros of mortgages in the Swiss currency.
 
“There’s a lot of people worried about the bank’s Swiss-franc mortgages in eastern Europe,” said Gregory Turnbull Schwartz, who helps oversee the equivalent of about $82 billion at Kames Capital in Edinburgh and doesn’t hold Raiffeisen bonds.
 
Raiffeisen said Jan. 15 that it can’t yet forecast the effects of the appreciation of the franc on its asset quality.
 
The bank “will certainly take one measure or the other in the near future,” Chief Executive Officer Karl Sevelda told reporters on the sidelines of the Euromoney CEE conference in Vienna today. He declined to elaborate. Franc loans in eastern Europe are “not a big problem,” he said.
The plunge appears focused on the potential capital shortfalls and talk of the bank selling its Russian unit - both have been denied... (as Reuters reports),
Raiffeisen Bank International has no desire to exit the Russian market, Chief Executive Karl Sevelda told a newspaper in response to market rumours it could sell its lucrative Russian business.
 
The Austrian lender has "absolutely no intention to sell our Russian bank", he told Der Standard in a report printed on Tuesday. A bank spokeswoman confirmed his remarks.
 
He was responding to Russian media reports that Raiffeisen was in talks with Alfa Bank about a potential sale. Sevelda dismissed these "unfounded rumours" and said Raiffeisen had "absolutely no contact" with Alfa Group.
 
Raiffeisen, which is conducting a strategic review of its portfolio, said this month losses for 2014 could surpass 500 million euros ($561.5 million) if it had to write down goodwill in Russia, its single most profitable market.
 
The spokeswoman also confirmed the paper's report that Chief Financial Officer Martin Gruell had denied market talk Raiffeisen may need to raise capital. It raised about 2.8 billion euros a year ago via a rights issue.

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