IKB Deutsche Industriebank
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IKB Deutsche Industriebank AG | |
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Type | Public (FWB: IKBG) |
Founded | 1974 |
Headquarters | Düsseldorf, Germany |
Key people | Günther Bräunig (CEO and chairman of the management board) Ulrich Hartmann (Chairman of the supervisory board) |
Industry | Financial services |
Products | Corporate, real estate and structured financing, private equity |
Profit | ▲ € 179.7 million (2006) |
Employees | 1,838 (2006) |
Website | www.ikb.de |
IKB Deutsche Industriebank (FWB: IKBG) is a bank based in Düsseldorf, Germany . It is specialized in lending to small and medium-sized companies.
In August 2007, it had to be bailed out due to bad losses in the subprime market meltdown.
IKB's fiscal year ends March 31 of each year.
Contents |
[edit] Corporation
IKB was granted its banking license in 1924 as "Bafio" (Bank für deutsche Industrieobligationen, Bank for German Industry Obligations). Bafio dealt in long-term real estate financing in an effort to aid the German economy grow under the weight of the World War I reparations the country owed.
The bank was incorporated under Germany's stock law (Aktiengesetz) in 1945. In 1974 it merged with Deutsche Industriebank to become IKB Deutsche Industriebank.
IKB's main area of business is financing for small and medium enterprises in Germany. In addition to corporate financing, they also undertake real estate financing.
The German government's financing bank, KfW (formerly Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau), owns a 38% stake in IKB.[1] As of October 2007, KfW is considering selling its stake in IKB.[2][
[edit] 2007 subprime crisis
[edit] Losses
When the subprime market in the United States crashed in the summer of 2007, the global reach of the crisis was not immediately obvious. Several European banks, however, became victims of the crisis due to investment history; IKB was the first European bank to declare financial trouble due to the subprime disaster.[3][4]
In July of 2007, IKB announced that it had been affected by the subprime mortgage crisis in the United States. Only a week earlier the bank had released a statement saying it expected to meet it earnings goals for the year. "Rhinebridge", a structured vehicle operated by IKB, had invested heavily in the U.S. subprime market.[5]
To control the effects of the crisis in Germany, KfW, along with numerous commercial and coop banks (including Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank), formed a rescue fund to bail out the group. The funds used to bail out the bank amounted to 3.5 billion euro. Although IKB's stocks fell drastically, the bank avoided default, and the rescue is credited with having spared the German economy drastic fallout from the subprime crisis.[6]
In February 2008, the German government announced that IKB would require another rescue package to remain liquid, largely because peer banks were reluctant to invest further in the bank. The rescue package was announced in mid February at an amount of 1.5 billion euro.[7] As a result of the losses suffered by IKB, the company was demoted from Deutsche Börse's mid-cap MDAX stock market index to the small-cap SDAX in March 2008.[8]
[edit] Investigations and controversy
[edit] Misconduct investigation by the Federal Republic of Germany
After the crash of its shares, the German financial watchdog BaFin and the Ministry of Finance opened an investigation into allegations of reporting and accounting misconduct. Although no charges were brought against the bank, four of the five executives of IKB stepped down between 1 August and 1 November 2007.[9]
[edit] State aid investigation by the European Union
Shortly after the IKB crash, the European Union opened an investigation into the rescue package to determine if the package contravened its state aid regulations.[10] After protracted talks with the EU, the German government submitted an official notification of the rescue measures and possible future restructuring measures in January 2008.[11] As of February 2008, no ruling has been made by the European Court on the IKB case.