Commission Decision
of 18 July 2011
on State aid C 15/09 (ex N 196/09), which Germany implemented and is planning to implement for Hypo Real Estate
(notified under document C(2011) 5157)
(Only the German text is authentic)
(Text with EEA relevance)
(2012/118/EU)
THE EUROPEAN COMMISSION,
Having regard to the Agreement on the European Economic Area, and in particular Article 62(1)(a) thereof,
Whereas:
On 3 June 2009 Germany notified a capital injection amounting to EUR 2,96 billion, registered under case number N 333/09.
On 17 August 2009 Germany informed the Commission (registered under case number C 15/09) that it intended to again prolong guarantees previously granted by the Sonderfonds Finanzmarktstabilisierung (‘SoFFin’) amounting to EUR 52 billion for HRE (cf. recital 2).
On 20 and 21 October 2009, Germany provided another update of the restructuring plan, notified the Commission of further intended measures for HRE (creation of a winding-up institution, grant of additional guarantees) and informed the Commission about a further prolongation, i.e. the third prolongation, of the existing SoFFin guarantees of EUR 52 billion (registered under case number N 557/09).
On 15, 16 and 17 December 2009 (registered under case number N 694/09) the German authorities complemented the notification of 26 October 2009 by submitting further information regarding the SoFFin guarantees of EUR 18 billion.
On 30 April 2010 Germany notified a SoFFin capital injection of EUR 1,85 billion (case number N 161/10).
On 2 September 2010 Germany notified a SoFFin liquidity guarantee amounting to EUR 20 billion (case number N 380/10).
On 14 June 2011 Germany submitted a final update of the restructuring plan. On 15 June 2011 Germany submitted a list of related commitments, which was supplemented on 1 July 2011.
On 14 June 2011, Germany clarified that the next capital injection will not amount to EUR 2,13 billion as notified on 10 September 2010, but that it will amount to EUR 2,08 billion and that the reduced amount will be made available to FMS-WM.
In the course of time several meetings and telephone conferences have taken place and further correspondence has been shared between the Commission departments, Germany and HRE.
The Commission received comments from interested parties, forwarded them to Germany, and received observations from Germany by letter dated 24 March 2010.
FMS-WM, the winding-up institution for HRE, was established in 2010. It manages the assets and derivatives of the HRE group that it has taken over because they were either non-strategic or contained an unacceptable risk or capital burden. FMS-WM has in the course of time taken over a considerable part of HRE’s assets. FMS-WM does not have a banking licence.
HRE reported losses of EUR 5,5 billion for the financial year 2008, losses of EUR 2,2 billion for 2009 and losses of EUR 0,9 billion for 2010.
By injecting capital amounting to approximately EUR 3,02 billion (EUR 60 million in March 2009, EUR 2,96 billion in June 2009), Germany became 90 % owner of HRE. In autumn 2009 a squeeze-out of minority shareholders took place. Germany acquired the remaining shares, paying EUR 1,30 per share, and becoming 100 % owner of HRE. A restructuring process was subsequently initiated for HRE.
At the end of September 2008, HRE faced a liquidity shortage, which put the bank on the brink of insolvency. HRE was not able to obtain short-term financing on the markets because the financial market crisis led to the collapse of some financing markets. After Lehman Brothers applied for creditor protection, the interbank market in particular came to an almost complete standstill in mid-September 2008.
The business model of DEPFA Bank plc, a wholly owned subsidiary of HRE since October 2007 that was highly dependent on funding from the interbank market and other short-term unsecured funding sources, proved to be extremely fragile in the face of the liquidity crisis, and the resulting problems threatened its very existence.
HRE had to cover the short-term liquidity needs of DEPFA Bank plc. However, the volume of the credit lines which became due on 30 September 2008 was too big to be supported by HRE. Furthermore, internal transactions and activities within the HRE group, such as receivables, guarantees and letters of comfort, meant that most companies in the HRE group were in the same situation. The liquidity problems therefore posed a serious threat to the existence of the HRE group.
Overall, the German State has provided or will provide HRE with capital injections totalling up to approximately EUR 9,95 billion (FMS-WM has received or will receive part of that capital) and guarantees of EUR 145 billion. HRE also benefited from an asset relief measure with an aid element of approximately EUR 20 billion.
As part of Germany’s intention to gain full control over HRE by acquiring all its shares in several steps, on 30 March 2009 SoFFin bought 20 million new HRE shares at their nominal value of EUR 3 per share, resulting in a capital injection to HRE of EUR 60 million and giving SoFFin an 8,65 % share in the equity. That capital injection was temporarily approved by the Commission on 13 November 2009.
On 2 June 2009, HRE shareholders approved a capital injection amounting to EUR 2,96 billion into HRE by issuing new shares to be acquired by SoFFin. As a result, SoFFin held 90 % of the shares of HRE. Those newly issued shares were registered in the commercial register on 8 June 2009. This capital injection was temporarily approved by the Commission on 13 November 2009.
- (a)
EUR 2 billion was injected into the uncommitted reserves (‘freie Rücklagen’) of HRE Holding and PBB. After the squeeze-out of minority shareholders, HRE was entirely owned by Germany/SoFFin;
- (b)
EUR 1 billion was injected as a silent participation in PBB, with a profit-dependent coupon of 10 % p.a.
The contracts for that EUR 3 billion capital injection were signed on 16 November 2009. The capital injection was temporarily approved by the Commission on 13 November 2009.
- (a)
a capital injection of EUR 1,4 billion (that tranche was temporarily approved by the Commission on 19 May 2010 and was injected thereafter);
- (b)a capital injection of up to EUR 450 million (that tranche was also temporarily approved by the Commission on 19 May 2010, contingent on the existence of certain circumstances16. It has not yet been injected as those circumstances have not yet occurred).
The capital injection of EUR 1,85 billion is part of a total capital need set out in the restructuring plan for HRE. EUR 1,4 billion of this capital injection was injected in order to comply with regulatory capital requirements and to have a risk buffer. The contract for that EUR 1,4 billion capital injection was signed on 20 May 2010. Germany expects the other part of the EUR 1,85 billion, i.e. EUR 450 million, to be injected in the third quarter of 2011.
On 10 September 2010 the German authorities notified a capital injection of up to EUR 2,13 billion for HRE. On 14 June 2011, Germany clarified that the capital injection would not amount to EUR 2,13 billion but to EUR 2,08 billion and that the amount would be injected into FMS-WM. According to Germany, the EUR 2,08 billion would be injected in the third quarter of 2011. SoFFin put the EUR 2,08 billion, subject to agreement by the European Commission, as a capital claim (‘Einlageanspruch’) into the capital reserve (‘Kapitalrücklage’) of HRE Holding. HRE Holding transferred that capital claim to FMS-WM as of 1 October 2010.
On 13 November 2008 Germany provided State guarantees of EUR 35 billion to bridge the refinancing needs of HRE. The guarantees were temporarily approved by the Commission on 2 October 2008.
These guarantees were provided for a liquidity line amounting to EUR 20 billion provided by the Deutsche Bundesbank and for guaranteed notes amounting to EUR 15 billion taken up by a consortium of German financial institutions.
HRE paid a guarantee premium to the State for the EUR 35 billion guarantee consisting of a basic premium and a performance-related premium. The basic premium consisted of 1 % p.a. on the so-called ‘First-Loss-Guarantee-Amount’ and of 0,5 % p.a. on the so-called ‘Second-Loss-Guarantee-Amount’. The performance-related premium consisted of 1,25 % p.a. on the ‘First-Loss-Guarantee-Amount’ and of 0,25 % p.a. on the ‘Second-Loss-Guarantee-Amount’.
HRE paid a guarantee fee of 0,5 % for the parts of the guarantee actually used to cover bonds and a commitment fee of 0,1 % for parts not used.
The ‘secured notes’ expiring on 23 December 2009 were replaced by a SoFFin guarantee for EUR 8 billion. The Commission temporarily approved that guarantee on 21 December 2009.
HRE paid a guarantee premium to SoFFin amounting to 0,5 % p.a. of the guaranteed sum. For parts of the guarantee that were not used, a commitment fee of 0,1 % p.a. was applicable.
On 21 December 2009 a SoFFin guarantee of EUR 10 billion, lasting for one year at most, was temporarily approved by the Commission, in order to ensure the liquidity needs of HRE.
HRE paid a guarantee premium to SoFFin amounting to 0,5 % p.a. of the guaranteed sum. For parts of the guarantee that were not used, a commitment fee of 0,1 % p.a. was applicable.
HRE needed an additional EUR 20 billion liquidity guarantee because of adverse developments on the capital and interest rates futures markets, which affected HRE until the assets had been transferred to the winding-up institution FMS-WM. The guarantee was temporarily approved by the Commission on 24 September 2010.
HRE paid a guarantee premium of 0,8 % p.a. For the part of the guarantee not used a commitment fee of 0,1 % p.a. was applicable.
A settlement guarantee of up to EUR 20 billion was needed because of the remaining uncertainties regarding the technically complicated procedures in connection with the transfer of assets to the winding-up institution. The guarantee was temporarily approved by the Commission on 24 September 2010.
HRE paid a guarantee premium to SoFFin of 0,8 % p.a. For the unused part of the guarantee a commitment fee of 0,1 % p.a. was applicable.
On 10 September 2010, Germany also notified the transfer of a notional amount of about EUR 210 billion of assets and about EUR 280 billion of derivatives to the winding-up institution FMS-WM. FMS-WM was created by a board decision of 8 July 2010 in accordance with the German Finanzmarktstabilisierungsfondsgesetz [Financial Market Stabilisation Fund Act] (§ 8a of the FMStFG). It manages assets and derivatives of the HRE group that it has taken over because they were either non-strategic or contained an unacceptable risk and capital burden. FMS-WM acts independently of HRE and benefits from an obligation on the part of SoFFin to compensate losses (‘Verlustausgleichspflicht’). However, FMS-WM does not have a banking licence. As a result, many of the HRE assets could only be synthetically transferred; a variety of ‘transfer’ mechanisms, depending on the specific circumstances, were devised to obtain a similar regulatory capital relief effect for PBB and the HRE group.
The transfer was temporarily approved by the Commission on 24 September 2010. The measure transferred non-strategic and non-performing assets such as government bonds or non-performing property loans (or, as described in recital 49, only their regulatory capital usage) into a government-backed vehicle to be wound down over a number of years. The transferred non-strategic assets also included those that could not be used as collateral for covered bonds.
The portfolio included about EUR 30 billion of commercial real estate loans, which are geographically diversified and composed mainly of financing of office buildings and shopping centres. They are of a relatively short duration (three years) but of inferior credit quality.
The non-commercial real estate part of the portfolio was composed of public sector finance or bonds and loans to public entities or utilities. Most of that business consisted of standard bonds (‘plain vanilla bonds’), but it also included EUR 31 billion of ‘structured credit instruments’ and another EUR 30 billion of public sector loans. The quality of the assets in this part of the portfolio was significantly better than that of the commercial real estate loans. However, due to their long maturities and with the market credit spread widening since acquisition, the securities suffered from a significant discount in terms of market price.
The Commission’s experts found that, in contrast to some other State aid cases, the complex commercial real estate loans and structured credit assets categories (mainly consisting of student loan backed securities, public sector asset backed securities and EUR 5 billion in a total return swap investment) were overall safe. They expected only limited losses on those categories, albeit higher than estimated by Germany’s experts, mainly due to the valuation of cash bonds in the Halcyon/Pegasus structures as well as the negative basis and the implicit funding cost in the total return swaps. By contrast, the ‘plain vanilla’ bonds were transferred at an asset swap level close to parity, considerably above their REV. In addition, they belonged to markets that were not particularly impaired, so that their REV should in fact be close to their market value. As a result, the Commission’s experts concluded that the REV of that part of the portfolio would be considerably below the value at which HRE transferred it to FMS-WM.
For the derivatives portfolio, the Commission’s experts largely agreed with the findings of Germany’s experts. In addition, they estimated the countervalue of the credit risk to be slightly higher than the level found by Germany’s experts and incorporated some findings from their sample as well as a general ‘operational risk’ charge, motivated by prudent assumptions surrounding shortcomings in the overall hedge effectiveness.
(in EUR billion) | |||||
Portfolio | Notional value | Transfer value (TV) | Δ REV–TV(Germany’s figures) | Δ REV–TV(Commission’s experts’ figures) | Divergence(Commission v Germany) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bonds | 83,444 | 93,96 | -0,902 | -7,59 | -6,688 |
Structured Credit | 31,199 | 30,111 | -0,765 | -1,981 | -1,216 |
CRE loans | 26,312 | 23,874 | -1,211 | -2,8 | -1,589 |
Non-CRE loans | 29,834 | 31,115 | -0,222 | -1,084 | -0,862 |
Derivatives | 280,255 | -13,106 | -2,149/ -2,531 | -2,786 | -0,255 |
Total | 451,044 | 165,954 | -5,249/ -5,631 | -16,241 | -10,61 |
As a result, the aid amount that, in line with the IAC, is not a priori compatible with the internal market (which is defined as the difference between REV and transfer value) is determined by the experts as being about EUR 16,2 billion. The total aid amount, i.e. the difference between transfer value and market value, is difficult to establish due to the lack of easily available market prices for the loan part of the portfolio. The extreme assumption that the market value of the loan book is zero would give a total aid amount of EUR 90 billion. Assuming that the loans trade in the same way as liquid bonds of similar maturity and credit quality, the total aid would be around EUR 20 billion.
On 7 May 2009, the Commission opened an in-depth investigation into State aid measures for HRE, mainly based on doubts regarding HRE’s viability, in particular in the light of HRE’s refinancing strategy and needs. The initial restructuring plan submitted to the Commission on 1 April 2009 only identified external factors as reasons for HRE’s financial problems and targeted a balance sheet reduction of only 25 %, meaning that the refinancing volume would have remained high. HRE planned to reduce the group balance sheet by selling assets on the market, not by transferring them to a winding-up institution. One of the core business fields described in the restructuring plan was budget finance activities that generate low margins, and the plan contained very little information on issues that are vital to the restructuring process such as the modification and integration of the IT systems. At that stage, the Commission also had doubts that there were sufficient measures to limit distortions of competition and sufficient burden-sharing measures.
- (a)the additional State aid measures for HRE, in the form of a capital injection of EUR 2,96 billion (cf. recital 30), a capital injection of EUR 3 billion (cf. recitals 31 and 32), a guarantee of EUR 8 billion (cf. recitals 41 and 42), a guarantee of EUR 10 billion (cf. recitals 43 and 44) and a guarantee of EUR 2 billion19 for refinancing a possible winding-down solution, plus capital injections amounting to a total of EUR 4 billion (structured as follows: the capital injection of EUR 1,85 billion referred to in recitals 33 and 34 and the capital injection of EUR 2,08 billion discussed in recital 35) had to be covered; and
- (b)the Commission had doubts that the restructuring measures were compatible with the Commission communication on the return to viability and the assessment of restructuring measures in the financial sector in the current crisis under the State aid rules20 (Restructuring Communication).
- (a)
the additional State aid measures for HRE, namely a guarantee of EUR 20 billion (cf. recitals 45 and 46), a further guarantee of up to EUR 20 billion (cf. recitals 47 and 48) and the transfer of assets to a winding-up institution (cf. recitals 49 to 57) had to be covered; and
- (b)
the Commission had doubts regarding the compatibility of the asset relief measure with the IAC, in particular with respect to transparency, valuation, burden sharing and remuneration, and had noted that the restructuring plan had shortcomings with regard to demonstrating the restoration of viability, proper burden sharing and appropriate mitigation of distortions of competition.
On 1 April 2009 Germany notified a first draft of a restructuring plan for HRE and, after several modifications, it submitted the final update of the plan on 14 June 2011. Unless otherwise specified, all references to the restructuring plan in the remainder of this Decision are to this final version of 14 June 2011.
According to the restructuring plan, HRE — having been freed from its legacy of impaired assets with a nominal value of EUR 210 billion by transferring them to the winding-up institution FMS-WM — will redesign its business activities in such a way that its core bank PBB can carry out its activities based on a stable funding approach and improved internal control systems. Its future activities will be on a considerably smaller scale than HRE’s activities before the crisis, regardless of whether measured in terms of balance sheet size, volume of new business, workforce, branch network or geographical scope.
Compared with the situation before the crisis, PBB’s strategic balance sheet size at the end of 2011 — corrected for items that are in run-down mode or have been synthetically transferred to FMS-WM — accounts for approximately 15 % of HRE’s balance sheet size at the end of 2008. New business in real estate finance will, for example, be reduced to approximately 30 % of its pre-crisis level (HRE’s new business in commercial real estate finance amounted to EUR 32,1 billion in 2007). The workforce has been reduced by approximately 30 %, and all the executive board members of HRE who held office before the crisis have been replaced. More than 30 participations, one third of which are outside Europe, have already been divested or liquidated, or are in the process of liquidation. Some 26 out of 32 branches have been closed. In addition, a multi-year, group-wide transformation project called ‘New Evolution’ with a budget of approximately EUR 180 million has been launched to improve and integrate the IT systems.
PBB will continue two strategic business lines, real estate finance (REF) and public investment finance (PIF). Both business lines target assets that are eligible for German covered bonds, either in the form of German mortgage bonds (‘Hypothekenpfandbriefe’) or in the form of German public sector bonds (‘öffentliche Pfandbriefe’). All other activities, in particular budget finance business, infrastructure finance, capital markets and asset management activities, will be terminated.
The arrangements for the two other subsidiaries of HRE Holding are as follows: DEPFA Bank plc is put into run-down as of the date of notification of this Decision and will not generate any new business. The same applies to its subsidiaries. HRE Finance is in liquidation and also not carrying out new business.
Germany claims that the fundamental decision to pursue a more conservative commercial strategy and to focus on German covered bonds as the primary refinancing source ensures a qualitative improvement of the lending activities because they are subject to the legal framework of the German Pfandbriefgesetz [Pfandbrief Act], which has specific requirements regarding the management, monitoring and control of risks, and provides for protective measures such as limitation of the loan-to-value ratio. That funding strategy considerably reduces HRE’s previous dependency on the interbank money market, which in future is only needed for the warehousing period preceding the issuance of covered bonds.
- (a)
Summary of comments from Verband deutscher Pfandbriefbanken (vdp) (November 2009):
vdp is convinced that a business model which is aligned on Pfandbrief-eligible business is promising and capable of ensuring the long-term viability and profitability of a bank without State guarantees.
- (b)
Summary of comments from Heisse Kursawe Eversheds (November 2009):
Heisse Kursawe Eversheds is of the opinion that the State aid violates the rights of certain shareholders, that the planned acquisition of all HRE shares by SoFFin by excluding minority shareholders (squeeze-out) constitutes further State aid, that the squeeze-out is not appropriate aid and that it violates the principle of free movement of capital.
- (c)
Summary of comments from Heisse Kursawe Eversheds (February 2010):
In its further comments, Heisse Kursawe Eversheds is of the opinion that the exclusion of the minority shareholders of HRE (squeeze-out) is State aid within the meaning of Article 107 et seq. TFEU, that such State aid violates the freedom of movement of capital, and that State aid for HRE may only be authorised if HRE will be continued on the basis of a sustainable restructuring plan.
- (d)
Summary of comments from Bohdan Kalwarowskyj (February 2010):
Mr Kalwarowskyj is of the opinion that, based on the valuation documents of HRE presented in the context of the squeeze-out on 5 October 2009, it is evident that HRE will be viable and profitable, and that SoFFin in cooperation with HRE aims to manipulate the company value downwards.
- (a)
Summary of comments regarding Verband deutscher Pfandbriefbanken (vdp):
According to Germany, the comments from vdp confirm that the planning of HRE’s business model is based on plausible assumptions.
- (b)
Summary of comments regarding Heisse Kursawe Eversheds:
Germany is of the opinion that the squeeze-out does not constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) TFEU. As the squeeze-out does not constitute State aid, the question whether there is a violation of the principle of free movement of capital (which is not the case in Germany’s opinion) is not relevant to the in-depth investigation at hand.
- (c)
Summary of comments regarding Bohdan Kalwarowskyj:
Germany agrees with Mr Kalwarowskyj that, on the basis of the planned restructuring measures, the long-term viability of HRE would be secured.
Germany accepts that the measures constitute State aid within the meaning of Article 107(1) TFEU.
- (a) Implementation of the restructuring plan and the commitments
Germany will ensure that the restructuring plan as set out in its final version and the commitments are fully implemented.
- (b) Duration of the commitments
In principle the commitments are valid until the end of the restructuring period, i.e. 31 December 2015. However, commitments regarding DEPFA Bank plc and its subsidiaries will in principle end as soon as DEPFA Bank plc is reprivatised, if that happens sooner. In such a case, Germany would notify the Commission of the sale in advance and would not implement the sale without the Commission’s approval, if it were to take place before 31 December 2013. Commitments regarding PBB will end as soon as PBB is reprivatised, but in any event not before 31 December 2013
- (c) Business lines
Germany will ensure that only PBB will pursue new business and will do so only in two business lines, real estate finance and public investment finance. All other business lines are stopped (the budget finance portfolio will remain on the PBB balance sheet but in run-down mode) and all other entities of the HRE group will stop their business activities.
- (d) Reprivatisation of PBB
Germany will reprivatise PBB as soon as possible, and by 31 December 2015 at the latest.
- (e) Restriction of growth of PBB
Germany will ensure that the growth rates of PBB remain within defined limits, measured in terms of balance sheet size as well as volume of new business.
- (f) Winding-up institution
Germany will ensure that, after 30 September 2013, PBB will provide neither asset management services nor refinancing services for the winding-up institution FMS-WM and that, from an organisational point of view, those services can be taken over by third parties.
- (g) Market presence
Germany will ensure that PBB will acquire new business only on the following geographic markets:
- (i)
Real estate finance:
- Core markets22: Germany, United Kingdom, France and Spain.
Further markets: Sweden, Poland, Czech Republic, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Austria, Switzerland, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Slovakia and Hungary.
- (ii)
Public investment finance:
Core markets: Germany, France, Spain and Italy.
Further markets: Switzerland, Austria, Poland, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg and United Kingdom.
- (i)
- (h) Remuneration for using the winding-up institution
Germany will ensure that HRE, within the limits of its abilities, pays adequate remuneration in return for using the winding-up institution FMS-WM. Specifically, Germany will ensure that the Bundesanstalt für Finanzmarktstabilisierung (‘FMSA’) orders HRE to pay an amount of EUR 1,59 billion to FMS-WM either directly or via its subsidiaries. Those subsidiaries of HRE which transferred assets to the winding-up institution and which have a core capital quota exceeding 15 % are in principle liable for that payment. PBB will retain and accumulate profits in order to pay back the silent participation.
- (i) Restrictions regarding coupon payments and profit distribution
Germany will ensure that HRE and its subsidiaries refrain, within the legal limits, from coupon payments and other measures of profit distribution.
- (j) Restrictions regarding paybacks
Germany will ensure that HRE and its subsidiaries refrain from paying back existing financial instruments.
- (k) Acquisition ban
Germany will ensure that HRE and its companies do not acquire other businesses during the restructuring period.
- (l) Commitments relating to information technology of HRE/PBB
Germany will ensure that the project set up to improve the bank’s IT systems is fully implemented.
- (m) Commitment relating to RAROC
Germany will ensure that PBB’s strategic new business does not issue any new loans that have a risk-adjusted return on capital (RAROC) of less than 10 % on a transaction-by-transaction basis.
- (n) Monitoring trustee
Germany will ensure that the restructuring plan and all commitments are correctly implemented and that the implementation is constantly monitored by a sufficiently qualified monitoring trustee.
Within the HRE group only PBB (and its subsidiaries) is pursuing new economic activities and is thus active on the markets. PBB can thus be regarded as the entity continuing the activities of the former HRE (albeit to a limited extent, as explained in recital 63). All other entities of the HRE group (i.e. DEPFA Bank plc and its subsidiaries and HRE Finance i.L.) are in run-down mode and their activities are limited to what is necessary to allow for an orderly run-down, but they do not generate new business.
As regards the view expressed by Heisse Kursawe Eversheds that the squeeze-out constitutes State aid, the Commission notes that, while the capital injections into HRE constitute State aid, the squeeze-out of minority shareholders (i.e. the acquisition of their shares against payment to those shareholders) does not in itself contain State aid elements because it does not provide the bank with an advantage stemming from State resources. The squeeze-out involved a payment from the State to the minority shareholders, but this had no economic effect on HRE. From HRE’s perspective only its ownership structure changed. As a result, the question whether the squeeze-out infringes the Treaty provisions on free movement of capital does not need to be assessed within this Decision.
Under Article 107(3)(b) TFEU, aid may be considered to be compatible with the internal market if it remedies a serious disturbance in the economy of a Member State. As the breakdown of a systemically relevant bank can directly affect the financial markets and indirectly affect the entire economy of a Member State, the Commission currently, in the light of the ongoing fragile situation on the financial markets, bases its assessment of State aid measures in the banking sector under State aid law on that provision.
The Commission has no grounds to doubt Germany’s qualification of HRE as a bank of systemic relevance, in particular in the light of the position it previously held in the German Pfandbrief market, the original size of HRE’s balance sheet and the amount of derivatives previously held by HRE.
The Commission observes that HRE has received rescue aid which the Commission has found to be compatible with the internal market; however, that aid will now have to be assessed to determine whether it may be considered to be restructuring aid which is compatible with the internal market. Therefore the Commission must now assess the compatibility of those measures and all further restructuring measures, i.e. the guarantees of EUR 52 billion and the capital injection of EUR 2,08 billion, on the basis of the Impaired Asset Communication and the Restructuring Communication.
Any asset transfer to a winding-up institution must take place in accordance with the IAC. Furthermore, the Restructuring Communication clearly states that adequate remuneration of any State intervention generally is one of the most appropriate limitations of distortions of competition, as it limits the amount of State aid. A limit on the bank’s expansion in certain business or geographical areas may also be required, for instance via market-oriented remedies such as specific capital requirements, where the market would be weakened by direct restrictions on expansion, or to limit moral hazard.
As regards the eligibility of assets earmarked for transfer, paragraph 34 of the IAC recognises the necessity of a pragmatic and flexible approach to the selection of asset types for impaired assets measures. The Commission has applied that flexibility in other State aid cases and accepted the transfer of assets which, strictly speaking, were not distressed but were non-strategic in view of the profound change in the business model of the bank in question.
As set out in paragraph 46 of the IAC, in order to facilitate the bank’s focus on the restoration of viability and to prevent possible conflicts of interest, it is necessary to ensure clear functional and organisational separation between the beneficiary bank and its impaired assets. The Commission understands that when the winding-up institution was created it was not possible, in particular for technical reasons, to immediately cut the links between PBB and FMS-WM. However, that situation must be remedied as quickly as possible. On that basis, Germany has committed that PBB will establish the full organisational independence of the related services and will no longer provide them to FMS-WM after 30 September 2013.
Paragraph 41 of the IAC states that the transfer value should correspond to the REV. Where a Member State considers it necessary — in particular to avoid technical insolvency — to use a transfer value for assets that exceeds their REV, it can only be accepted if accompanied by far-reaching restructuring and the introduction of conditions allowing the recovery of that additional aid at a later stage, for example through a claw-back mechanism.
- (a)
a contingent payment of EUR 1,59 billion from HRE to the winding-up institution;
- (b)
the use by PBB of retained profits to redeem the silent participation of the Federal Republic of Germany;
- (c)
after the payment of EUR 1,59 billion has been made in full, the DEPFA Bank plc sub-group (i.e. parent company and all subsidiaries) must pay to Germany an adequate remuneration for the State support;
- (d)
although HRE has been nationalised, Germany plans to reprivatise PBB, which means that Germany will receive proceeds from any subsequent reprivatisation. Due to the fact that the State has taken the bank into public ownership and now plans to reprivatise it, it can also be argued that the State will try to recuperate as much of its contribution as possible and that former shareholders have contributed adequately.
Moreover, the proposed restructuring is very far-reaching and includes a dramatic downsizing of the ‘good’ core bank, to approximately 15 % of HRE’s size at the end of 2008. Together with commitments on growth restriction, product range limitations, corporate governance and reprivatisation through a public tender, the complete restructuring package can be considered sufficiently far-reaching within the meaning of the IAC.
The Commission also observes that the doubts it raised about Germany’s and HRE’s willingness and ability to provide full ex ante transparency and disclosure of the impairments have been alleviated by the extensive data delivery from a dedicated team at the bank. In addition, partly at the Commission’s request, HRE has had its data sets audited for consistency and quality, which facilitated the final assessment by the Commission’s experts. Furthermore, Germany and PBB have committed to far-reaching improvements to the risk management and reporting systems in order to alleviate the Commission’s concerns about potential gaps in management information systems in the future.
The amount of capital injections already granted, the amount of capital injection still envisaged and the amount of State aid resulting from the asset transfer together represent more than 20 % of HRE’s pre-crisis risk weighted assets.
In line with section 2 of the Restructuring Communication, Germany submitted a comprehensive and detailed restructuring plan which identifies the causes of the financial difficulties faced by HRE and provides detailed information about the business model.
- (a)
the status of HRE, and in particular its subsidiary DEPFA Bank plc, as a purely wholesale financed bank without franchise funding, so that it was highly dependent on an intact interbank money market, which temporarily came to a complete standstill after the collapse of Lehman Brothers;
- (b)
a legacy problem stemming from assets that do not show an appropriate return on investment if their actual risk profile is taken into account; and
- (c)
the fact that HRE was the product of a merger of several smaller banks with different IT applications that were not integrated into a comprehensive, coordinated risk management system.
As set out above, the restructuring and the planned measures, which relate primarily to the funding of the bank and internal control systems, are intended to ensure that the liquidity problems that put the bank on the brink of insolvency cannot be repeated. The restructuring plan addresses the main concerns very specifically by focusing on a more stable, Pfandbrief-based funding concept, by considerably reducing the previous dependence on the interbank money market, by improving and integrating its IT systems and by reducing the geographical scope, the branch network and the absolute size of the business. Terminating other activities and treating them as a run-down portfolio on the PBB balance sheet is the logical complement to that concept.
Consequently, the two remaining business lines of PBB will only target assets which are eligible for German covered bonds, either in the form of mortgage bonds (‘Hypothekenpfandbriefe’) or that of public sector bonds (‘öffentliche Pfandbriefe’). The argument that a more conservative commercial strategy of that kind should lead to a qualitative improvement of the lending activities is credible, in particular in the light of the specific requirements of the German Pfandbrief Act regarding the management, monitoring and control of risks, and its protective measures such as limits to the loan-to-value ratio.
In recital 92 of the extension decision of 24 September 2010 (cf. recital 15 of this Decision) the Commission expressed doubts that the bank could achieve sufficient margins with its future business activities, in particular those in the public finance sector, which is characterised by low margins. Some of HRE’s former public sector finance activities, namely the PIF activities, are to be continued. However, the PIF activities will only involve financing for products linked to investments by public-sector customers. Hence they can be distinguished from budget finance activities, i.e. uncommitted financing of public authorities, which are characterised by particularly low margins. In the adjusted business model low-margin budget finance activities are terminated (they are equivalent to approximately 75 % of the former public sector finance activities) and the resulting portfolio is put in run-down mode on the PBB balance sheet, so that those concerns of the Commission are alleviated. Moreover, the commitment from Germany to ensure that PBB in its strategic new business will not contract new loans which have a RAROC of less than 10 % on a single transaction basis helps to alleviate those concerns.
The Commission also notes that keeping PIF as a second business line of PBB will mitigate concerns of market players and rating agencies about the lack of diversification on the part of banks which restrict their activities to a single business line (known as ‘monoline banks’) and are therefore overly dependent on a single business area. Having two business lines, with potentially different business cycles, should enable PBB to secure more stable and predictable revenues and to achieve the required visibility among institutional investors.
The restructuring concept will result in a clearer organisational structure, as fringe activities such as capital markets and asset management activities are terminated and the branch network is considerably reduced. A substantial number of sales offices have already been closed; according to the more detailed and regional business model, four of those sales offices (Berlin, Hamburg, the Rhine/Ruhr area and Stockholm) will be re-opened.
The restructuring plan ensures that PBB will not unduly increase its presence on the markets. New lending is capped for both business lines. On its respective core markets PBB targets market shares of 1 % to 2 % with its PIF activities and 2 % to 6 % with its REF activities.
The Commission notes that the bank has started to address the weaknesses of its IT system, which was initially rather heterogeneous and seriously deficient, in particular with regard to risk-management functionality and applications. In 2009 HRE set up a multi-year, group-wide project called ‘New Evolution’ with a budget of approximately EUR 180 million to transform the IT landscape. The project will roll out various system improvements in six successive releases. The scope of the project covers, inter alia, operational improvements such as the consolidation of credit management systems, risk management related improvements of the IT system with respect to credit, market and liquidity risks, standardisation of front office systems, and improvements to the accuracy, detail and quality of information and data. The information provided on the content and progress of the IT transformation process suggests that the initial problems have been adequately addressed and can be resolved to the required extent during PBB’s restructuring period. It is the Commission’s view that the future IT system will be a functional, efficient platform for timely and prudent risk management which is appropriate to the business processes. Its full implementation is therefore crucial.
According to the restructuring plan, PBB will no longer benefit from State guarantees on its refinancing. PBB nevertheless remains a wholesale funded institution without franchise funding. That situation is mitigated by PBB’s strategy to significantly reduce the amount of unsecured funding required and instead to issue covered bonds, considered to be a more stable source of funding.
As an acute liquidity shortage was one of the main causes of HRE’s problems that ultimately led to the need for State support, the restructuring plan provides for an adequate cash and liquidity reserve, taking into account effects that might result from Basel III requirements. That reserve is greatest at the beginning of the restructuring period and will gradually decrease over time. In the base case scenario the cash and liquidity reserve would be approximately [12–17] % of PBB’s balance sheet by the end of 2011 and reach a level of approximately [7–17] % by the end of 2015. In the stress case scenario the cash and liquidity reserve would exceed [7–10] % of PBB’s balance sheet by the end of 2011, and reach a level of approximately [7–10] % by the end of 2015. In the Commission’s view, the liquidity situation seems to be appropriate in both a base case and a stress case scenario.
With a core capital ratio (calculated on the Basel II internal ratings-based approach) projected at 12,9 % at the end of 2011 in the base case scenario or 10,5 % in the stress test scenario, PBB is sufficiently capitalised and will meet minimum capital requirements over the restructuring period. According to the assumptions used in the restructuring plan, the core capital ratio at the end of 2015 will be 12,4 % in the base case scenario or 11,3 % in the stress case scenario. However, the decline in the core capital ratio in the base case scenario is due mainly to the projected increase in risk-weighted assets resulting from the planned growth and not to losses (in the base case scenario, PBB shows a positive result after tax between 2011 and 2015; only in the stress case scenario would PBB show a loss after tax in 2011 and 2012).
The profitability of PBB is expected to improve over the restructuring period. According to the restructuring plan, in the base case scenario PBB’s profit after taxes will amount to EUR [110–150] million in 2011 and to EUR [280-320] million in 2015. In 2011 that result would correspond to a return on equity (after taxes) of just [3–6] %, but at the end of the restructuring period in 2015 it would correspond to a return on equity (after taxes) of [8–11] %. The targeted profitability in the base case can hence be considered satisfactory for a bank pursuing the business targeted in the restructuring plan, both from a viability point of view and in the light of the planned reprivatisation of PBB. According to Germany, for PBB profits after tax will be offset by losses from previous years. In view of the losses carried forward, this means that PBB will record balance sheet losses (‘Bilanzverluste’) until 201[…] but will not do so in 201[…], in the context of the redemption of the silent participation.
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Net interest income and similar earnings | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Net commission income | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Operating income | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Loan loss provisions | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Administrative expenses | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Balance of other income/expenses | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Pre-tax profit/loss | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Taxes | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Profit/loss after taxes | EUR million | [110-150] | [140-160] | [170-220] | [240-270] | [280-320] |
Assessing PBB’s main profitability drivers, two sources of profitability can be identified: first, PBB’s revenues stemming from its commercial activities will increase and, second, operating costs will decrease.
Given the importance of securing sufficiently high margins, Germany’s commitment that PBB’s strategic new business will not contract new loans with a RAROC of less than 10 % on a transaction-by-transaction basis is appropriate and necessary.
In 2011 and 2012, fees generated from asset management services provided for FMS-WM (HRE’s ‘bad bank’) represent an important source of income for PBB. As set out in the IAC, in order to facilitate the bank’s focus on the restoration of viability and to prevent possible conflicts of interest, it is necessary to ensure a clear functional and organisational separation between the beneficiary bank and its impaired assets. The Commission understands that when the winding-up institution was created it was not possible, in particular for technical reasons, to immediately cut the links between PBB and FMS-WM. However, that situation needs to be remedied as quickly as possible. On that basis, Germany has committed that PBB will establish full organisational independence of the related services and will no longer provide those services to FMS-WM after 30 September 2013. The same applies to the refinancing of FMS-WM. That commitment also helps to ensure that in the medium term PBB’s profitability is self contained and no longer based on fee income related to the transfer of impaired assets.
The Commission notes that PBB intends to reduce its operating costs considerably. Over the restructuring period, the cost-income ratio will improve significantly from [64–79] % in 2011 to [32–42] % in 2015 in the base case scenario.
After the transfer of impaired assets to FMS-WM, resulting in a significant reduction of the balance sheet, the base case scenario shows that PBB’s loan loss provisions are stable for the restructuring period.
The Commission considers that the targeted profitability of PBB is also sufficiently robust against the assumptions made in the stress case scenario, as neither the viability of the bank nor the prospects of reprivatising PBB are put at risk. According to the restructuring plan, in the stress case scenario PBB would record losses of EUR [100–125] million in 2011, yet at the end of the restructuring period in 2015 PBB is expected to show profits of EUR [270-310] million. The return on equity (after taxes) would be negative in 2011 (– [2,8–3,8] %) and in 2012, but in that scenario the expected return on equity in 2015 would be nearly [9–12] %.
2011 | 2012 | 2013 | 2014 | 2015 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Net interest income and similar earnings | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Net commission income | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Operating income | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Loan loss provisions | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Administrative expenses | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Balance of other income/expenses | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Pre-tax profit/loss | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Taxes | EUR million | […] | […] | […] | […] | […] |
Profit/loss after taxes | EUR million | – [100-125] | – [75-90] | [230-290] | [250-290] | [270-310] |
In the light of the improvements to the business model, the technical infrastructure and the organisational set-up, and their impact on PBB’s situation as to expected liquidity, solvency and profitability, the Commission considers that the restructuring plan fulfils the requirements of the Restructuring Communication with regard to the restoration of long-term viability.
- (a)
Restructuring aid should be limited to covering costs which are necessary for the restoration of viability.
- (b)
In order to limit the aid amount to the minimum necessary, the beneficiary bank should first use its own resources to finance restructuring, for example, through the sale of assets.
- (c)The costs associated with the restructuring should not be borne solely by the State but should also be borne by those who invested in the bank by absorbing losses with available capital and by paying an adequate remuneration for State interventions. The objective of burden sharing is twofold: to limit distortions of competition and to address moral hazard33.
The Commission’s doubts as to whether the aid is limited to the minimum necessary to restore the long-term viability of PBB have been allayed. Altogether Germany has invested or will invest nearly EUR 10 billion in HRE. Part of those capital injections, i.e. EUR 2,08 billion, will be used to recapitalise the winding-up institution FMS-WM, while another EUR 1,59 billion will be transferred to FMS-WM in the course of the restructuring. Approximately 63 % of the capital of nearly EUR 10 billion remains within the HRE group.
PBB is the only entity within the HRE group that will undertake new business in future and hence actively participate in competition. In the base case scenario its core capital ratios (based on the Basel II RBA method) are projected to be 12,9 % at the end of 2011, declining slightly over the restructuring period to reach 12,4 % by the end of 2015. The restructuring plan does not raise doubts that the bank will meet minimum capital requirements over the restructuring period. The projected core capital ratio is strong, yet in line with capital ratios of competitors. In reaction to the financial crisis, banks are now generally expected to show higher capital ratios than before the crisis. It also needs to be borne in mind that PBB, due to its problems within the crisis, needs a strong capital base in order to convince market players that it is a reliable business partner. In the Commission’s view, the amount of capital provided and the resulting capital ratios are therefore deemed to be adequate and limited to the minimum necessary.
HRE has furthermore benefited from the provision of guarantees amounting to EUR 145 billion in total, of which EUR 124 billion have actually been used. Those guarantees were necessary in order to enable the continued operation of the bank when it faced insolvency, at least until HRE was in a position to transfer its impaired assets to FMS-WM. All the guarantees that were used by the HRE group, amounting to a total of EUR 124 billion, were transferred to FMS-WM with effect from 1 October 2010. The operation of PBB therefore no longer relies on State guarantees. That transfer helped to ensure that the aid in the form of guarantees was limited to the minimum period necessary.
As stated in the Restructuring Communication, beneficiary banks should first use their own resources to finance their restructuring, which is typically done by selling assets. HRE has hived off a considerable part of its assets by transferring a notional amount of about EUR 210 billion of assets as well as about EUR 280 billion of derivatives to the winding-up institution FMS-WM, thereby effectively cutting its balance sheet in half. However, that transaction has not created any accounting surplus that could have contributed to the financing of the restructuring costs. Rather, the transfer should be classified as a State aid measure itself, as the price that HRE received for the assets exceeded the REV of the assets by some EUR 16,2 billion. Nevertheless, the company has sold and is in the process of selling several participations in companies (e.g. Arsago ACM GmbH (Frankfurt), Arsago Holding AG (Switzerland), DEPFA First Albany Securities LLC (New York) and Collineo Asset Management GmbH).
Furthermore, as regards HRE’s subordinated debt holders, Germany has provided a commitment that HRE will not make discretionary payments on profit-related financial instruments to third parties, thereby ensuring that Tier 2 capital holders will get little or no compensation for their investment and will thus participate in the burden sharing in the same way as Tier 1 capital holders.
The Commission therefore concludes that HRE’s shareholders have adequately contributed to the restructuring costs and that as a consequence the risk of moral hazard is adequately addressed.
As regards the measures limiting the distortion of competition, the Restructuring Communication sets out that the Commission has to take into account, in its assessment the amount of aid, the degree of burden sharing and the position the financial institution will have on the market after the restructuring. On the basis of that analysis, suitable measures should be put into place.
The distortions of competition caused by HRE are significant. Overall, the German State has provided or will provide for HRE capital injections totalling up to approximately EUR 9,95 billion (FMS-WM is the recipient of part of that capital) and guarantees of EUR 145 billion. HRE also benefited from an asset relief measure with an aid element of about EUR 20 billion. In view of that considerable State support, a deep restructuring of HRE must be carried out.
HRE’s successor, PBB, will be well funded and relieved of the burden of the risky lending made by HRE in the past. A large amount of aid has been necessary in order to keep PBB in business and to facilitate the split-up. However, PBB will be a much smaller bank, and sufficient measures limiting any distortion of competition have been put in place by Germany.
First, PBB will be an economic entity that is rather different from the former HRE. It has been taken into public ownership and is currently undergoing in-depth restructuring. As a result, PBB is a much smaller bank than HRE was. After the transfer of a series of assets to FMS-WM, PBB’s strategic balance sheet size — which does not take into consideration those balance sheet items which are in run-down mode or have been synthetically transferred to FMS-WM — is around 15 % of HRE’s balance sheet at the end of 2008.
Second, Germany has provided the Commission with several commitments aimed at limiting PBB’s market presence, which have been described in more detail in Section V. PBB will only pursue new business in two business lines, REF and PIF. Those two business lines have only limited room for growth during the restructuring period because new business, the balance sheet and portfolio sizes must all stay within defined boundaries, effectively restricting PBB’s ability to expand on the market and thus distort competition. Those caps on growth will remain in place until at least 31 December 2013 and potentially longer if PBB is not reprivatised by then. All other entities of the HRE group must stop business and run down their portfolios, in particular infrastructure finance, capital markets and asset management, and activities related to budget finance.
Third, in order to allay the Commission’s concerns that PBB might harm competition and competitors through overly aggressive pricing strategies, Germany has given a commitment that PBB’s strategic new business will not issue new loans with a RAROC of less than 10 % on a transaction-by-transaction basis. In the Commission’s view, that commitment will be another effective measure against undue distortions of competition.
Fourth, PBB’s activities will be limited by behavioural constraints which include an acquisition ban and a ban on invoking State support in its advertising.
Finally, Germany has committed to reprivatise PBB as soon as possible, i.e. by 31 December 2015 at the latest. The sale of PBB will allow the Federal Republic of Germany to recover (part of) the funds invested in HRE. In addition, the Commission notes that timely reprivatisation can ensure that third parties have the opportunity to acquire PBB.
Germany has committed that the implementation of the HRE restructuring plan and the implementation of the commitments will be monitored by a monitoring trustee, who will submit reports to the Commission on a quarterly basis.
The Commission concludes that the measures analysed above constitute State aid pursuant to Article 107(1) TFEU.
The Commission further concludes that the restructuring aid is compatible with the internal market pursuant to Article 107(3)(b) TFEU subject to the implementation of the restructuring plan which was finally updated on 14 June 2011 and subject to the fulfilment of the commitments set out in the Annex to this Decision,
HAS ADOPTED THIS DECISION: