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Deutsche Bank helped Riga City Council secure funding for Southern Bridge without reporting it as debt

Alla Petrova, BC, Riga, 13.04.2010.Print version
Germany's Deutsche Bank AG helped the Riga City Council in 2005 finance the construction of Southern (Dienvidu) Bridge with derivatives that sought to delay debt payments, and the money was spent without the local government reporting it as debt, the British magazine "Risk" writes.

The Latvian government told the Riga City Council in 2005 that it could not borrow the entire amount of money necessary to build the Southern Bridge". The solution proposed by Deutsche Bank – enhanced vendor financing (EVF) – would provide the money to the construction company, Dienvidu tilts in a series of payments, allow the city a five-year grace period before repayments start this year and not need to be reported as debt, informs LETA.

 

The downside was the expense: 46% of the total LVL 567 million bill for the bridge was interest, "Risk" wrote.

 

Separately, the construction company had an agreement with Riga City Council that the city would provide the money for those repayments.

 

But the city council also sold Deutsche Bank credit protection on Dienvidu tilts, ensuring that if the company defaulted for any reason, the city will be on the hook for the full sum.

 

It was this credit default swap which later made clear to "Eurostat" and that Deutsche Bank's credit exposure was ultimately to Riga rather than the construction company.

 

Therefore Eurostat ordered Latvia to retroactively correct its figures for the budget deficit and debt levels for 2005 and 2006.

 

One senior European Union civil servant said the bank told Riga what it wanted to hear about the accounting treatment – essentially, that it could borrow money while calling it something else.

 

Early in 2007, Latvia's authorities started to question Deutsche Bank's accounting guidance, organizing a meeting at which the bank was asked to explain the financing scheme and its accounting.

 

Afterwards, Latvia's Central Statistical Bureau asked European authorities for advice and their decision was unequivocal: according to the September 2007 ruling, which forced Latvia's debt and deficit restatement, EVF should "be considered a device whereby Deutsche Bank extends a loan to the City of Riga".

 

The Latvian Audit Office audit came to the same conclusion, calling the scheme a series of "simulative transactions that conceal [Riga's] borrowing".

 

"The financing was fully transparent in the city’s accounts at all times," Deutsche Bank spokesman Armin Niedermeier told BLOOMBERG by telephone. "And Latvia complied 100% with Eurostat's clarified guidance once issued."

 

However, Deutsche Bank stopped offering EVF to clients after the Eurostat ruling on Riga.






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