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Media Reports German Bank IKB Sold to US Private Equity Group

DW staff (nda)August 23, 2008

According to German media reports on Saturday, Aug. 2, German bank IKB, a casualty of the subprime mortgage crisis, was sold to US private equity group Lone Star for 150 million euros ($222 million).

https://p.dw.com/p/F3c5
Board members of Deutsche Industriebank AG, IKB, Reinhard Grzesik, Dieter Glueder, supervisory board chairman Ulrich Hartmann, CEO Guenther Braeuning and board member Claus Momburg, from left, are silhouetted at the annual meeting in Duesseldorf, Germany, Thursday, March 27, 2008.
Could the sale, if confirmed, see IKB come out of a dark period in its history?Image: AP

"According to informed sources, the amount (of the sale) is 150 million euros," Die Welt newspaper said.

IKB had been rescued by state development bank KfW, which earlier this week did not disclose the sale price of its 91 percent stake in IKB. KfW said only that it was a "low three digit million euro amount" -- meaning presumably anything between 100-300 million euros.

IKB, a specialist in loans to small- and medium-sized business based in Duesseldorf, invested heavily in securities tied to high risk subprime mortgages in the United States.

When US homeowners began defaulting on these home loans, these securities plunged in value and cost banks around the world hundreds of billions of dollars as they wrote off their investments.

In Germany, Europe's biggest economy, IKB was the first and biggest casualty of the subprime mortgage meltdown. To prevent it going bankrupt it was bailed out to the tune of several billion euros gathered by the government, KfW and private German lenders.

A spokeswoman for the finance ministry, cited by several newspapers Saturday, indicated that the state would carry a guarantee up to 600 million euros on any possible new losses by IKB.

Dallas-based Lone Star saw off bids from Swedish bank SEB and fellow US private equity group Ripplewood, sources said. Two state-owned German banks, BayernLB and WestLB, were also interested but withdrew from the bidding.

The sale still needs to be approved by KfW's supervisory board and by others including BaFin, the German financial supervisory authority and the European Commission.