Greensill: State bank risked £335m to back lender, say MPs (2024)

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Greensill: State bank risked £335m to back lender, say MPs (1)Image source, Shutterstock

Taxpayers may be liable for up to £335m after a government bank failed to scrutinise collapsed lender Greensill Capital properly, MPs have said.

A Public Accounts Committee report on the British Business Bank's Covid loan scheme said checks to approve the company were "woefully inadequate".

Greensill went on to lend £418m to companies, 80% of which may have to be repaid by taxpayers if they default.

Ex-PM David Cameron was an adviser to the lender, which collapsed in March.

A government spokesman said it was not involved in the decision to accredit Greensill: "The decision was taken independently by the British Business Bank, in accordance with their usual procedures."

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The British Business Bank was tasked with approving High Street banks and other lenders to dish out government-backed loans to embattled businesses, as Covid-19 restrictions first took hold. It was a conduit for billions of pounds in emergency lending.

With help from then-adviser Mr Cameron, Greensill tried to access several government schemes, some of which were rejected. In June 2020 it was approved to lend, under two business interruption loan schemes.

The vast majority of the government-guaranteed loans from Greensill went to companies within Sanjeev Gupta's steel empire GFG Alliance, and the bank eventually suspended the loan guarantees after it appeared Greensill had broken the £50m lending cap to groups of companies.

But before it got to that point, the MPs found, different government departments and agencies were not sharing their concerns about Greensill and its main client GFG.

'Insufficiently curious'

The MPs' report pointed to issues raised with the National Crime Agency about one part of GFG Alliance, Wyelands Bank, that the Treasury and the Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) spoke about, but did not share with the British Business Bank "because they deemed it not to be relevant to the accreditation process despite Greensill being a significant financier to the GFG Alliance".

MPs said this "lack of information-sharing across government" which hampered decision-making in response to the pandemic, allowed Greensill access to taxpayer-funded schemes, thereby exposing taxpayers to a risk of £335m should Greensill's administrators seek repayment.

The British Business Bank was also criticised for being "insufficiently curious" about media reports that questioned Greensill's lending model and ethical standards.

In May the Serious Fraud Office opened an investigation into GFG over suspected fraudulent trading and money laundering, including its financing arrangements with Lex Greensill's company.

Image source, PA Media

The committee of MPs also said that in the government's rush to encourage lenders to funnel emergency loans to businesses it "struck the wrong balance between making decisions quickly and protecting taxpayer interests".

"With more time and due diligence, the bank might have reached a different decision on Greensill's accreditation," the MPs said.

A British Business Bank spokesman said: "The National Audit Office concluded in July 2021 that the British Business Bank appropriately applied a streamlined version of its established process when it accredited Greensill Capital (UK) Limited as a lender under the Covid-19 business support schemes.

"In the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic, the British Business Bank said it accredited 171 lenders across three schemes to provide government-backed loans for more than 1.6m businesses.

"A less streamlined accreditation process would have meant fewer lenders would have been accredited and fewer businesses would have received the critical emergency finance they needed during the pandemic," he added.

"The NAO also found that it was to the bank's credit that its post-accreditation monitoring and audit processes picked up a potential issue quickly, as they were designed to do".

The bank said its investigation into Greensill Capital's potential breaches of the rules is continuing, and the guarantees on repaying 80% of defaulted loans remains suspended during this probe.

The committee said the bank must set out "how it will better balance between speed of delivery and value for money in future, and what trade-offs it is prepared to accept".

Greensill collapsed earlier this year after its insurer refused to renew cover for the loans it was making.

The finance company was the main lender to GFG's Liberty Steel, which employs 3,000 people in England, Scotland and Wales.

Related Topics

  • Public Accounts Committee
  • Greensill Capital

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Greensill: State bank risked £335m to back lender, say MPs (2024)

FAQs

What happened to Greensill Bank? ›

Greensill, which lent money to companies by buying their invoices upfront, collapsed after credit insurers withdrew cover, amid concern over its huge exposure to the steel and commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta's GFG Alliance.

What went wrong at Greensill? ›

Greensill Capital specialised in supply chain finance, where businesses borrow money to pay their suppliers. Despite Cameron's efforts, it never received any money from the Covid scheme and collapsed in March 2021. Its failure was in 2021 estimated by a parliamentary inquiry to have cost UK taxpayers up to £5bn.

What is the story of Greensill Capital? ›

Greensill Capital Pty Limited was the parent company to the Greensill Group of which Greensill Capital (UK) Limited and Greensill Limited formed a part. It entered into administration in Australia on 9 March 2021 and then subsequently into liquidation in Australia on 22 April 2021.

How does Greensill make money? ›

According to its court filings, Greensill had three main businesses: supply chain financing (also called "reverse factoring"), accounts receivables financing (also known as "factoring") and a practice Greensill called "future accounts receivables finance".

What is the Greensill bank scandal? ›

During Cameron's 2010–2016 premiership, financier Lex Greensill, suggested by the image of a business card published by the Labour Party to be a senior advisor to the Prime Minister, was alleged by The Sunday Times to have had access to eleven departments and agencies.

Is Greensill still trading? ›

Greensill Capital provided finance services to companies, and collapsed in 2021. After the company went into administration, it emerged Lord Cameron, now the foreign secretary, had advised the business. Lex Greensill, who set up the business, worked for Mr Cameron when he was in Downing Street.

Who owns Greensill? ›

Why did Greensill collapse the simple problem behind the financial empire? ›

Investigators were threatening to shutter the bank, in part because its loan book was too concentrated with Gupta and his company, GFG. For a period, more than half the loans on Greensill Bank's books were linked to Gupta.

Is Lex Greensill still a billionaire? ›

Saughall, England | Lex Greensill, the former Bundaberg farmer turned fallen billionaire financier, has a new project: a sustainable farming and reforestation project on 502-acre Shotwick Park, near the north-west English village of Saughall that has been his home base for two decades.

How does Greensill work? ›

Here's how it works. Greensill acquires payment undertakings from client companies and assigns them to a special purpose vehicle (SPV) which issues notes that are sold on to investors. In other words, Greensill takes the company out of its promise to pay suppliers and parks that promise in a new entity.

Who owns Greensill Farming? ›

The Greensill Farming legacy began in 1945 and is currently run by brothers Peter, Lex and Andrew Greensill.

Why did Credit Suisse bank collapse? ›

Hobbled by a series of scandals and failed restructuring plans under successive management teams, Credit Suisse had experienced massive deposit outflows in October 2022.

What happened with Greensill and Credit Suisse? ›

The Swiss financial regulator has ordered Credit Suisse to overhaul its risk management after finding the bank “seriously breached its supervisory obligations” in its dealings with the collapsed Greensill Capital.

What is reverse factoring? ›

Reverse factoring, or supply chain finance, is a fintech method initiated by the customer to help financially support its suppliers by financing their receivables, where a bank pays the supplier's invoices at an accelerated rate in exchange for lower rates, thus lowering costs and optimizing business for both the ...

How was Credit Suisse involved in Greensill? ›

Greensill acted as a financing company, securitised the claims and transferred the securities to the four Credit Suisse funds. It was planned that specific insurance cover would secure the majority of the claims against a default of buyers.

Did Greensill Capital collapse and Credit Suisse lose money? ›

Greensill Capital, a British financial firm specialised in short-term corporate loans via a complex and opaque business model, collapsed in 2021. Credit Suisse was heavily invested in the firm and had to close four connected funds, in which around $10 billion had been invested.

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