Germany's
WestLB bank is the latest subprime victim; to make a loss in 2007
13 November 2007
German
bank WestLB has warned that it expects a loss this year instead of a profit. The
bank is the latest victim of a global credit crisis set off by US sub-prime mortgage
lending. WestLB
says it expects to report a full-year pretax loss in the low, triple-digit, million-euro
range, even though operating earnings have come up to plan. "The substantial
price losses of structured securities in the past weeks are the main reason for
this development," the bank said in a statement. Earlier
this year, proprietary trading blunders pushed the bank to a first-half pretax
loss of €38 million ($55 million). But the bank, which made a pre-tax profit
of €1 billion in 2006, announced in August it still expected to make a profit
for 2007. That hope has been dashed by the sub-prime crisis. The
finance ministry of the German state of North Rhine Westphalia directly and indirectly
owns 38 per cent of WestLB. It said it stood behind the bank and would make a
decision about its future only after it had seen a report from Citigroup, which
is advising the state government about a possible sale of WestLB. The
head of Germany's banking association said on Monday that Germany was over the
worst of the crisis. Europe's biggest economy was one of the first countries to
suffer from the sub-prime fallout, with the near collapse of two banks. Klaus-Peter
Mueller is also chief executive of Commerzbank, Germany's second-biggest bank,
which has written down the value of its sub-prime linked investments by over €300
million. General
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