- European Investment Bank shares default risk with companies’ bank
- After careful consideration Bank Austria selected as first partner for pilot scheme in Austria
Bank Austria and the European Investment Bank (EIB) today signed a risk sharing agreement in Vienna, under which the EIB will in future no longer act purely as a provider of funding to Bank Austria but also, under a pilot project in association with the bank, grant low-interest loans to businesses. After a detailed examination of its lending procedures, Bank Austria was selected as the EIB’s first partner in Austria. The total volume of EIB co-financing operations is currently limited to EUR 75 million, an amount that will be matched by Bank Austria. Under the agreement both partners will share the credit risk fifty-fifty.
Matthias Kollatz-Ahnen, EIB Vice-President responsible for loans in Austria, said: “With this new type of loan, the EIB will be taking on some of the risk in order to give a greater boost to those segments of the market in which commercial banks want or need to have additional risk partners. It should help to mitigate the effects of the current economic crisis by granting firms better access to medium and long-term funding on favourable terms.”
Helmut Bernkopf, member of Bank Austria’s Management Board for Corporate & Investment Banking, stated: ”For many years we have been cooperating successfully with the European Investment Bank. Refinancing by the EIB is particularly valuable in economically difficult times, as it enables commercial banks to make loans on favourable terms to businesses in a targeted manner, independently of the capital markets. I am pleased that we have been selected as the exclusive partner for this pilot project. This speaks volumes for our high standards in lending”.
The new low-interest loans from Bank Austria and the EIB are intended specifically for small businesses but also for medium-sized firms with up to 3 000 employees. Technology and environmental projects in particular, with a total value of up to EUR 25 million, will be financed. The loans will run for between 3 and 12 years. If the pilot project is a success, further tranches will be considered.