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 Credit Suisse files five insurance claims on Greensill-linked funds

The logo of Swiss bank Credit Suisse is seen at a branch office in Basel, Switzerland March 2, 2020. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann

Credit Suisse files five insurance claims on Greensill-linked funds

ZURICH, Jan 13 (Reuters) – Credit Suisse (CSGN.S) has filed five insurance claims related to $1.17 billion in exposure across two of its Greensill-linked supply chain finance funds, the bank said on Thursday.

As of Dec. 31, it had filed five claims related to $846 million in exposure for its Luxembourg-based supply chain finance fund, the bank said in a document published on its website, while it has filed two claims for its high-income supply chain finance fund related to $326 million in exposure.

The bank said some of the claims were submitted in relation to both funds. It did not say with whom it had filed the claims.

Switzerland’s second-largest bank has been working to recover assets from the collapse of some $10 billion in funds linked to insolvent supply chain finance firm Greensill. read more

It has so far recovered some $7.2 billion of the funds.

The bank has been focusing on some $2.3 billion in loans provided by Greensill, which imploded in March, to three counterparties including commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta’s GFG Alliance, SoftBank-backed Katerra, and coal miner Bluestone, for which late payments have accrued.

In December, it filed applications seeking information through U.S. courts which could lead to it taking legal action in Britain against SoftBank (9984.T) to recover funds it says are owed in relation to Katerra, which filed for bankruptcy in June. SoftBank has denied any wrongdoing.

Along with an application filed in California, the Swiss bank also filed for document discovery in an Arizona federal court, Credit Suisse said on Thursday.

As of Dec. 31, it said a total $2.5 billion in late payments had accrued across its four supply chain finance funds, $2.2 billion of which were related to the three companies. Reporting by Brenna Hughes Neghaiwi, editing by Silke Koltrowitz, Michael Shields and Tomasz Janowski

This article was originally published by Reuters.

Global Business Magazine

Global Business Magazine

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