Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Depfa Bank

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Industry
  
banking

Operating income
  
€874 million (2006)

Founded
  
1922

Founder
  
Gerhard Bruckermann

Website
  
www.depfa.com

Parent organization
  
FMS Wertmanagement

Depfa Bank httpsmediaglassdoorcomsqll10622depfabank

Type
  
Private (subsidiary of Hypo Real Estate)

Headquarters
  
Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Subsidiaries
  
DEPFA Funding II, DEPFA Finance N.V.

DEPFA Bank plc is a Dublin-based German-Irish bank. It provides financial services to the public sector and also provides financing for larger infrastructure projects. The name derivates from Deutsche Pfandbriefbank.

History

DEPFA Bank was established in 1922 under auspices of the Prussian government, and was asked to provide financing for residential construction projects. Its more recent history began in 1950s, when the bank become a federally owned corporation, and was to provide for a wide range of residential mortgages. When the corporation lost its tax-free status in the 1970s, it entered the commercial lending industry, becoming the largest German underwriter of public covered bonds. The bank was privatized in 1990, and obtained a FSE listing in 1991.

At the end of the 1990s, the bank went through a legal restructuring, which led the bank to move its headquarters to the IFSC in Dublin, Ireland in 2002 with the Irish government specifically legislating for it. Depfa Bank was purchased by German mortgage giant Hypo Real Estate in October 2007. The bank ran into liquidity problems in 2008 as a result of the economic and financial turmoil in the United States. At the same time banking supervision in Ireland was very weak, soon to be proved by the 2008–2010 Irish banking crisis.

DEPFA underwrote a group of municipal bonds in the U.S. that subsequently had their ratings downgraded. Under the terms of the underwriting, DEPFA was required to buy back the securities after downgrade in the ratings. Because of the difficulties in obtaining short-term funding in the markets at that time, Depfa's liquidity became a major concern. Through a series of bailouts, the German government ended up with 100% ownership of Depfa's parent company, Hypo Real Estate.

References

Depfa Bank Wikipedia