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He is the former economics professor behind an upstart bank
that rode the Greek boom to become a publicly listed heavyweight with a
loan book of over 35bn euros. She is his devoted wife, who oversees the
bank's sponsorship of museums and the arts, and advised it on corporate
social responsibility.
Michalis Sallas, executive chairman of Piraeus Bank, the country's
fourth largest, and Sophia Staikou are a power couple, symbols of the
fast-growth years after the country joined the euro in 2001.
But an investigation of public documents, including financial
statements and property records, shows the couple may also be emblematic
of the lack of transparency and weak corporate governance that have
fuelled the country's financial problems.
The banks will soon be recapitalised with an estimated 30bn to 50bn
euros, part of the country's second bailout, backed by the
International Monetary Fund and European taxpayers. Analysts estimate
Piraeus will take about 3bn to 3.5bn euros.
Sallas was put in charge of Piraeus by the government 21 years ago,
before the bank was privatised. He owns about 1.5 percent of the bank,
whose stock price has plunged 97 percent since its peak in 2007.
But Sallas and his wife and his two children have also run a series
of private investment companies that public records show have sealed
millions of euros in real-estate business with Piraeus, deals that were
not disclosed to shareholders.
In wealthy locations in Athens and its suburbs and on at least one
island, these companies bought properties with loans from Piraeus and
then rented at least seven of the buildings back to the bank, which used
them as branches. Piraeus also bought properties from the companies and
financed other buyers to buy properties from them.
Among the most unusual deals were transactions involving companies
linked to Staikou, Sallas' children Yiorgos and Myrto, as well as key
former Piraeus executives. These centred on the sale to Piraeus in April
2006 of three different properties, via three different private
businessmen. According to property records, each of the businessmen
bought a property for a knock-down price from the family companies and
then sold them on to Piraeus for more than double that price. On paper,
they generated a 160 percent total cash profit for the men, nearly 6m
euros, within the space of three weeks.
According to real-estate and legal experts in Athens, a pattern of
quick sales is often used in complex tax-avoidance schemes. Such deals
are legal if all taxes were paid. But one businessman named in the sales
documents told Reuters his name had been used without his knowledge. He
had "never owned property in Athens in my life," he said.
Neither Piraeus nor Sallas would answer questions about the
property deals, saying they were unable to do so because of an ongoing
legal case against an ex-Piraeus employee. Matthew Saltmarsh, a UK-based
spokesman for the bank, told Reuters that Greek banks had become "the
most thoroughly audited financial institutions in the world," and there
was no reason to question Piraeus' governance.
But property records show the deals linked to Sallas were opaque
and raise questions about how cleanly the lines between his family and
Piraeus Bank were drawn. They also provide a window into some of the
often byzantine money-making schemes that characterised what one Athens
real-estate agent calls the "crazy times" – the years between the stock
market boom in 1999 and the crash in 2009, a span that included the
entry into the Euro and its hosting of the 2004 Olympics.
"It's nothing compared to what was happening back then," a
businessman who helped run one of the Sallas' family companies said of
the property deals. "It would be unfair to limit your research to Sallas
and Piraeus. Everybody in the business knows that there are other banks
that used similar tricks to do much worse things than buying and
selling a bank branch."
"This period of time was a crazy party for some."
Sunk by the country
Greek banks have long had a reputation for being conservative. In
the past decade they mostly avoided the excesses – investment in
sub-prime debt and complex derivatives – of US and other Western banks.
In Boomerang, his 2011 book on the European debt crisis,
former Wall Street trader Michael Lewis argues that Greece's banks were
laid low not by their own misbehaviour but by the collapse in value of
the sovereign debt they had been pushed by their government to purchase.
"In Greece the banks didn't sink the country. The country sank the banks," writes Lewis.
Still, the banks in Greece played a key part in creating the bubble
that helped Athens convince the world it could afford its ever-growing
pile of debt.
Piraeus was among the fastest growing of those banks. Privatised in
1991, it expanded its total assets, including loans, from less than the
equivalent of 4bn euros in 1998 to 57bn euros in 2010. Aggressive and
willing to innovate, Piraeus swallowed several smaller lenders as well
as branches of foreign banks in Greece. It expanded into the Balkans and
bought the Marathon National Bank of New York.
Like other Greek banks, Piraeus is now struggling to deal with a
massive funding gap, the result of lost access to interbank borrowing
and falling deposits as many Greeks citizens withdraw their savings.
Saltmarsh, the bank's spokesman, said the loan book of all the
banks had been examined in the last few months in an independent audit
commissioned by the Bank of Greece and carried out by Blackrock, a
US-based asset management firm. The size of the banks' bad loans and the
amount of new capital they required, he said, would be "resolved in the
most public of ways" when the Bank of Greece publishes capital-raising
requirements across the sector sometime in the coming weeks.
A spokesman for Blackrock said they had examined all "Greek
domestic debt assets held onshore or in foreign branches", but they
declined to discuss their conclusions. The Bank of Greece (BoG), which
regulates the country's banking system, said Blackrock's terms of
reference were confidential. The BoG failed to respond to repeated
separate requests to identify what rules of disclosure and conflicts of
interest applied to Greek banks, or to questions about the Piraeus
property deals.
Last year, with attention focused on the banks and their role in
the country's crisis, several Greek newspapers and blogs reported on the
existence of a series of private companies, some offshore, that were
allegedly loaned up to 250m euros by Piraeus and whose debts appeared to
have been written off.
The reports included articles in a widely-read anonymous blog called WikiGreeks.org and daily Kathimerini.
The origin of the reports appears to be a vague one-page document,
of unproven provenance, listing 21 companies. This is now at the centre
of a criminal complaint filed in the courts by Piraeus against a former
employee, Angeliki Agoulou, a one-time branch official. The bank accuses
her of embezzling money from savings accounts and spreading false
information.
"Piraeus believes this to be a falsified document distributed to
entities including WikiGreeks by a disgruntled ex-employee as part of
that employee's continuing attempt to intimidate Piraeus Bank into
dropping legal action against that ex-employee related to an alleged
serious fraud perpetrated against Piraeus Bank," the bank said,
referring to Agoulou's case.
Agoulou denies any wrongdoing and insists the document is genuine.
Agoulou and the contents of the document are now under official
investigation by both the financial police and Financial and Economic
Crime Unit (SDOE), the national anti-money laundering department,
according to one senior Greek official.
Board members
Reuters examined publicly available data to try to establish
independently if the companies linked to Piraeus existed and, if they
did, what business they were in.
Greek companies, whether public or private, are not required to
publicly register all their shareholders and there is no public register
of directorships. But an inspection of the Government Gazette,
where company announcements and financial results are published, showed
an extensive network of private interests connected both to Sallas and
his family, and to several former senior executives at Piraeus.
In all, Reuters identified 11 companies in which members of the
Sallas family have served on the board of directors, including four
mentioned on the disputed document allegedly leaked by Agoulou. Sallas'
wife Staikou served as a director on nine of them, including at least
six as chairman, while Sallas' children Yiorgos and Myrto each served on
four. Sallas himself was not a director of any of them.
As well as the family, Konstantinos Liapis was just one of many
former Piraeus executives who served on the companies' boards. Liapis,
who was financial director of the bank from 2004 until 2006 before
becoming vice-general manager until 2009, served on the boards of eight
of the companies in all.
Stylianos Niotis, a manager of the shipping department until 2009, served on four.
An examination of Piraeus' public declarations since 1999 appears
to acknowledge only two of the companies, both property management
firms: Erechtheas Investment and Holdings SA, which was bought by the
bank at the end of 2009 and listed as a new subsidiary; and a 2004
mention of MGS (which happen to be Sallas' initials), in which Sallas
held 73.76 percent of shares.
Reuters was unable to locate any disclosures by the bank of any
property purchases, rents or sales involving the private companies,
despite the apparent links with the chairman and despite public
documents showing the companies regularly did business with Piraeus.
Several accounting experts said deals such as rental agreements or
the sale of real estate between the companies and the bank should have
been defined as "related party transactions." Under the International
Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS), adopted by Piraeus in 2005, such
transactions should have been disclosed publicly in the bank's financial
statements so as to highlight any potential conflicts of interest.
The accounts do show, as required by the IFRS, a global declaration
of loans to directors and executives and their families, peaking at
244m euros in 2008, 0.64 percent of the bank's then total loans and
advances to customers. Several Greek banks show high levels of such
loans to executives.
But outside the global declaration of loans, Piraeus accounts do
not mention any property transactions between the bank and any companies
related to its directors, including MGS.
Brian Creighton, a UK-based director at BDO, a leading accounting
firm, declined to comment on any specific case. But under the version of
the IFRS rules that applied until last year, he said, loans or any case
where a company director or close family member had a "significant
influence" over another entity should have been disclosed. "Property
sales, leases, loans and rent are among transactions that should be
disclosed if they are between related parties," he said.
In its annual accounts, Piraeus often asserted that "the terms of
the bank's transactions with related parties are those that prevail in
arm's length transactions and according to the financial procedures and
policies of the bank."
Grant Kirkpatrick, deputy head of corporate affairs at the
Paris-based Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), said that banks had a particular duty to be transparent about
lending activities.
"The fact there are family members on the board of a company doing
business with a bank is enough to suggest a potential conflict of
interest," he said. "The board of directors of the bank should have a
very clear process to deal with such cases, and that process, and the
details of any transactions, should be disclosed."
Former Piraeus financial director Liapis said he was confident
Sallas and his family had declared everything they should. "A
businessman has his own private activities or assets that he has to
handle," Liapis said. "He only has to declare his so-called related
interests and respect the ‘arms-length principle.' Everything was
declared in the bank's statements. Otherwise, (do) you think that Price
Waterhouse (the bank's external auditors) would sign Piraeus Bank
accounts?"
PricewaterhouseCoopers declined to comment.
Piraeus and Sallas did not respond to repeated requests to identify any public declarations about the firms linked to Sallas.
Buried treasure
Property is the foundation of almost all personal wealth in Greece,
a country with one of the highest rates of home ownership in Europe.
Land records are officially public, but routine access is restricted to
practising lawyers. Reuters worked with an Athens-based lawyer who
searched for transactions recorded by the firms linked to Sallas'
family.
Land records found by the lawyer and examined by Reuters show that
six of the companies had bought at least 11 properties between 1998 and
2012 for a total of 14m euros. Eight of the properties were subsequently
sold.
The documents show that more than 28m euros in loans, all from
Piraeus, were secured on the buildings. One senior official at the
finance ministry said that such a high ratio of loan to purchase price
could indicate the loans were issued by Piraeus without sufficient
collateral in place.
In all, seven of the 11 properties have been or are still used as
Piraeus branches or offices. The rent the bank paid or pays for these
properties couldn't be determined. But deeds found in the land
registries show three references to rental contracts with Piraeus, one
for 24,000 euros a month, another 11,400 euros a month, and the other
unspecified.
Sallas declined to comment on the rental agreements.
Myrto Sallas, who sat on the boards of four of the private
companies and heads the family's wine company, Semeli, referred all
questions to her father and said she had no knowledge of any of the
property deals.
"I can't help you with that; you can talk maybe better with my
father," she said. "All the other companies are totally different from
Piraeus Bank. They have nothing to do with that."
Yiorgos Sallas could not be reached for comment.
Liapis, who now teaches at the Panteion University in Athens, said
he had been a director of thousands of companies because "that's what
accountants do".
Asked specifically about some of the companies he helped run –
including Erechtheas, MS Investing, and MGS – Liapis confirmed he had
been a director at each. "It is not a secret to whom they belong. You
can even tell by the names sometimes."
Asked if that meant Sallas and his family, he confirmed: "Of course. There is nothing wrong with that."
Liapis said he had no conflict of interest since he had not worked
at Piraeus between 2000 and 2004, the period in which he was a director
on the boards of those companies.
When told records showed that he had remained a director of at
least two family companies until at least 2006, after he returned to
Piraeus, Liapis conceded that might be possible. "Yes, maybe," he said.
"But still I didn't sign any transactions with Piraeus Bank. During my
tenure as financial director, I had nothing to do with holding companies
or real estate."
Liapis described his role as an agent of Sallas. "It is very
simple," he said. In his position running Piraeus, Sallas could not be
the director of another company "so he appointed me".
Liapis said many Greeks in high-profile positions were not honest
in their declarations of assets; Sallas, in contrast, had been sincere
and honest.
Niotis, the former Piraeus shipping adviser, said he retired from
the bank in 2009. "During my career I accepted, at times, a number of,
mostly, non-executive directorships in various companies of different
remit. In none of these have I had ever any beneficial shareholding."
Unusual transactions
Of all the transactions that involved the Sallas companies, perhaps
the strangest were three prime properties in central Athens that
Piraeus bought in April 2006 for a combined cost of 9.4m euros.
One of the properties was the ground floor of an office building;
the other two were townhouses. Each had belonged to one of three
companies: MGS, Agallon, and Erechtheas. According to company accounts,
Staikou then chaired MGS and has previously been a director of the other
two.
In each case, the companies sold their properties to individuals
who then sold them on within days. In all, the three Sallas
family-connected companies declared a total of 4m euros for their
property sales. The new owners sold them for 2.05m, 2.65m and 4.7m euros
respectively.
The buyer in each case? Piraeus Bank.
The properties were sold at what would prove to be the height of
the property boom, according to Athens real estate experts, and the
price paid by Piraeus was close, if not a little above, what was then
the market price. "The bank would have lost money later when the price
of property fell, but I am not sure it was cheated at the time," said
one experienced agent, who advises the Bank of Greece.
Real-estate agents, lawyers, and officials said that the deals
could have been a complex attempt to buy properties indirectly from the
family-connected companies. Others suggested it was simply a legal tax
dodge.
One senior tax official explained that most property is typically
sold with part of the real price left undeclared and paid in cash. "The
problem is when you want to sell the property again, if you declare the
real price, then you are left with a huge capital gain to declare," he
said.
One solution, he said, was to make use of an individual who, in
return for a cut of profits, operated as a so-called "strawman" who
could buy on the grey market, paying both the declared price and an
extra portion in cash, and then selling on at the real price.
Piraeus would not comment on these three deals.
Stefanos Vasilakis, a public notary who said he helped draw up the
purchase contracts for all three sales for Piraeus, said the reasons
behind the complex arrangement "have to do with taxation".
"When a company sells a property, it has to pay capital gains tax,
which is the difference between the property bought and the property
sold. Maybe two sales would be more profitable than one because my
capital gains tax would be smaller," he said.
Another tax official said that, under laws that applied briefly in
2006, capital gains tax for such deals was much lower, explaining the
timing.
The businessmen who acted as intermediaries in two of the deals confirmed by email and phone that they took part.
The third case – the ground floor of an office block at 157 Michalakopoulou St in central Athens – is less straight forward.
MGS bought the property in 2003 for a declared total of 1.05m
euros. At the same time, Piraeus approved a loan to MGS of 2.4m euros,
secured on the property. MGS then got further cash from Piraeus by
renting the property back as a bank branch for a monthly sum of 11,454
euros, according to later sale documents.
When it eventually sold the property in April 2006, MGS declared
the sale price at 975,000 euros. According to the Athens real estate
agent, this was "an extremely low price for those times. About two
million euros would be a normal price."
The buyer listed in the sale documents was a Lebanese-born
businessman based in London called Philip Moufarrige. Nine days after
buying the building, Moufarrige sold it to Piraeus for 2.65m euros,
according to a contract in the land registry. A lawyer involved in the
case confirmed to Reuters he had represented Moufarrige in his absence.
Moufarrige, who lives in London, expressed bafflement when reached
for comment. The passport and family details recorded in the sales
documents were accurate, he said, but the London address the documents
listed was wrong.
"I have never owned property in Athens in my life," he said. "This was done without my knowledge." (Stephen
Grey, Reuters. Additional reporting by Nikolas Leontopoulos and
Karolina Tagaris in Athens and Yeganeh Torbati in London)
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Monday, 2 April 2012
Piraeus Bank chief's secret property deals
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