How BCR dodged the bullet
December 20th 2005, 19:13. Sebastian VlÄdescu, the then finance minister, announces the result of the biggest privatisation in Romanian history: Austrian group Erste bought the biggest local bank BCR beating Portugal's Millennium BCP by a whisker, in a transaction worth 3.75 billion euros. For both groups BCR is "the deal of a lifetime", but an operation that required significant resources, even above their normal powers, considering that the difference between Austria and Portugal versus Romania is not that great in terms of size of the economy.
What would have happened to the BCR had the Portuguese been the winners of the privatisation auction? Would BCR not have been on the ropes had its main shareholder not been able to support it any more? Who would have "rescued" whom now - Millennium BCR or BCR Millennium? Erste itself worked its way through the crisis with the help of the Austrian state, which injected 1.2 billion euros in it in early 2009 and guaranteed bonds issued by the bank. The vast majority of the international financial groups that own banks in Romania were "rescued" during the crisis by their own states, who pumped billions of euros into them to keep them from being engulfed in the whirlwind of the crisis. The Greek and the Portuguese at Millennium, who after losing BCR decided to invest over 300 million euros to start greenfield projects, now hold 16%-17% of the assets of the Romanian banking system, with problems in their own countries making it much more difficult to fund Romanian operations through loans.