But with Greensill’s supply chain finance business crumbling,the question is what that means for Gupta. By Wednesday,there were already signs of stress.Germany’s financial watchdog said it closed Greensill Bank after finding irregularities in how the lender booked assets tied to Gupta. Also,the Bank of England asked GFG’s Wyelands Bank to pay back retail depositors,prompting a fresh cash injection of £75 million ($135 million) from its shareholder.
The BoE took the step due to concerns with Wyelands’ business model and its exposure to the rest of the alliance,according to a person familiar with the matter,who asked not to be identified discussing private information. In a statement on Wednesday,Gupta said that the bank was recapitalised following turmoil caused by Brexit and the pandemic,and that it planned to focus on “business advisory and connected finance” going forward.
GFG has never published a consolidated set of accounts,making its financing near-impossible to track. In October,Gupta told Bloomberg that Greensill was its biggest lender and that while it planned to diversify funding,the relationship with the financier would likely go from strength to strength.
“We’re very proud of our relationship with Greensill,” Gupta said at the time.
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The turmoil surrounding Greensill comes as Gupta’s businesses should be in a position to benefit from rallying commodities markets. Steel and aluminum prices have soared since the nadir of the COVID-19 pandemic on rebounding Chinese demand and bets that vaccine roll-outs will help drive a global economic recovery.
A spokesperson for GFG said the group has “adequate current funds” and that plans to secure new financing were progressing well. They also said GFG has benefited from the recovery in steel and aluminum markets and that its businesses were running near full capacity.