Bank’s European subsidiaries faced ‘abnormal cash outflows’, so it could no longer supply them with liquidity

Sberbank, Russia’s biggest lender, is pulling out of the European market, after it said it faced large outflows of cash in the region, as well as threats to the safety of its employees and branches.

The bank said in a statement that its European subsidiaries had faced “abnormal cash outflows”, meaning it could no longer supply them with liquidity. However, Sberbank said it had sufficient capital to be able to make payments to all of its depositors.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

World Bank ‘missed vital opportunities’ to support Covid response, says Oxfam

Millions forced to do without or pay for services as funding fails…

Greater Manchester police admit footage of officer dragging homeless man is ‘unacceptable’

Video shot near town hall shows officer deliberately stepping on man’s stomach…

Xi’s trip to Moscow didn’t impress the west – but his most important audience is at home

The official narrative in China is that the US responds to problems…

One weekend, six events, one very frazzled journalist: my gruelling tour of UK festivals

As the season of live music returns, bands and DJs are trekking…