(Reuters) - The governor of the Bank of Greece
was given a severance payment of 3.4 million euros when he left his
former employer, a major bank that he now regulates, documents seen by
Reuters show.
George Provopoulos was awarded
the sum when he stepped down as vice-chairman of Piraeus Bank to become
governor of Greece's central bank and a member of the board of the
European Central Bank in 2008. The scale of the pay-off, previously
unknown to most Greeks, is likely to prove controversial, amounting to
nearly 2.8 million euros ($3.6 million) after tax.
As
governor of the central bank, Provopoulos, now 62, has played a key
role in propping up Greece's banking system, which has received billions
of euros in liquidity from the ECB and is in line for up to 50 billion
euros of new capital from the bailout provided by euro zone countries and the International Monetary Fund.
The
Greek central bank has also faced criticism over the recent rescue of
the country's troubled state-run Agricultural Bank (ATE), which
left-wing Greek MPs described as the "robbery of the century." In that
deal the authorities decided to place ATE's non-performing loans into a
‘bad bank' and hand the rest of ATE to Piraeus.
The
Bank of Greece said Provopoulos faced no conflict of interest from his
severance deal and had fully informed the authorities of the payment.
When Reuters sent questions to Provopoulos, the Bank of Greece legal
department responded: "In compliance with the applicable Greek law,
Governor Provopoulos declared the severance payment to all pertinent tax
and judicial authorities."
In a
letter to Reuters, Dr Vassilios Kotsovilis, the bank's legal director,
added: "The severance payment, having been agreed upon at an earlier
time and under very different (pre-crisis) circumstances, was neither of
an arbitrary nature nor of an extra-ordinary nature."
Kotsovilis
said details of the payment were reported in "the press and blogs of
the period." However, Reuters was unable to find mention of the payment
despite extensive searches in both Greek and English.
Piraeus,
which is suing Reuters over a previous report about the bank, said in a
statement: "In view of legal proceedings... we consider it
inappropriate to comment in any detail."
It
added: "It goes without saying that Piraeus Bank has always fully
complied with the rules and regulations governing the Greek banking
sector."
BOARD APPROVAL
Provopoulos,
a former chief executive at Emporiki Bank, Greece's fifth largest bank,
joined Piraeus, the fourth largest, on October 18, 2006. As a
vice-chairman and managing director, he was entitled to a net salary of
580,000 euros, plus expenses and a bonus.
On
May 22, 2008 he resigned from Piraeus after 19 months service.
Documents seen by Reuters indicate that, on the day before he left the
bank, its directors approved a severance payment of 2,775,000 euros, in
addition to his pay of 325,704 euros for five months work that year.
The
Bank of Greece confirmed the severance payment was 3.46 million euros
before tax and was paid to Provopoulos that month. It amounted to more
than two million euros per year of service.
Almost
a year later the deal appeared in minutes of a Piraeus shareholder
meeting held on April 30, 2009, which sought retrospective approval for
the payment. Though such shareholder meetings are open to the press, the
payment appears to have passed unnoticed.
Louka Katseli, a former Greek Economy
Minister and now professor of Economics at the University of Athens,
was one of those unaware of the payment, despite being a prominent
opposition politician at the time. When told of the payment this week,
she said: "I had no prior knowledge of Mr. Provopoulos's severance."
George
Gougoulis, the president of ESETP, a staff union within Piraeus Bank,
was also unaware of the pay-off to Provopoulos. "We have repeatedly
asked the Bank to disclose to us information about the way top
executives and members of the Board are remunerated, for instance by
stock options, and they have always refused that," he said.
The
scale of Provopoulos' payment is notable when set against what minutes
of shareholder meetings record for payments to other directors who have
departed Piraeus. Another vice-chairman, Theodoros Pantalakis, was on a
similar level of remuneration at Piraeus to Provopoulos and left in
December 2009 after working for the bank since 2004. He was given a
pay-off of 470,000 euros, according to shareholder minutes, amounting to
less than 100,000 euros per year of service.
By comparison, Provopoulos' pay-off was three times his after-tax annual compensation, according to the Bank of Greece.
Pantalakis
told Reuters that any payments to him were "as recorded in minutes of
shareholder meetings." His severance payment may have been lower because
of the worsening credit crunch at the time of his departure. He said of
the payment to Provopoulos: "I don't find it peculiar, I don't have any
recollection that something was out of line."
Michalis
Colakides, another former vice chairman and deputy chief executive of
Piraeus, left the bank in 2007 after seven years of service. Piraeus
accounts record no severance pay for Colakides that year, though
Colakides told Reuters that he received a payment equal to two years
salary. He declined to comment further.
A
spokesman for Piraeus said: "The remuneration of Piraeus Bank's senior
management has been established and duly approved by all the relevant
corporate committees and bodies, in full compliance with all applicable
internal and external regulations and duly recorded as such in the
Bank's financial statement."
In
response to Reuters inquiries about Provopoulos' financial arrangements
with Piraeus, the Bank of Greece said that "detailed answers have been
given to the Greek parliament", and other relevant authorities.
The
issue arose in parliament in 2009 because rumors had been circulating
in banking and political circles about a large investment loss suffered
by Provopoulos a few months after he left Piraeus.
In
September 2007 he and other senior executives of Piraeus had taken out
loans from the bank to buy shares in a rights issue it was staging.
According to one former Piraeus manager, all senior figures at the bank
were asked to take part when the bank's then executive chairman, Michael
Sallas, announced he would raise 1.35 billion euros by issuing
approximately 67m new shares.
"Everyone
got a letter that said something like: ‘Here is your allocation of
shares. Your loan is pre-approved. Sign here!'" said the former manager.
Bank of Greece rules allow banks to finance
the participation of employees in rights issues. Piraeus declined to
comment on the rights issue and the loans because of legal proceedings
against Reuters.
In May, Piraeus
announced it was suing Reuters over an earlier report about the bank
renting properties owned by companies run by Sallas and his family. The
bank is claiming 50 million euros in damages. Reuters stands by the
accuracy of its report.
"AN IMPORTANT LOSS"
According
to stock exchange records, on September 17, 2007 Provopoulos bought
212,911 shares in Piraeus, having purchased the rights to participate in
the offer a week earlier. To cover the cost Provopoulos took a loan
from Piraeus for 5,024,812 euros, according to his own later
declarations.
He bought another 23,250 shares on December 28, 2007, under a share option scheme.
After
leaving Piraeus, Provopoulos held onto his shares for three months
while he was governor of the central bank overseeing the banking system.
He had informed legal advisers and been told that "the ownership of the
portfolio did not...influence in any way the legality of his duties",
his office later told parliament.
Provopoulos
sold the shares in October 2008 after the collapse of Lehmann Brothers
sent bank shares plunging. He realized 2,449,256 euros - far less than
his outstanding loan to Piraeus.
Speculation
about Provopoulos' debt to his former employer prompted Michael
Karhimakis, then a Pasok MP, to ask questions in the Greek parliament.
Provopoulos responded with a formal statement from the director of his
office.
It said he had suffered an
"important loss" on his Piraeus shares and repaid his loan to the bank
with the proceeds of the share sale plus a personal cheque for 2.1
million euros. The statement to parliament made no reference to the fact
that Provopoulos had been granted a severance payment of 3.4 million
euros by Piraeus.
There was no
legal obligation for Provopoulos to declare his severance payment in
parliament and the Bank of Greece said it was not mentioned "due to the
fact that the then-asking MP confined his questions to the sale of the
shares of Piraeus."
But Karhimakis,
the former Pasok MP, told Reuters that, in his opinion, Provopoulos had
a moral duty to disclose the payment and make clear his assets and
their source. "This is a period when transparency for public figures is
needed more than ever," he said.
Provopoulos'
salary as governor of the central bank is not published. But the Bank
of Greece told Reuters his salary is 50 per cent lower than it was when
he took office, after he had accepted two pay cuts during the country's
austerity drive. Provopoulos now receives an after-tax 'monthly' salary
of 7,615 euros paid, as for many Greek public officials, 14 times a
year, said the central bank.
In
August, Provopoulos defended Piraeus's takeover of ATE in the Greek
parliament. When lawmakers questioned him about Reuters reports
involving Sallas, Provopoulos was dismissive. He said the reports
referred "to isolated incidents, implications that are presented as
facts and selected parts of statements by experts and non-experts to
arrive at an arbitrary conclusion in my opinion - that the Greek banking
system is suffering from bad corporate governance and inadequate
regulation."
If this were true, Provopoulos said, "then today there would no banks left standing."
Reuters, 11/10/2012
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