© Reuters. The company logo for Signature Bank is displayed at a location in Brooklyn, New York, U.S., March 20, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

(Reuters) – The U.S. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) set in motion the sale of an $18.5 billion loan portfolio from Signature Bank (OTC:) this week, a set of loans linked to major private equity and investing firms, Bloomberg News reported on Friday.

The portfolio comprises 201 performing capital-call loans tied to Starwood Capital Group, Carlyle Group (NASDAQ:), Blackstone (NYSE:), Thoma Bravo and Brookfield Asset Management, the report said, citing a person familiar with the matter.

The FDIC hired Newmark Group (NASDAQ:) in March to sell about $60 billion of Signature Bank’s loans, after state regulators decided to close down the failed lender amid a turmoil in regional banks earlier this year.

The FDIC did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The sale was launched on July 25 and is limited to FDIC-insured depository institutions, the report said, citing a notice by the regulator.

The notice reads that the loans for sale “consist of subscription credit facilities to private equity funds.”

Reuters

Source link

You May Also Like

Navy Federal More Rewards American Express Credit Card: Earn rewards on your everyday spending with this $0 annual fee card

Why we like this card: The Navy Federal More Rewards American Express…

Financial experts say we need to stop living in a ‘YOLO economy.’ They share 5 ways to rein in spending

It was also, well, expensive. I don’t regret the money I paid,…

Fashion retailer H&M’s profit tumbles more than expected as costs bite

HONG KONG, CHINA – 2021/08/07: Pedestrians cross the street in front of…

China Evergrande reports first-half loss of $4.5 billion ahead of creditors meetings and resumed stock trading

China Evergrande Group is poised to resume stock trading on Monday, ending a 17-month halt,…