Chaos ensues in the insolvency proceedings of Rene Benko’s property empire, as different segments of the expansive conglomerate resist coordinated restructuring efforts. The administrators for Signa’s overarching organization revealed on Monday the challenges posed by multiple administrators independently grappling with the largest insolvency in Austrian history.
Austrian law prohibits consolidating a conglomerate into a single insolvency process, placing its constituent parts under the jurisdiction of court-appointed custodians. Each part, with distinct sets of shareholders and creditors, finds itself in competition to safeguard its assets and interests within Benko’s former empire.
Investor attention centers on Signa’s Prime and Development units, the entities that acquired the properties amassed by Benko over two decades. Signa Holding, primarily serving an administrative role, possesses limited assets to appease creditors who have filed claims totaling €8.6 billion ($9.3 billion) — a staggering €3.5 billion more than initially estimated.
Despite significant efforts by Signa Holding’s insolvency administrator, the coordination among the insolvency administrators of the Signa Group proves elusive due to conflicting interests. A jointly commissioned expert opinion aims to clarify the reciprocal information obligations between Signa Development and Signa Prime.
Among the claims are €5.1 billion in guarantees and letters of support provided by Signa Holding, primarily backing loans taken by subsidiaries. An additional €1.6 billion is owed to other parts of the group, with less than 1% of total claims acknowledged by the administrator thus far.
Notably, Austrian tycoon Hans Peter Haselsteiner emerges as a financial supporter for Signa Development, while declining to inject funds into Signa Holding, where he holds a 15% stake. The management of Signa Prime and Development falls under the expertise of Erhard Grossnigg, a restructuring specialist and business partner of Haselsteiner.
Signa’s diverse shareholders include some of Europe’s wealthiest families, such as Klaus-Michael Kuehne and the Peugeot family. The group’s creditors extend to sovereign wealth funds, insurers, and banks, reflecting divergent interests.
The insolvency of Signa’s two German retail subsidiaries becomes an opportunity for rent reduction, emphasizing the liberation of stores from high rental burdens. Meanwhile, the holding company, abandoning attempts at self-administration of insolvency, engages Deloitte experts to formulate a medium-term financing plan and scrutinize business transactions in the year preceding the insolvency.