OREANDA-NEWS. July 30, 2009. The EBRD and Societe Generale are teaming up to boost lending to the real economies of eastern Europe, in a direct response to the impact of the global economic crisis, reported the press-centre of EBRD.

The EBRD is planning to make investments of around EUR400 million via loans to several eastern European subsidiaries of the French banking group, which is particularly active in that region.

The EBRD investment is part of a joint pledge by the EBRD, the World Bank Group and the European Investment Bank (EIB) to provide over EUR 24 billion in support of the banking sectors in the region and to fund lending to businesses hit by the global crisis.

The joint IFI Action Plan acknowledges that IFIs, central banks and parent banks are the only new sources of funding to eastern European financial institutions at this time of crisis. Societe Generale has made clear its commitment to the region.

The majority of the EBRD funding to the subsidiaries is for SME lending with the main aim of supporting this sector via loans to Societe Generale units that are of systemic importance in their countries and which have SME sector expertise.

“Societe Generale is a long-standing partner of the EBRD with a strong commitment to eastern Europe. We are working together to make sure there is a continued flow of lending to the economies of the EBRD region at this time of continued crisis,” said EBRD President Thomas Mirow.

"This joint initiative, which highlights the long-standing relationship between EBRD and Societe Generale Group, will help address the current challenges faced by economies in Central and Eastern Europe, as it will increase Societe Generale's capacity to serve and accompany its clients in the region," said Frederic Oudea, Chairman and CEO of Societe Generale.

In addition to the new funding provided under the Joint IFI Action Plan, the initiative has been a platform for a broad response to the crisis in eastern Europe involving the IFIs, the European Commission, home and host country regulators as well as the major western banking groups active in eastern Europe.

Its aim has been to mount a collective response to the crisis that keeps the immediate flow of credits running to eastern European economies but also lays the ground for continued engagement in the region by the major banking groups.

The EBRD expects to invest a total of over EUR 3 billion in support of the financial sector this year, focused on systemically important financial institutions and including other joint initiatives with major banking groups active in the region.

Societe Generale is one of the largest financial services groups in the euro-zone. The Group employs 163,000 people worldwide in three key businesses:

Retail Banking & Financial Services: Societe Generale serves more than 30 million individual customers worldwide.

Global Investment Management & Services: Societe Generale is one of the largest banks in the euro-zone in terms of assets under custody (EUR 2 762 billion, March 2009) and under management (EUR 332 billion, March 2009).

Corporate & Investment Banking: Societe Generale tailors solutions for its clients across sectors by capitalising on its worldwide expertise in investment banking, global finance, and global markets.

Societe Generale is included in 3 socially-responsible investment indexes: FTSE4Good, ASPI and Ethibel.

www.societegenerale.com