M. M. Warburg & Co.

Last updated
M.M.Warburg & CO (AG & Co.) KGaA
TypeLimited partnership with share capital (KGaA)
IndustryFinancial service activities, except insurance and pension funding  OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
Founded1798;225 years ago (1798)
HeadquartersFerdinandstraße 75
20095 Hamburg, Germany
Key people
  • Joachim Olearius (Spokesman, Partner)
  • Henneke Lütgerath (Partner)
  • Eckhard Fiene (Partner)
  • Peter Rentrop-Schmid (Partner)
Products Private Banking
Asset Management
Investment Banking
Number of employees
1,201
(Warburg Banking Group)
Website www.mmwarburg.com OOjs UI icon edit-ltr-progressive.svg
M.M.Warburg & CO headquarters in Altstadt's Ferdinandstrasse Bankhaus Warburg an der Ecke Ferdinandstrasse zum Alstertor in Hamburg-Altstadt.jpg
M.M.Warburg & CO headquarters in Altstadt's Ferdinandstraße

M.M.Warburg & CO (AG & Co.) KGaA is a German private bank, based in Hamburg. A family-owned bank, it was founded in 1798 by brothers Moses Marcus Warburg and Gerson Warburg, two members of the Warburg family. The bank was Aryanized under the Nazis. The Warburg family still owns the bank, continuing a more than 200-year legacy of private ownership.

Contents

History

Nazi era

When the Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933, Jews were persecuted, and their property began being transferred to non-Jews. In 1938, the Nazis arrested Fritz Moritz Warburg, former head of M. M. Warburg Co. and younger brother of Paul Warburg and Felix M. Warburg. [1] After being held for several months, he was released and went to Stockholm, eventually becoming a Swedish citizen. [2] The bank was Aryanized but its name remained unchanged. [3] It was transformed from a family firm to a limited company, and new managers were brought in, notably Rudolf Brinckmann and Paul Wirtz. [4]

Siegmund Warburg emigrated from Nazi Germany in 1934 and founded S. G. Warburg & Co. in London in 1946. [5]

Postwar

The bank rose to become one of the most powerful investment banks in the City during the 60s, 70s, and 80s and Warburg himself one of London's most preeminent and influential financiers of the era. The London subsidiary was sold to Swiss Bank Corporation in 1995 and is today a part of UBS. Some descendants immigrated to the United States, for business reasons and to escape the persecution, and established themselves there. They include banker Paul Warburg and his nephew Eric M. Warburg, founder of Warburg Pincus.

Recent acquisitions

During recent years, the bank has grown through many acquisitions. It bought several German private banks such as Marcard, Stein & Co. in Hamburg, Carl F. Plump & CO AG in Bremen, Bankhaus Hallbaum AG in Hannover and Bankhaus Löbbecke in Berlin. Furthermore, there are the foreign subsidiaries M. M. Warburg Bank (Switzerland) AG and M. M. Warburg & CO Luxembourg S.A., as well as various mutual funds. Since 2009 the Schwäbische Bank AG in Stuttgart has been part of the Warburg Banking Group. In 2016 the former subsidiary banks Bankhaus Hallbaum, Bankhaus Löbbecke, Bankhaus Carl F. Plump & CO and Schwäbische Bank were amalgamated with M.M.Warburg & CO.

The bank's headquarters are located at Ferdinandstraße 75 in Hamburg, with additional offices in Frankfurt, Berlin, Munich and Cologne. The bank also maintains several offices in Zurich and Luxembourg.

Today, M.M.Warburg & CO's core business is in private banking, asset management, and investment banking, serving private, corporate and institutional clients.

Cum-Ex scandal

The bank has been implicated in the Cum-Ex scandal, accused of defrauding taxpayers in excess of over 50 million euro. [6] One of the leading players in cum-ex transactions, Hanno Berger, advised M.M.Warburg & CO, or the two main shareholders at the time, the chairman of the supervisory board Christian Olearius and his deputy, Max Warburg, on cum-ex transactions. According to a Spiegel report published in March 2021, Warburg paid 17.5 million euros to Hanno Berger and Benjamin Frey for advice on cum-ex deals. Warburg wired the money to Sarasin Bank, which routed it to an offshore firm owned by Berger and Frey in the British Virgin Islands. [7]

On January 12, 2022, the former managing director of a Warburg subsidiary in Luxembourg surprisingly confessed during a trial before the Bonn Regional Court ('third cum-ex criminal trial'). He is regarded as the Warburg Group's first confessed cum-ex actor.

The lawyer Gerhard Strate filed a complaint against Olaf Scholz and Peter Tschentscher in February 2022. The then mayor and now federal chancellor Scholz and the then finance senator and now mayor Tschentscher are accused of taking 47 million euros from M.M. Warburg & Co. not to have reclaimed. The sum had been reimbursed to the bank by the tax office in connection with cum-ex transactions. Strate accuses the politicians of aiding and abetting tax evasion. [8]

Literature

See also

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References

  1. TIMES, Wireless to THE NEW YORK (1938-11-15). "DR. FRITZ WARBURG IS SEIZED BY NAZIS; Banker Among Those Reported Held as Hostages--He Has Been a Welfare Leader ARREST CONFIRMED HERE Others, Rounded Up include Jewish War Veterans' Head and Palestine Office Chief Warburg's Arrest Confirmed Here". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  2. "Fritz M. Warburg of Banking House; Last of 5 Brothers in Noted German Family Is Dead". New York Times. October 15, 1964.
  3. ""aryanized" Warburg Bank Takes over Goldschmidt Firm in Hamburg". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Retrieved 2023-02-02. The M.M. Warburg & Co., 141-year old private banking house in Hamburg, Germany, which was recently "Aryanized," but is continuing under its old name, has taken over the business of the Hamburg Jewish banking house, J. Goldschmidt & Sons, it was learned here today.
  4. Bajohr, Frank. "The Beneficiaries of "Aryanization": Hamburg as a Case Study" (PDF).
  5. Times, Special to the New York (1982-10-20). "SIR SIGMUND WARBURG 80, DIES; LED TRANSITION IN LONDON BANKING". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2023-02-02.
  6. dpa: Warburg-Bank weist Vorwürfe zu Cum-Ex-Geschäften zurück. Süddeutsche Zeitung, 16. Januar 2018.
  7. Hollenstein, Oliver; Schröm, Oliver (2021-03-26). "(S+) Steuerexperte und Anwalt Hanno Berger: Der Mann hinter der Cum-Ex-Masche". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2022-02-22.
  8. Latsch, Gunther; Siemens, Ansgar (2022-02-17). "Cum-ex-Affäre um Warburg Bank: Strafanzeige gegen Olaf Scholz und Peter Tschentscher". Der Spiegel (in German). ISSN   2195-1349 . Retrieved 2022-02-22.