Siemens Financial Services

Siemens Financial Services GmbH
Gesellschaft mit beschränkter Haftung
Traded as FWB: SIE, NYSE: SI
Founded 1997 in Munich
Headquarters Munich, Germany
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Roland W. Chalons-Browne (CEO), Dr. Peter Moritz (CFO),
Products Equipment financing & leasing, vendor finance, asset-based lending, private equity, project and equity participations, project and export financing, industrial insurance solutions, private finance solutions, asset management, treasury solutions, structured financing, banking
Services Business services, financing
Number of employees
2,600
Parent Siemens
Website finance.siemens.com

Siemens Financial Services GmbH is a subsidiary of Siemens. The company’s global headquarters is in Munich, Germany. The Financial Services division of Siemens (SFS) offers international financing solutions in the business-to-business area. Financial Services serves Siemens as well as other companies – primarily in the energy, industry, healthcare and infrastructure & cities markets. The division finances infrastructure, equipment as well as working capital investments, and acts as a manager of financial risks within Siemens AG. The network of financing companies coordinated by Siemens Financial Services GmbH in Munich comprises about 2,600 employees worldwide.[1]

History

The Siemens Group first bundled its financial activities into an organizational unit in October 1997. In addition to developing the financial business, the main focus at the time was to increase transparency for investors – by creating a separate financing balance sheet. Since 1999, Siemens Financial Services has been the center of expertise for financial services and the provider of financial risk management for Siemens in the market for business-to-business financial solutions.

From the very start, SFS’ responsibility included Siemens’ leasing and alternative forms of asset and equipment financing as well as project financing and equity participations. SFS was also put in charge of Siemens’ treasury and payment-transaction solutions as well as of the financial management of pension assets. In 2000, these responsibilities were expanded to include Siemens’ insurance operations – and later its venture capital activities.

In addition to the expansion of business operations, SFS’ international presence has grown (including the acquisition of Schroder Leasing in Great Britain in 2000).

In recent years, expansion has taken place not only in the established European and North American markets, but also increasingly in emerging markets. In March 2005, Siemens Financial Services established its own leasing company in China, Siemens Finance and Leasing Ltd. (SFLL) with headquarters in Beijing. At the start of 2011, Russia’s Federal Antimonopoly Services approved the acquisition of ZAO DeltaLeasing, a provider of equipment financing in Russia. On October 1, 2011, DeltaLeasing was renamed OOO Siemens Finance.[2]

In June 2011, Siemens Financial Services Private Limited was established in India[3] and was granted its non-banking finance license (NBFC license) from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI).[4] Since then, the subsidiary has been providing financing solutions for Siemens’ customers in India.

At the end of 2010, Siemens Financial Services received its banking license[5] in Germany from the German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority. Siemens Bank GmbH adds loans and guarantees to the SFS product portfolio particularly in the sales-financing area.

Executive management

Business units

Siemens Financial Services (SFS) has eight Business Units:

Global reach

As a worldwide financial services provider in the business-to-business area, SFS has an international network of financing companies at its disposal (as of Sept. 30, 2011).

Research

The company provides research covering aspects of finance. Research reports written over the past four years include:

2011 2010 2009 2008
The Affordable Metropolis[6] Energy down, momentum up 2010 Riding the Storm – A study on the current financing situation Counting the Cost - analyzing the real impact of the international financial crisis on relationship banking for European business
Investment in Focus Navigating uncertain waters Maintaining the green momentum – A study of European private sector investment in green equipment and technologies Putting Capital to Work - A study of private sector working capital in Europe and the United States
Medical Equipment and Frozen Capital Energy Efficiency - Trends, Investment Challenges & Financing Solutions
Productivity – Providing answers to a dynamic global market
Integrated Healthcare – Challenges in the medical sector

Further reading

References

  1. Siemens AG (2011). "Siemens AG Annual Report 2011" (PDF). Siemens AG. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  2. "Delta Leasing adopts Siemens name - Next phase of ambitious growth plans". Finanzen.net. 2011. Retrieved October 2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. "Siemens sets up financial services arm in India". The Financial. 2011. Retrieved 16 March 2011.
  4. "Siemens granted non banking finance license in India". APN News. 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2011.
  5. "Siemens will expand financing opportunities for its customers with its own bank". The Financial. 2010. Retrieved 7 December 2010.
  6. "The affordable Metropolis". finance.siemens.com. 2011. Retrieved May 2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
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