Tredefina
Treuhandverwaltung für das Deutsch-Niederländische Finanzabkommen GmbH (Tredefina) was a public law institution originally formed in 1920 by the Weimar Republic which during the Nazi occupation of Europe was used by CEO Alexander Kreuter to purchase Aryanized companies. Originally created to administer a revolving loan from the Netherlands of 140 million Dutch guilders, Tredefina remained active until the early 21st century.[1]
History
Founding and activities
After the end of World War I, the German economy faced, among other things, a considerable shortage of foreign currency, which hindered the urgently needed import of food and industrial raw materials.
Thereupon, the Treuhandverwaltung für das Deutsch-Niederländische Finanzabkommen GmbH (Trust Administration for the German-Dutch Financial Agreement) was founded with a share capital of 200,000 marks (50% of which was paid in) to administer the loan, with Kreuter as its head. The agreement then came into force towards the end of 1920 and was subsequently extended several times. Tredefina granted, against appropriate credit security through the assignment of goods as collateral or the pledging of capital assets such as ships, The loans usually ran for one year, with the possibility of a prolongation, and were to be repaid in effective guilders. Borrowers were obliged to always mark stocks of goods transferred as collateral for the loan and the rooms or places where they were kept with the designation "DNF". The loan was repaid in the first years of the Second World War, after the occupation of France.
World War II
During World War II, Tredefina was used by Kreuter, by then a member of the General SS and in the service of the Foreign Intelligence Service headed by Walter Schellenberg in Office VI of the Reich Security Main Office (RSHA) of the SS, to purchase Aryanized companies, that is taken over from Jewish owners. Tredefina first took control of the "Aryanized" French investment bank "Société Financière pour l'Étranger" (SFE), and renamed it "Société de Crédits et d'Investissements" (SCI). This bank was then used to buy up "Aryanized" shares in French companies with money from Tredefina, including the "Société de Crédits et d'Investissements" (SCI). These included the Société des Schistes Bitumineux d'Autun, which exploited oil shale near Autun, and the Galeries Lafayette department store chain.[3][4][5][6][7][8]
Postwar
The credit was renewed after World War II by a Dutch banking syndicate. Tredefina, now with branches in Düsseldorf and Munich, existed until the early 1970s.[9]
References
- ^ "Treuhandverwaltung für das Deutsch-Niederländische Finanzabkommen GmbH, Frankfurt - Firmenauskunft". www.firmenwissen.de. Retrieved 2021-10-17.
- ISBN 978-3-663-13799-3.
- OCLC 1263199348.
- ISBN 978-2-7381-2938-3.
- ^ Pamphlet - Dept. of the Army. War Department. c. 1940s.
- ISSN 0752-5702.
- ISBN 978-2-200-28891-4.
- ^ Trial of the Major War Criminals Before the International Military Tribunal, Nuremberg, 14 November 1945 - 1 October 1946. Vol. X. Nuremberg, Germany: International Military Tribunal. 1947.
- ^ "German-Dutch relations after the occupation: economic inevitability and political acceptance, 1945-1957" (PDF).
From 1948 onwards, discussions on the possibility of reactivating Tredefina surfaced occasionally, but without much result. Nevertheless, a new credit was given to Germany as part of the Dutch-German trade treaty of 18 January 1951, the so-called Tredefina III. It was issued so Germany could buy raw materials.
Literature
- Martijn Lak: Tot elkaar veroordeeld: de Nederlands-Duitse economische betrekkingen tussen 1945–1957. Uitgeverij Verloren, Hilversum 2015, ISBN 978-90-8704-547-0, S. 139–143: Een Nederlands krediet voor Duitsland?