19 Aug 2009

Banks need to be protected from themselves

The farcial comedy surrounding the attempted takeover of Continental by Schaeffler proves that the old saying is correct: the more you owe the banks the more you can dictate to them. The banks should never have agreed to advance billions of Euros to support Schaeffler's attempt to gain control of Continental AG in the first place. Even in times or normal credit markets the leverage ratio was just too high and made no allowance for a deterioration of the economy and/or markets. Lending cannot just be done on the basis of assuming the best of all worlds. As the upside is limited in any credit exposure (to par value) lenders have to build in worst-case scenarios and err on the pessimistic side. Regulators must assure that banks are conservative in their lending practices and should limit loans to prudent ratios in relation to the equity capital available to creditors.

Bank rescues distort competition - BIS Study

The unprecedented support for the banking system has so far cost the 11 leading economies about Euro 2 billion in subsidies and/or state support/guarantees according to a new study published by the Bank for International Settlements.

17 Aug 2009

Banking Pay - a better solution

Politicians and Media Pundits in several countries are currently discussing ways to control pay in the banking industry. Discriminatory laws aimed at the industry will only lead to more and more detailed interference in the market and create all sorts of counterproductive distortions (The Cuban Economic Model as final destination). A much more effective - and simpler - solution would be to focus on implementing much-needed banking reform. Controls on balance sheet risk and exposures would do much to prevent a future bank crisis and also limit the fallout if a bank fails - as has to be allowed to happen in a free enterprise system. A side-effect would be that commercial banking would become less profitable and this would automatically limit 'excessive' compensation of banking executives.

13 Aug 2009

Hell-bent on destruction

The self-servicing top tax court in the UK (ominousely called 'Special Commissioners') has just issued an order to the foreign banks located in the country to hand over details of accounts held by British citizens in their foreign branches or other operations. Apart from the question whether these foreign operations are legally entitled to pass on any information we wonder what this threat (and we expect protracted legal wrangeling) will do to damage the standing of the City of London as a financial centre. The endlessly growing power of politicians over the life of citizens used to stop at the border of the respective country, now we seem to move into the era of 'Ueber' Socialism - at least in some countries. Given that taxes on individuals and companies are comparatively less attractive in the UK than in the past we expect the relative standing of the UK's financial markets to decline. The tipping point is still far away but it is getting nearer with every ill-considered move by the politicians and their appointees.

7 Aug 2009

To split or not to split?

One of the many possible remedies for the banking crisis is the separation of traditional banking (lending and deposit taking) from investment banking, in particular trading for the bank's own account. While the industry naturally is against Glass-Steagall Mark II there might be a half-way solution in that the large 'universal' banks are allowed to keep their investment banking activities but only if they are held in a completely separate legal entity that has its own funding, risk management etc. In case of failure of the investment bank the traditional banking unit would effectively be ring-fenced.

6 Aug 2009

Better Regulation for Banks

A sensible article by Katsunori Nagayasu, President of Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UJF, encourages my view that the solution to the recurring banking problems is the application of simple and common-sense regulations. Funding should be matched with deposits as should be maturities on both sides of the balance sheet. Loan values must be conservative - no more 100% mortgages for homebuyers or property speculators. People who have to review the application of these rules don't need a PhD in advanced mathematics, they might not even need more than common sense and a solid grounding in the three R's. The question of excessive remuneration of banking executives would also take care of itself as the banking industry would have solid but more subdued earnings.

5 Aug 2009

Figuring our Goldman

While working at GS quite a few years ago I used to joke and say that we were ahead of the competition for a simple reason: we were the one-eyed man among blind men. Nothing has changed and it is amazing that all the smart people in the competing firms and the media have not yet figured out the simple ingredients in Goldman’s recipe for success - after 25+ years!

3 Aug 2009

UK probes structured-finance products

'The U.K. is probing sales of structured products amid concern that bankers may have knowingly sold complex assets based on flawed valuations' (Wall Street Journal, 3 Aug 2009).
This shows why regulators often remind us of the Keystone Cops. They should be aware that anything you sell is 'worth' less than what you sell it for, for example - how much is a Rolex 'worth' (adding up the raw materials etc). So this inquiry is posturing more than sound analysis. Buyer beware is still the best deterrent and the effort to protect all consumers, investors etc is just relieving those doing the buying of their responsiblity to conduct due diligence

31 Jul 2009

Stolen Goods and Northern Rock

When a City Commentator states that the tripartite system of regulation in the UK 'undoubtedly contributed to the collapse of Northern Rock' (Daily Telegraph, 31 July 2009)one has to wonder why a 'powerful' committee of MPs wants to grant more powers to a failed regulator such as the FSA. All bureaucracies have an inbuilt incentive to increase their powers. Some people just want to boss around other people while other people want to enjoy harvesting the fruit of labor performed by others. Politicians and regulators combine these bad character traits in a toxic mix that pervades all their actions. As Richard Fletcher suggests in his comment 'allowing the FSA free rein to expand...could also endanger London's position as one of the leading financial capitals in the world'.

1 Jul 2009

Fantasy World of Eurocrats

We challenge anyone to get a clear answer from Neelie Kroes with respect to the rules that are applied when she and her lightweight team decree what Banks and Governments are expected to do in order to conform to their whimsical ideas of a competitive banking market. Anyone can see that her department employs two drivers for the occasional excursion into Euroland. This is a nice human touch as it shows that all staff are equal but the sad thing is that most of the other staff look like fresh out from university and utterly unqualified to decide the fate of Europe's banks (and economies). In what fantasy world do these Eurocrats live when they think that major banks can shrink dramatically while the economies are still on the tipping point to a prolonged recession? Try to get a curriculum vitae for all the staff listed on Kroes' website if you can. We did not have much luck doing just that.