How will regulation reshape the banking system? Yasmine de Bray 11/05/2012 Summary 01 New regulation is putting pressure on the size of the banking system… 02 …but the risk of an abrupt shrinkage has more to do with the current sovereign crisis 03 Regulation should be instrumental in avoiding future liquidity crisis but should not overshoot How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 2 1/ New regulation is putting pressure on the size of the banking system Regulators require banks to hold more capital – The switch from Basel 2 to Basel 3 is reducing the average common equity ratio of the top 100 global banks by 3% points from 10.2% at June-end 2012 to 7.1% as per the latest QIS published by the Basel Committee on April 12th. – In practice, European regulators are requesting their domestic banks to hold common equity ratios of at least 9%. More than €500bn has been raised so far in Europe: 55% of which has been provided by governments and 45% by private investors. European banks’ core tier 1 ratios have improved from 6.5% in 2008 to 10% in 2011. Country (€ bn) Source of capital Form of capital raising Private State Total Ords / MCN Other Total Austria Benelux France Germany Greece / Cyprus Italy Ireland Spain 2,3 0,0 26,7 24,1 7,1 25,5 1,8 31,7 5,9 15,4 16,5 38,2 3,8 4,1 71,1 27,5 8,2 15,4 43,2 62,4 10,9 29,6 72,8 59,2 3,9 6,0 24,2 44,4 6,8 21,7 69,8 54,5 4,3 9,4 19,0 17,9 4,2 7,9 3,0 4,7 8,2 15,4 43,2 62,4 10,9 29,6 72,8 59,2 Portugal Nordics Switzerland UK Eurozone 3,8 10,4 25,6 76,8 123 13,0 4,2 3,9 82,3 195 16,8 14,6 29,5 159,2 318 4,8 11,1 26,0 149,4 236 12,0 3,5 3,6 9,8 82 16,8 14,6 29,5 159,2 318 39% 61% 100% 74% 26% 100% 113 90 203 186 17 203 56% 44% 100% 92% 8% 100% as % Non-Eurozone as % Total as % 236 286 522 423 99 522 45% 55% 100% 80% 20% 100% Source: Goldman Sachs Ability to raise further capital is limited given governments’ over-indebtedness and the lack of investors’ appetite for bank stocks due to poor risk-adjusted returns (cf Unicredit’s difficult capital increase in early January which required a 40% discount to TERP). The other way for banks to release capital is to reduce their balance sheets… How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 3 1/ New regulation is putting pressure on the size of the banking system Regulation is to structurally reduce the size of the senior debt market: Regulation is likely to reduce the velocity of money – Growing scrutiny on re-hypothecation. – Higher risk weights for credit exposure to large regulated banks (>100bn asset). We estimate the total deleveraging effort to be close to €1.3 trillion of assets (5.7% of total assets) over the next 3 years for European listed banks, which could release €50bn of capital. – Under the IMF base-case scenario for a sample of 58 large EU banks, the reduction of bank assets would be €1.6bn over the next two years, €2.5bn under their worst-case scenario. This should help close an estimated capital shortfall of around €80bn in Europe and help manage down the stock of senior debt funding (€730bn maturities in 2012-2014). 19 000 Lending CEE Greece / Ireland Total deleverage % of total assets Lending as a % of deleveraging plan 61 500 7 000 87 500 9% 78% ISP Medio 15 700 3 600 5 000 20 700 3 600 3% 6% 100% 100% BMPS 16 000 16 000 7% 100% BP 18 894 18 894 14% 100% UBI 7 000 7 000 5% 100% PMI 500 500 1% 100% 40 000 163 194 34 300 47 000 10 000 12 000 2 053 406 60 91 300 7 545 2 520 5 400 5 710 9 800 40 000 194 194 38 603 70 206 34 044 27 700 170 554 29 045 2% 5% 3% 4% 2% 6% 3% 10% 100% 90% 94% 68% 30% 0% 55% 45% 7 545 19 962 14 678 5 256 6 810 7 069 3 177 5 678 4 180 60 000 126 809 216 624 5 400 9 800 25 981 - 216 624 25 981 - 29 045 19 962 14 678 5 256 6 810 7 069 3 177 5 678 4 180 60 000 126 809 257 769 24 333 282 102 55 168 53 508 108 676 151 220 108 171 20 122 63 846 343 358 36 000 16 800 52 800 8 524 19 517 28 041 1 335 580 100% 4% 2% 3% 2% 5% 7% 3% 9% 6% 6% 5% 37% 1% 9% 5% 6% 5% 8% 9% 1% 3% 5% 23% 13% 19% 4% 14% 8% 5,7% Other Italy Soc Gen BNP CASA Natixis France KBC ING Benelux SAN BBVA Caixa Pop BTO SAB BKT BCIV Other Spain CBK Deutsche Germany UBS CS Switz RBS Lloy Barc HSBC UK BOI AIB Ireland Erste RI Austria Total % of Total 19 000 2000 22800 11524 19300 55 624 6 300 0 0 7 000 8 400 15 400 6 300 - 15 164 15 164 22 648 5 405 28 053 12 195 28 049 20 122 60 000 120 366 1 385 12 800 14 185 258 691 19% - 24 333 24 333 32 520 48 103 80 623 85 366 85 366 3 360 3 360 209 082 16% 48 171 70 976 - 119 146 36 000 13 440 49 440 - 774 059 58% 7 140 6 717 13 857 59 757 4% 250 5 460 5 488 9 146 3 846 18 480 - 33 990 3% 1 – Term senior unsecured debt would become more “capital” than “funding” in nature, and would become more expensive. This could lead to a structural reduction in banks’ unsecured debt funding reliance, only partially offset by growing covered bond issuance. Legacy assets UCG CIB/ markets 1bp 1,2 1bp 1 1bp 0,8 1 1bp 0,6 0,4 0bp 0,2 0bp 0 0bp 0 45% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100% 94% 0% 86% 0% 0% 0% 32% 66% 0% 0% 35% 100% 80% 94% 84% 34% 49% 62% 1 – The European commission recently issued a consultation paper suggesting that regulators should be able to impose losses on bank creditors before the bank become insolvent potentially based on a trigger mechanism. The key is whether it will be a low or high trigger. Assets/loans 0,5 1 1,5 Source: Amundi, Morgan Stanley How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 4 2/ New regulation is putting pressure on the size of CIB activities The deleveraging effort is focusing on corporate and investment banking – European banks announced risk-weighted asset reduction plans of €700bn since 2009 in their CIB business, 37% of which has been completed so far. – 35% of the remaining deleveraging efforts will focus on CIB activities. – CIB activities can be downsized faster. – CIB is very competitive and will become less profitable under Basel 3 (CVA, greater capital requirement for market risks etc..). – Example of explicit regulatory/political pressure: RBS requested to specifically downsize its investment bank. EUR bn UBS CS Deutsche Bank CASA BNP Soc Gen Natixis RBS TOTAL RWA Reduction done so far 14 38 30 36 26 16 3 94 257 % Target 18% 48% 25% 120% 58% 40% 30% 32% 37% RWA Reduction Target 78 80 120 30 45 40 10 292 694 Regulation will lead to a polarisation in the investment banking industry – Scale will be a competitive advantage given the sector’s high operational leverage (elevated fixed cost base) – Heavy technological investments will be required, with the FICC business likely to move to electronic platform trading business. How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 5 3/ New regulation is putting pressure on cross-border lending Regulators are increasingly requesting liquidity to be ring-fenced – The UK independent commission for banking (“ICB”) is requesting the UK ring-fenced entity to be subject to minimum liquidity ratios on its own – The Austrian regulator recommended that Austrian banks’ foreign subsidiaries do not issue new loans in excess of 110% of available local funding. – Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria particularly at risk. Foreign subsidiaries’ compliance with the Basel 3 NSFR will also put pressure on intra-group funding and lending growth given the yet limited size of local debt capital markets. CEE countries will be most impacted… Sector loan-to-deposits (LHS) Reduction in credit supply by European banks under the three IMF deleveraging scenarios (in % of total bank credit) CZ SLK SA 0% TR 0% RU 25% PL 50% BG 50% RO 100% HU 75% SRB 150% SLO 100% UKR 200% Assets controlled by European banks (RHS) Basel 3 creates a capital shortage: banks will seek to better optimize capital utilization by favouring multiproduct relationships over lending-only relationships, which tend to favour domestic clients. – Banks will however not stop funding their core clients’ off-shore projects. How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 6 4/ Basel 3 will reduce the amount of stable funding to the economy Banks will favour short-term lending over long-term lending to meet Basel 3 liquidity ratio. Banks will seek to gain large corporate (investment-grade) exposures through corporate bonds rather than lending. Asset Cash Short-term unsecured <1Y Repos Sovereign Corporate bonds AA+, >1Y Corporate bonds ACorporate lending <1Y Retail loans <1Y Mortgages All other assets Credit facilities Asset weighting as per first draft 0% 0% 0% 5% 20% 50% 50% 85% 100% 100% 10% New weighting Liability weighting as per first draft All other liabilities 0% Wholesale funding 1Y50% Retail and SME deposits 70-85% Wholesale funding 1Y+ 100% Tier 1 & Tier 2 capital 100% Liability New weighting 80-90% 65% 5% Sources of corporate debt Corporate balance sheets might be weakened (reduced availability of long-term funding for SMEs and greater reliance on volatile market funding for large corporates). 100% This is already visible in the ECB banking surveys: “Some further tightening is expected to affect large firms (8%) rather than SMEs (2%), as well as primarily long-term loans”, April 2012. 50% 90% Borrowed from banks 80% 70% Obtained directly from the bond market 60% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% US Corporates US All Incorporations UK Eurozone Europe How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 7 Domestic credit will also be impacted Smaller investment banking and international, activities, together with growing disintermediation for corporate funding will help reduce the size of the European banking system… 900% Banking system assets as a % of GDP Loan to deposit ratios by region 800% 700% 120% 600% 110% Europe LDR 2011 500% With a European sized corporate bond market 400% 300% Adding Mortgages held in GSEs 200% 90% 80% South Africa Canada Norway US Australia Italy Sweden Belgium Germany Austria Spain Netherlands France 60% Denmark 0% Switzerland 70% UK 100% Ireland Other regions 100% EUROPE LatAm Europe- with a US sized corporate bond market Africa US Asia ex Japan Japan Source: Barclays How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 8 Domestic credit will also be impacted But closing the customer gap will still be needed through: 1. Re-intermediation of off-balance sheet assets, although this could be partially crowed out by State borrowing – Italian banks selling their own retail bonds and term deposits instead of third-party bonds. Introduction of a more favorable fiscal regime for government bonds vs. other savings products. – French banks trying to repatriate savings on balance-sheets: €bn 60 50 40 2009 30 2010 2011 20 10 0 Net inflows (life insurance) Net inflows (on-balance sheet savings products) Source: OEE 2. And real lending deleveraging efforts : – Key risk to growth is tightening conditions for investment loans. Dotted lines show the IMF’s three deleveraging scenarios How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 9 Domestic credit will also be impacted 2. And real lending deleveraging efforts : – Key risk to growth is tightening conditions for investment loans. Source: IMF Dotted lines show the IMF’s three deleveraging scenarios How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 10 Summary 01 New regulation is putting pressure on the size of the banking system… 02 …but the risk of an abrupt shrinkage has more to do with the current sovereign crisis 03 Regulation should be instrumental in avoiding future liquidity crisis but should not overshoot How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 11 But what is at stake is the risk of an abrupt credit crunch The current risk of credit crunch has more to do with the current crisis. Net % of banks contributing to tightening their credit standards, ECB Credit standards have tightened in H1 2012 with the worsening of the sovereign crisis. Recent relief in Q1 is due the easing of banks and governments’ funding access in the wake of the two LTROs (Dec and Feb). How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 12 But what is at stake is the risk of an abrupt credit crunch Credit tightening has more to do with sovereign-related liquidity and capital issues rather than regulations. – Credit conditions for corporates: a net 87.5% of Italian banks reported tighter standards in Q4 vs 35% of European banks in the Q4 2011 ECB survey (25% vs. 9% respectively in the Q1 2012 survey) – Credit conditions for households: a net 87.5% of Italian banks reported tighter standards in Q4 vs 29% of European banks in the Q4 2011 ECB survey (37.5% vs. 17% respectively in the Q1 2012 survey) Difficult wholesale funding access based on sovereign risk Capital shortfall driven by net unrealized losses on bonds 5 YR CDS spreads ITALY SPAIN FRANCE GERMANY Country split of EBA's €106bn european banks capital shortfall NORDICS 800 SWEDEN AUSTRIA 1% 3% CYPRUS BELGIUM3% 700 600 4% 500 GREECE 29% GERMANY 5% 400 NORWAY SLOVENIA 0% 1% DENMARK 0% PORTUGAL 7% 300 200 FRANCE 8% 100 an No B de rd ls ea ba nk en ed ITALY 14% N H D Sw BK M Z D C SO G N C AS A BN P C I IS P U BP M PS Sa n Ba nk in Sa ter ba de B B ll VA 0 SPAIN 25% Source: EBA As at end of April 2012 How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 13 …driven by market forces and a previous lack of regulation Banks’ market funding costs were extrememly low… $tr Total market funding issued by European banks p.a. 3 500 700 3 000 EU BANKS SECTOR CDS INDEX 5Y - CDS PREM. MID 600 500 2 500 US BANKS SECTOR CDS INDEX 5Y - CDS PREM. MID 400 2 000 300 1 500 200 100 1 000 02/10/2011 02/07/2011 02/04/2011 02/01/2011 02/10/2010 02/07/2010 02/04/2010 02/01/2010 02/10/2009 02/07/2009 02/04/2009 02/01/2009 02/10/2008 02/07/2008 02/04/2008 02/01/2008 02/10/2007 02/07/2007 02/04/2007 02/01/2007 02/10/2006 02/07/2006 02/04/2006 02/01/2006 02/10/2005 02/07/2005 02/04/2005 02/01/2005 02/10/2004 02/07/2004 02/04/2004 02/01/2004 0 500 0 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 YTD … creating a strong incentive for banks to leverage their balance sheets. 3,8 Eurozone banking assets / GDP (x) 3,6 3,7 3,7 3,7 150% L/D Ratio European System 3,5 145% 3,4 3,2 3,2 3,0 2,9 2,7 2,8 2,6 2,6 2,4 140% 3,1 2,4 2,7 135% 2,8 2,6 130% 2,4 125% 2,2 Jan-10 Jan-09 Jan-08 Jan-07 Jan-06 Jan-05 Jan-04 Jan-03 Jan-02 Jan-01 Jan-00 Jan-99 Jan-98 Jan-97 2,0 120% Jan-1999 Jan-2001 Jan-2003 Jan-2005 Jan-2007 Jan-2009 Jan-2011 Source: ECB How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 14 Monetary authorities are trying to smooth the process Authorities are seeking to avoid a severe credit crunch: – In Dec 2011 and Feb 2012 the ECB provided €530bn of net additional funding to European banks (LTROs take up less MRO transfers), equivalent to the amount of senior and covered bonds maturing over the next 12 months. – Spanish and Italian banks have covered their 2012 maturities and invested in short-term government bonds. ECB Lending, Since End-Nov 11 Use 210 526 2012 debt maturities 7 000 Sov Acqn Balance 217 526 ECB new loans as a % of total assets 99 734 87 748 30 043 217 526 6% ITALY Source ECB New Loans LT debt issued in 1Q12 Use 116 813 2012 debt maturities 5 931 Sov Acqn Balance 122 744 ECB new loans as a % of total assets 1 200 45 764 80 630 3 650 122 744 3% ECB lending to commercial banks 1 000 600 400 200 janv 12 juil 11 janv 11 juil 10 janv 10 juil 09 janv 09 juil 08 janv 08 0 juil 07 €bn 800 janv 07 SPAIN Source ECB New Loans LT debt issued in 1Q12 How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 15 Summary 01 New regulation is putting pressure on the size of the banking system… 02 …but the risk of an abrupt shrinkage has more to do with the current sovereign crisis 03 Regulation should be instrumental in avoiding future liquidity crisis but should not overshoot How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 16 The cost of financial crises might outweigh that of regulation A survey of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BSBC) estimates that the net present value costs to output from financial crises range between 19% and 163% of annual GDP (with a median estimate of 63%). The same survey estimates that financial crises occur approximately every twenty to twenty-five years. So financial crisis would cost 3% of GDP per year. According to a BIS paper published in 2010, the probability of systemic banking crisis is substantially reduced for systems’ core tier 1 in excess of 9%. The relationship between bank lending growth and GDP growth, although intuitively positive, is not straightforward – 1980s: the introduction of credit cards did not lead to stellar GDP growth – Past periods of deleveraging show varying outcome for underlying economic growth. – Credit crunch induced by banking crises negatively impact investments. 8% Crisis Probability 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% 6% 7% 8% 9% 10% 11% 12% 13% 14% 15% Core Tier 1 ratio How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 17 Too much regulation kills regulation? The shadow banking system Shadow banking is defined as “the system of credit intermediation that involves entities and activities outside the regular banking system“ as per the FSB): insurance companies, asset managers, hedge funds, pension funds, non-regulated credit institutions…” – Non-rated private securitization placements (with more flexible collateral eligibility criteria) – Loans Liquidity and credit risks are being transferred to “unregulated” institutions. When regulated, regulation plays against this transfer (cf Insurance). Non-regulated shadow banking entities could pose systemic risk if connected to the banking system (ex: banking affiliates): – Risk of moral hazard, – Remember that US subprime loans were primarily originated by non banking institutions. Banking is a confidence business no matter what: regulators need to be pragmatic when deciding upon the final calibrations of the NSFR and LCR ratios (40% cap on level 2 assets, calibration of corporate deposit outflows). Excess return/capital requirement (%) of different asset classes under the draft solvency 2 rules The shadow banking system is particularly big in the US. Globally, shadow banking account for 25-30% of the financial system. Source: Morgan Stanley/Oliver Wyman How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 18 DISCLAIMER The document is provided by AMUNDI Asset Management. All analysts providing research for the document are employees of AMUNDI or one of its advisory affiliates and are providing this information to you on behalf of AMUNDI. The document is only for use by those professional investors to whom it is made available by AMUNDI. The information provided is not intended for distribution to, or use by, any person in any jurisdiction where such distribution would be contrary to local law or regulation. The material in this document is provided for information purposes only and is not intended as a solicitation of investment business. The material is based upon information that we consider reliable, but we do not represent that it is accurate or complete and it should not be relied on as such. Any opinions expressed reflect the current judgement of the authors at the time of printing and are subject to change; they do not necessarily reflect the opinion of AMUNDI. Past performance is not necessarily a guide to future performance. Income from investments may fluctuate. The price or value of the investments to which the reports relate, either directly or indirectly, may fall or rise against the interests of investors. Neither AMUNDI nor the authors accept any liability whatsoever for any direct or consequential loss arising from use of the reports. AMUNDI and its affiliates may provide advice, act upon, or use material in the reports prior to their inclusion in the research reports. AMUNDI and its affiliates and employees may hold a position in the financial instruments of any issuer discussed. Users of the information provided in this document acknowledge that it contains copyrighted material. No copying, redistribution, retransmission, publication or commercial exploitation of this material is permitted without the express written consent of AMUNDI. How will new regulation reshape the banking system? - 17/03/2016 - page 19