Early
in the financial crisis, the US forced all large banks to take an infusion of
capital. This helped put a
floor under the US financial system. Regulators and stakeholders encouraged
US banks to address the significant nonperforming loan problem.
The eurozone banking woes
persist. Before the weekend, the shares of the one the largest banks
was trading at 25 -year lows. The problem with nonperforming loans though is
largely concentrated in the periphery. Italy is moving to finalize its
latest attempt to deal with its NPLs, which are
estimated at around 360 bln euros. The banks have made provisions
for about 40%-45%, according to reports.
European bank shares have been battered
this year. Italian bank shares have been among the hardest hit,
though in anticipation of the establishment of a bad bank and a private fund to
provide equity funding, banks shares rallied before the weekend and
today.
The Great
Graphic here is from Bruegel.
It shows the nonperforming loans as a percentage of total loans for the US
(yellow), the eurozone (red) and the UK
(blue).
The US and the UK are less
dependent on bank lending than the eurozone.
Businesses in the US and UK rely more on the
capital markets for funding, while the eurozone is more bank-centric.
It is difficult to envisage a sustainable recovery in EMU without a healthier
banking system.
The old issue remains. There is a debate about US banks being
too big to fail. Yellen argued last week that rather than break up the
banks, as presidential candidate Sanders, and the new President of the
Minneapolis Federal Reserve have advocated, the Federal Reserve will regulate
them closer and require much greater capital buffers. In Europe, the
challenge is that some banks have assets and/or
derivative exposures that are a multiple of their country's GDP. That
makes the banks not only too big to fail
but too big for a country to save.
Disclaimer
Great Graphic: Nonperforming Loans, Another Divergence
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
April 11, 2016
Rating: