Toward the end of 2015, Portugal bailed in some senior creditors in
addressing a failed bank. Many observers were aghast. This was thought to be horrific and uncivilized
by some of the very same people who are critical of the EU and Italy's decision
not to bail in senior creditors in the two failed regional banks in
Italy.
They were wrong about Portugal. It was not a watershed event
that spurred capital flight from Europe. And they are wrong about
Italy. This does not end banking
union, and if Europe moves at two-speeds, as some proposal for EU reform
post-Brexit as some suggest, it will not be because of Italy and the EU's decisions
regarding Veneto Banca and Banca Popolare di Vicenza.
The critics are like someone watching a basketball game. One
player fouls another who had an easy
shot. Fouling the player to force them to ostensibly
take a more difficult shot is not cheating. It is not a
loophole. It is part of the rules of the game, and part of the strategy
of the game.
Some argue that by not bailing in senior creditors, Italy violated the
"spirit, if not the letter, of the European banking resolution
rules." It is certainly not the case that Italy violated the
letter of the law. Indeed the EU approved the actions, making them
legal. The spirit of the law is a different story, but arguably, the
spirit was upheld by Italy and would be violated
by an overly rigid ruling as the critics seem to demand.
The procedures and processes were followed
to the letter. The Single Resolution Board, the pertinent entity,
ruled that the BRRD (the directive that governs the resolution process) did not
apply because the failure of the two regional banks was not expected to have a
"significant adverse impact on financial stability." This is important because this transferred the issue back to Italian authorities and the national insolvency laws and
procedures. The system worked.
The two regional Italian banks accounted for around 2% of the Italian
banking system. The EU regulators could fairly and honestly expect
little systemic financial risk. However, Italian officials argued that
there were still important regional economic risks that the failures
posed.
It is not unreasonable to be concerned about the fallout on other banks
if the two regional banks were forced
into resolution. The EU rules, which the Financial Times points out,
would have required the Italian banking system to fund a 12 bln euro deposit
insurance program. This would have
to come from the Italian banks, such as
Unicredit, Intesa, UBI Banca, and the troubled Monte Paschi.
All these banks have either recently raised capital themselves or are
going to the market shortly. Moreover, all the loans from the two
banks would have to be called immediately, which would also be potentially
disruptive and could spur a run on other Italian financial
institutions.
Also, there was obviously political
and economic concern about the impact of bailing in senior creditors.
Many years ago, as the banks were marketing these bonds, a significant tranche was sold to retail investors as a secure
investment. They were secure when they were sold,
but the quality deteriorated, and the
rules changed. The bonds that were part of the "misselling scandal" will mostly mature in the
next few years, and this will resolve
this issue.
Italian officials hoped to minimize
a recurrence of what happened in late 2015 when it liquidated four small popolari banks (mutually owned rather than
publicly traded) and losses on retail
investors that made for particularly
poor press. The bank failure meant job losses for some local households, and they were penalized by losing some of the funds invested in the same
bank.
While fans at the basketball game may try goading the referee into making
a call, the referee judges what a foul is.
In these matters, the European Commission is the only referee that matters, and
it agreed with Italian officials. Much to the critics’ chagrin, the EC concluded that the Italian actions are
consistent with the EU rules on state aid.
There is no need to "mourn the banking union," as one critic
put it, because the BRRD "has been trampled
to death," wrote another critic. Europe's slowly coagulating
banking union is still in its early stages,
and it is still moving forward. That senior creditors and
depositors were not "bailed in" non-systemic banks will not
prevent the continued movement toward the banking union, which was much more
about the systemically important banks. It is an extreme
exaggeration to say that "Senior creditors need never again to fear losses
due to a failing bank." It is simply not true, and the polemical zeal
asphyxiates reasonable and dispassionate discourse.
Rest assured these are not the last banks in Europe to have problems.
Pity the next Italian bank to have solvency issues. Given the criticism of the
way Italy handled these two banks, the risk is that it will come down harder on
the next. However, the critics call to punish Italy for its efforts (they
think) to circumvent the rules, has fallen on deaf ears. Italian bank
shares are up nearly 3.75% since the weekend announcement. European bank
shares in the Dow Jones Stoxx 600 are up 1.5% over the past two
sessions. Italy's five year credit default swap (the price for insurance) is at its lowest level since last October.
Banking union and European
integration remain a work still very much in progress. The critics
are prone to hyperbole. The key to European integration going forward it not to be
found in Rome or Venice., but in Paris and Berlin. Macron, now
with his substantial parliament majority, must bring France back into
compliance with the Stability and Growth Pact and boost its competitiveness
(e.g., exports as a share of world exports). That may prove more
important than forcing haircuts on senior creditors and depositors at two
non-systemically important banks.
Disclaimer
And Yet it Moves: Understanding Why Italy's Threat is Exaggerated
Reviewed by Marc Chandler
on
June 27, 2017
Rating: