1 / 18

Some remarks about bank strategies

This workshop discusses strategies for handling distressed loans in the European Currency Union, including loan renegotiation, selling to third-party funds, and the importance of specialized NPL management firms. It also explores the question of who should bear losses and the potential of digitalization in the banking industry.

carriew
Télécharger la présentation

Some remarks about bank strategies

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Some remarks about bank strategies byGünter FrankeUniversity of Konstanz Workshop on Banking KievMay 19, 2016

  2. Handling distressed loans /non-performing loans in the European Currency Union Digitalization Banking without banks? 3 Topics

  3. Currently about €1 trillion of distressed loans in ECU Concentration particularly high in Southern European countries Handling distressed loans /non-performing loans in the European Currency Union

  4. Distressed loans: bank aims to renegotiate/restructure loan together with debtor keeping debtor alive and maintaining relational banking with debtor Non-performing loan: bank sells loan to third-party (vulture funds, bad banks) which often aims to maximize cash flow from liquidating assets often debtor´s existence jeopardized, relational banking stopped Handling distressed loans /non-performing loans in the European Currency Union

  5. NPL-book value very risky, even after write-off → strong capital buffer required NPL-management different from management of distressed loans → better to transfer management to specialised firm Bank management not distracted from new business by NPL-management Bank reputation would be endangered by its NPL-management Why sell NPLs?

  6. New European Single Resolution Mechanism Concept shareholders of bank: first loss position bail in-creditors: second loss position private safety net of banks:third loss position European guarantee fund: fourth loss position Who should bear losses?

  7. Practice: Governments refuse resolution mechanism unless forced ECU Italian depositors lost money in bail in Italian government and ECU revised bail in-losses € 340 bio NPLs of Italian banks semi-private funds with 6 bio € equity to buy NPLs Who should bear losses?

  8. Should equity owners and bail in-creditors bear losses generated by political risk factors? Or tax payer? In case of high NPL losses, equity owners and bail in-creditors can bear only part of losses. Indemnifying equity owners and bail in creditors against losses creates strong moral hazard of banks Who should bear losses?

  9. Taxpayer may support bank by providing new equity or guarantees, compensated at market rates Greece 2015: 4 systemically relevant banks -- got new equity from private investors and ECU, each € 10 bio -- previous government stake basically worthless Who should bear losses?

  10. Transfer NPL to vulture fund to private bad bank to public bad bank ECU tries to establish market for NPLs Tradability of NPLs?

  11. Internal organisation: Many standardized human jobs replaced by IT for example, more electronic credit screening “ “ reporting “ “ compliance checks Block chain technology as big cost saver? Digitalization

  12. Bank-customer relationship: convenient payments with mobile phones international electronic payments robot advice of customers collecting big data about customers to support cross selling Digitalization

  13. Should bank buy new ideas of digitalisation or develop them internally? Banks do both. Many start ups: ~ 5% succeed others are taken over by banks or disappear Very difficult for start up to operate independently of bank because of lack of customer base No protection of intellectual property Digitalization

  14. European Capital Market Union: To stabilize financial markets, promote lending: -- default risks largely borne by non-banks -- without banks Payment systems without banks exist. Trading platforms without banks exist. Banking without banks?

  15. USA: volume of electronic lending platforms increases but volume still modest Europe: still much smaller volume Functional approach: Which functions are important for effective lending? Credit business without banks?

  16. Functions in lendingBanks Non-banks Niche players Credit screening standard ++ niche ++ Monitoring the borrower standard ++ niche ++ Renegotiating loans/bonds standard ++ niche ++ Managing Non-Performing Loans -- (--) (--) Credit business without banks?

  17. Bond financing for SMEs? In most countries so far ineffective Transaction costs too high for small bonds Credit business without banks?

  18. Conclusion: Banks are experts for most lending functions in particular when borrowers are opaque Politics should promote syndicated lending, i.e. lending with banks in charge of main functions and risk sharing with non-banks Lead bank should retain sufficient share of default risk to constrain adverse selection and moral hazard Credit business without banks?

More Related