National Post

Bank rescue plan may squeeze a corner of Canadian bond market

Rules may cause friction in money market

- Allison McNeely

New rules to protect taxpayers from bank failures may push investors out of a $ 95billion corner of Canada’s corporate bond market, reducing liquidity and raising borrowing costs.

Under a regime set to take effect in 2018, short- term bank deposit notes typically sold to institutio­nal investors will gradually be replaced by senior “bail-in” debt that can convert to equity in the event of a bank failure. The new instrument­s may be off limits to money-market investors who aren’t allowed to hold securities that risk being converted to equity, some analysts and money managers say.

The changes could cause friction in the $ 310- billion money market that greases the wheels of corporate fi- nance. Short- term investors scoop up deposit notes with less than a year left to maturity as longer- term investors sell. That helps keep the market liquid, allows banks to borrow at low rates and offers investors access to safe bonds that yield more than short-term government debt.

“What we don’t know is if there is going to be an impact to bank funding costs because there is not a wall of money market buying at one year,” according to Kris Somers, a credit analyst at BMO Capital Markets who follows Canadian banks.

The federal government and bank regulator are expected to release final guidelines for the bail- in regime before the end of the year, including how much debt and capital banks will need to hold to satisfy their total loss- absorbing capacity requiremen­t, also known as the TLAC ratio. The framework is part of a global effort to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis, which saw taxpayers fund massive bailouts of banks. The po- tential wrinkle for Canadian money- market investors is due to an interpreta­tion of existing securities law.

The draft rules say unsecured debt with a term of at least 400 days will be eligible for bail- in and that a security must have at least 365 remaining days to maturity to count toward a bank’s TLAC ratio. The TLAC ratio must be 21.5 per cent of risk- weighted assets by Nov. 1, 2021. Currently the big five Canadian banks have an average TLAC ratio of 15 per cent, according to Himanshu Bakshi, a Bloomberg Intelligen­ce credit analyst.

About $ 18.6 billion of existing deposit notes mature in the first half of 2018, according to a RBC Capital Markets report. If banks don’t issue deposit notes to replace them before the bailin guidelines are finalized, they will be replaced by senior bail- in debt. The average spread on a five-year deposit note is about 71 basis points over government debt.

“We’re going to have fewer options to add yield to the portfolio,” said Walter Posiewko, a money-market fund manager at RBC Global Asset Management. The fund likely won’t purchase the new senior bail-in debt because of the lack of clarity around securities regulation and liquidity concerns, choosing instead to buy other short-term bank debt such as banker’s acceptance and bearer deposit notes, he said.

The Office of the Superinten­dent of Financial Institutio­ns, Canada’s bank regulator, has no intention of amending its guidelines to address the question, spokeswoma­n Annik Faucher said in an email. Current guidelines don’t prohibit investors from purchasing the debt, she said.

The Ontario Securities Commission and the Canadian Securities Administra­tors, an umbrella organizati­on of provincial regulators, declined to comment.

The proposed bail-in rules are not intended or expected to result in significan­t changes to banks’ funding structures, including which investors buy the debt, Jocelyn Sweet, deputy spokeswoma­n for Finance Canada, said in an email. The regulation does not prohibit particular types of investors from buying bail-in debt, she said.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Starting in 2018, short-term bank deposit notes are to be replaced by “bail-in” debt that can be converted to equity in the event of a bank failure.
NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Starting in 2018, short-term bank deposit notes are to be replaced by “bail-in” debt that can be converted to equity in the event of a bank failure.

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