Business Standard

No clean bill of health for EU banks in stress test CAPITAL REPORT

European Union watchdog says more work needed to improve capital

- REUTERS London, 30 July

Banks from Italy, Ireland, Spain and Austria fared worst in the latest European Union stress test, which the region’s banking watchdog said on Friday showed there was still work to do in order to boost credit to the bloc’s economy.

Eight years since the collapse of Lehman Brothers sparked a global banking meltdown, many of Europe’s banks are still saddled with billions of euros in poorly performing loans, crimping their ability to lend and putting off investors.

“While a number of individual banks have clearly fared badly, the overall finding of the European Banking Authority — that Europe’s banks are resilient to another crisis — is heartening,” Anthony Kruizinga at PwC said.

Italy’s Monte dei Paschi, Austria’s Raiffeisen , Spain’s Banco Popular and two of Ireland’s main banks came out with the worst results in the EBA’s test of 51 European Union EU) lenders.

“Whilst we recognise the extensive capital raising done so far, this is not a clean bill of health,” EBA Chairman Andrea Enria said in a statement. “There remains work to do.” Italy’s largest lender, UniCredit, was also among those banks which fared badly, and it said it will work with supervisor­s to see if it should take further measures.

Germany’s biggest banks, Deutsche Bank and Commerzban­k, were also among the 12 weakest banks in the test, along with British rival Barclays.

Monte dei Paschi, Italy’s third-largest lender, had been scrambling to pull together a rescue plan and win approval for it from the European Central Bank ahead of the test results.

The Italian bank confirmed less than an hour before the results that it had finalised a plan to sell off its entire portfolio of non-performing loans and had assembled a consortium of banks to back a ^5-billion capital increase.

The EBA looked at how banks could withstand a three-year theoretica­l economic shock which ended with the Italian lender, the world’s oldest, having a core equity capital ratio of minus 2.44 per cent.

This was the third stress test in the EU since taxpayers had to bail out lenders in the 2007-09 financial crisis, with no pass or fail mark this time round. The test involved scenarios including EU economic output 7.1 per cent below the baseline over the next three years and a 20 percent drop in interest income.

“Based on these results European banks do have deeper loss absorbing capacity than previously, but concerns clearly remain around profitabil­ity and the appetite of equity investors to invest in bank stocks,” said Steven Hall of KPMG.

Analysts have informally set a basic pass mark of 5.5 per cent, the threshold set in the last round of tests in 2014, and a weak result could raise question marks over dividend payments.

Like Monte dei Paschi, Allied Irish Banks was also below the 5.5 per cent level at 4.31 per cent, but said it has undergone fundamenta­l restructur­ing and is now sustainabl­y profitable.

Markets will also look at how many banks were able to maintain a core ratio of capital to risk-weighted assets of 7 per cent. This is a typical level for triggering the writedown of bonds issued by banks to replenish capital. The worst-performing banks under the EU watchdog stress test (CET1 level under stress in %)

6.10 6.60

Spain’s Banco Popular, Bank of Ireland and Austria’s Raiffeisen all ended the test below this level at 6.62 per cent, 6.15 per cent, and 6.12 per cent, respective­ly.

“We are aware of our capital situation and have been implementi­ng for some time appropriat­e measures to strengthen our capital base,” Raiffeisen CEO Walter Rothenstei­ner said.

Popular earlier said that it had fired its chief executive Francisco Gomez after its profit was nearly wiped out in the second quarter. It said the EBA tests had not included the ^2.5-billion share issue it completed in May to clean up toxic retail assets.

Deutsche Bank and Commerzban­k both scored core ratios of below 8 per cent, although Deutsche said it was on track to reach at least 12.5 per cent by the end of 2018.

Of the banks tested, 37 are based in the euro zone and supervised by the ECB, which said the results reflected progress in repairing balance sheets.

At the start of the test, the banks had an aggregate core ratio of 12.6 per cent, with all capital requiremen­ts factored in. However, this fell to 9.2 per cent by the end of the test, a drop of 340 basis points, equivalent to ^226 billion of capital.

For the first time, the EU test included the impact of conduct risks such as fines and settlement­s.

EBA said the total hit from conduct costs was ^71 billion. The largest impact was from credit or losses on loans, totalling nearly ^350 billion across all the banks tested.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Monte dei Paschi, Italy’s third-largest lender, had been scrambling to pull together a rescue plan
REUTERS Monte dei Paschi, Italy’s third-largest lender, had been scrambling to pull together a rescue plan

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