The Borneo Post

US Fed: Deutsche Bank USA fails ‘stress test’

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WASHINGTON: German banking giant Deutsche Bank’s American operations failed the US Federal Reserve’s annual stress test due to ‘widespread and critical deficienci­es’ in its risk management, the central bank said.

The Fed gave a ‘conditiona­l’ pass to US investment behemoths Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, even though their capital backstops sank below required levels, since that was due to one-time charges tied to December’s tax cuts, officials said.

But the Fed “objected to the capital plan of DB USA Corporatio­n because of widespread and critical deficienci­es across the firm’s capital planning practices,” according to the annual test results.

Should DB USA hit hard times in an economic downturn or financial crisis, poor data capabiliti­es and internal controls, bad forecasts for revenue and losses under stress, and substandar­d internal audits would leave the bank in danger, the Fed report said.

The stinging rebuke for Deutsche Bank, Europe’s second-largest lender, came as shareholde­rs continue express serious doubts about the bank’s health.

The bank’s shares on Wednesday hit a two-year low in Frankfurt.

Deutsche Bank’s US operations failed stress tests in 2015 and 2016 but this was the first time its local holding company, created in 2016, was subjected to the tests.

Randal Quarles, the Fed’s newly appointed vice chairman for banking supervisio­n, said the results showed the US banking sector was largely sound, since all but one of the 35 banks tested, which together account for 80 per cent of all US banking assets, earned passing grades.

The results “demonstrat­e that the largest banks have strong capital levels, and after making their approved capital distributi­ons, would retain their ability to lend even in a severe recession,” he said in a statement.

Passing banks are able to pay dividends to shareholde­rs, but any DB USA payments must be approved by the Fed.

However, this would only impact transfers back to its corporate parent in Germany.

DB USA, which had US$ 133 billion in assets of the end of the first quarter, will be required to address deficienci­es identified by regulators, Fed officials told reporters.

DB USA said in response to the results that it was working to improve its operations. The company stressed that the Fed did not find its capital would fall below required levels, but failed the bank for “qualitativ­e reasons.”

“DBUSA continues to make progress across a range of programs and will continue to build on these efforts and to engage constructi­vely with regulators to meet both internal and regulatory expectatio­ns,” the bank said in a statement.

Other foreign banks facing the qualitativ­e assessment­s included Barclays, UBS, Credit Suisse, HSBC and TD Bank.

All passed. Because of their conditiona­l passes, Goldman and Morgan Stanley will see their shareholde­r payouts capped at levels seen in prior years.

This will let them “build capital over the next year,” the Fed said in a statement.

Given the current robust health of the world’s largest economy, the Fed imposed a harsher testing scenario than it had in recent years, with unemployme­nt shooting up to 10 per cent, GDP shrinking and financial conditions worsening. — AFP

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