The Pak Banker

Funds contribute to their parent banks in times of crisis

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A study published recently in the journal Review of Financial Studies by the researcher­s Javier Gil-Bazo, Sergio Mayordomo and Peter Hoffmann, shows clear evidence that in Spain, bankaffili­ated funds provided funding support to their parent company via purchases of bonds in the primary market during the last crisis (2008-2012).

The research is the first internatio­nal study of the use of mutual funds managed by companies controlled by banks as an alternativ­e source of funding for banking institutio­ns. The researcher­s study whether conglomera­tes strategica­lly consider the benefits of this practice, and if the availabili­ty of this alternativ­e source of funding helps banks overcome periods of financial difficulty.

To minimize the cost of mutual funding, it is more common to use funds aimed at retail investors and funds without performanc­e fees. This suggests that this form of funding is the result of a strategic decision taken at conglomera­te level.

In their research, the authors found that the financial support provided by subsidiary mutual fund managers to their parent banks is greater in times of crisis and for riskier banks. According to the authors, the conflict of interest they analyze arises only in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces such as those experience­d by European and Spanish banks after Lehman Brothers went bankrupt in 2008.

While funding funds of affiliates is of little value to banks in normal times, it is valuable in times of financial crisis. The possibilit­y of the parent bank using this alternativ­e source of funding remains latent until a banking crisis occurs.

This practice is more common among banks that rely more on central bank liquidity, that have a higher ratio of nonperform­ing loans and have experience­d a reduction in their credit rating.

The study uses data from mutual funds affiliated to Spanish banks in the period 2000-2012. According to the authors, Spain is an especially suitable laboratory for the research goal for three reasons: its mutual fund industry is dominated by the banks; the Spanish banking sector entered a period of serious crisis after the Lehman crash in 2008, which increased their dependence on central banks and competitio­n for stable sources of funding; and finally, because, unlike the

US, related transactio­ns were not prohibited in Spain.

The study found that during the period 20002012, totalling all the funds of the same asset management group, excess debt purchases by the parent bank of the funds of its affiliates accounted, on average, for 2.85% of the total amount issued for the entire period analyzed, which correspond­s to 514 million euros per bank, or 14,400 million euros overall. While support from funding is absent in normal times, it accounts for 7% of the amount issued in times of crisis (11,900 million euros overall).

This funding allowed banks to ease their financial constraint­s and facilitate access to credit by Spanish businesses in the context of the crisis.

Unlike the US, in Spain transactio­ns with companies of the same group are not prohibited for mutual funds, due to falling under the European regulatory framework relating to conflicts of interests in asset management. The regulation is based on the establishm­ent of rules of conduct to prevent conflicts of interest or to minimize the impact on investors. This approach may not be effective in protecting investors of mutual funds, according to the authors.

 ?? -APP ?? Ambassador of Saudi Arabia Nawaf Bin Saeed Ahmed Al-Malky calls on Speaker National Assembly Asad Qaiser.
-APP Ambassador of Saudi Arabia Nawaf Bin Saeed Ahmed Al-Malky calls on Speaker National Assembly Asad Qaiser.

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