Business Day

Deutsche in regulator’s sights, but now gun is pointing back

ECB mulls probe but has spotty oversight record itself

- Elisa Martinuzzi and Marcus Ashworth

For the umpteenth time, Deutsche Bank is ensnared in an alleged regulatory blunder. Except this time, the stakes are greater than its own integrity: confidence in its regulator, the European Central Bank (ECB), is on the line too.

The ECB is considerin­g whether to probe Germany’s biggest bank for trading in its riskiest debt without the regulator’s approval, according to the German newspaper Sueddeutsc­he Zeitung.

In an effort to maintain liquidity in the bonds, the firm’s securities unit continued to make a market in the notes well after they were sold to investors. Typically, banks need to be authorised to buy their own subordinat­ed bonds because they count as equity capital that should help a lender absorb potential losses.

By secretly buying the notes, Deutsche could have created a false market for the bonds, keeping a lid on its overall borrowing costs. That would also have left investors in the dark about how the bank’s capital might have been affected by the purchases. While it is not clear how much of the debt Deutsche had on its books at any one time, nor what effect the trades may have had on the bonds’ prices, the purchases allegedly went on for years.

What is more, after being told by the ECB in 2014 to stop buying the bonds, Deutsche allegedly carried on doing so until 2017. Only then did it receive the regulator’s green light, and not retroactiv­ely.

Why the ECB, which assumed regulatory oversight of Europe’s biggest lenders in 2014, is digging into this only now is a mystery.

It may turn out that Deutsche misunderst­ood the guidance it received from the ECB, or that the numbers involved were immaterial, which led the ECB to put off a formal probe. Or maybe Deutsche thought it was able to make a market in the notes under terms spelt out in the offer documents.

Deutsche and the ECB declined to comment .

But the ECB is a young regulator and its record so far as an enforcer of the financial rule book is somewhat spotty. Setting the record straight on what is potentiall­y a serious breach is not inconseque­ntial.

The years in question were a period of turmoil for Deutsche. Faith in its ability to meet its obligation­s reached a nadir as clients worried whether the lender could afford a huge US fine for selling toxic mortgage securities.

Customers were pulling billions of euros of cash every day. Fears were that the firm would run out of reserves to pay interest to bondholder­s, specifical­ly on its subordinat­ed, additional Tier 1 notes. Some notes fell to a low of 70c on the euro in February 2016.

The ECB must show it is doing all it can to establish an account of what happened, not least because this is not the first time that its banking oversight has been called into question.

At the height of Deutsche’s troubles in 2016, the ECB let the lender include in its stress test results the proceeds of a sale that had not yet been completed, the Financial Times has reported. And earlier in 2019, Bloomberg uncovered how the ECB had signed off on Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena’s $6bn bailout even though it was aware the bank was probably insolvent.

It is possible that Deutsche acted in good faith. But if the ECB wants to build the trust of investors and depositors, it should eliminate any lingering doubts.

● Martinuzzi is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering finance and Ashworth a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering European markets. This column does not necessaril­y reflect the opinion of the editorial board or Bloomberg LP and its owners.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Peppermint, anyone?: Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt. Germany’s biggest bank is accused of trading in its riskiest debt without the regulator’s approval, creating a false market in its bonds.
/Reuters Peppermint, anyone?: Deutsche Bank in Frankfurt. Germany’s biggest bank is accused of trading in its riskiest debt without the regulator’s approval, creating a false market in its bonds.

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