Thursday, February 12, 2009

it would probably require them all coming to market, and probably requiring government capital.

From Alphaville:

"
‘Financial stability’ for UK banks

Think the US’s ‘financial stability’ plan only affects American banks? Think, perhaps, again.

JP Morgan bank analysts Carla Antunes da Silva and Amit Goel have an eye-catching piece of research out today — on the read-through of the plan for UK banks.

Recall that the centrepeice of Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner’s proposed plan is a ’stress test’ for banks with assets over £100bn. Banks will be required to have a capital buffer sufficient to absorb potential losses that could be experienced under the stress test (conditions of the stress test, are as yet, unknown). Banks that don’t have enough capital according to the test, will will have to raise more, either via the government or through private means, if possible.

The JPM analysts note:

[It’s] Unclear whether US subsidiaries of foreign banks will be included and what the details of the stress test will be. Nevertheless, given that plan is designed to restore confidence, and the stress test is described as ‘comprehensive and forceful’, it should be significant. If the stress test turns out to be weak, then what we have learnt from the UK, is that it will not work.

In any case, UK banks that would qualify for the $100bn mark, JPM says, are:

(i) HSBC - at Q3 08 HFC had $123bn of receivables, supported by $11.4bn of tangible equity. Remember the majority of these assets are of sub prime nature so would likely fare badly in a stress test scenario. If the capital is insufficient then we could see a situation where the bank would have to transfer capital from the group, the level of surplus at which is unclear at present. This could lead them to take action on their dividend sooner rather than later, or to raise additional capital. Note that at this stage HSBC has a provision of $11.8bn within HFC;

(ii) RBS - at H1 08 RBS had $114bn of US customer loans (o.w. $18bn mortgages, $35bn home equity, $22bn other consumer and $39bn of corporate). The quality of these loans is deemed to be slightly better than those at HFC, but there would likely still be some substantial impairments. It is unclear how much equity is backing this business and if they were to need to transfer capital this could put more pressure on the UK government for additional support. In this case, we believe it is less clear whether they would participate;

(iii) Barclays - At FY 08 they had $112bn of direct US customer loans. At a Group level, there is a significantly higher proportion of US assets and it is unclear whether the scheme would cover these. Note they have been able to participate in other US schemes to date;

JPM also note that the UK’s Financial Services Authority did its own stress test in October last year — right before recapitalising Britain’s banks to the tune of £37bn. Interestingly, the test used a “one-year 1990s scenario” in calculating the required capital buffer, according to the JPM analysts.

Now, as JPM notes:

If the regulator were to … require a more ‘comprehensive’ stress buffer, given that none of the banks have raised capital since, it would probably require them all coming to market, and probably requiring government capital.

Oh dear.

JPM’s inevitable conclusion:

Overall, whilst we do not have the full details yet, we see these measures as targeting the broader economy, but negative short term for the equity holders of banks due to risk of further issuance. In the UK, HSBC will be the most likely impacted, where we think that this action could force management to address any capital issue sooner rather than later, and in general we see these measures as substantially more onerous than what the UK government has proposed so far. We maintain Underweight ratings on UK bank stocks and believe there could be some similar measures adopted by the UK government later this month, removing some of the recent optimism following the handout to ING.

All a bit premature, of course, given the lack of detail in Geithner’s plan, but interesting nonetheless.

Related links:
Stress test: almost 100 regulators at Citigroup - Calculated Risk
‘Financial stability’ unveiled - FT Alphaville
Buried bail-outs - FT Alphaville

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat Feb 12 16:11
Is there any chance that we'll nationalize HSBC, RBS, and Barclays in the US, claiming the assets using terrorism laws?

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