Thursday, April 2, 2015

TLAC pressures build for Asia banks

TLAC pressures build for Asia banks

[HONG KONG] Asian banks are bracing for the impact of new capital adequacy rules, even if the region's regulators choose not to follow global proposals on total loss-absorbing capacity, or TLAC.
Lenders in Asia have been largely exempt from the debate raging in Europe and the US over TLAC capital buffers, which aim to prevent taxpayer-funded bailouts of banks deemed too big to fail.
Regulators in the region have yet to announce formal TLAC instructions, but many bankers say they expect Asia to adopt them in some form in the coming years to align their standards with the rest of the world.
"It may also trickle down to us here in Asian countries when our regulators are ready to adopt some of these practices," said Wong Yee Fun, head of capital management at Maybank.
"We are definitely keeping ourselves in the loop to know what the potential impact would be for us."
The Financial Stability Board's proposed TLAC guidelines will force the world's most important banks to maintain a sufficient capital buffer to survive a stressed scenario. Common equity, Tier 1 and Tier 2 securities and senior bonds will count towards the capital requirement, but only if they are able to absorb losses.
The rules will initially apply only to global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) in developed markets, leaving Japan as the first Asian country needing to comply. In time, however, the three Chinese banks on the G-SIB list will also need to conform, and national regulators will be free to set their own standards for all major lenders.
Some Asian regulators are further ahead than others in enforcing higher capital buffers. Hong Kong designated Bank of East Asia, Bank of China, Hang Seng Bank , HSBC and Standard Chartered as domestic systemically important banks (D-SIBs) last month and will require them to hold higher T1 ratios than other lenders.
Whether or not local regulators adopt versions of TLAC, the global rules will set a new benchmark for the financial health of all banks. In order to lift their TLAC ratios, banks are likely to issue far more T2 capital and create a new class of loss-absorbing senior bonds in a move that raises serious questions for Asian banks.
Bail-in clauses on senior bonds threaten to increase funding costs for Asian banks, since they will receive no benefits under TLAC for generating a lot of their funding from deposits.
It also undermines banks in countries like Australia, which heavily rely on wholesale funding.
"When you are bailing in seniors, that could increase wholesale funding costs to an unviable level," said Shilpa Singhal, senior credit analyst at ING Investment Management in Singapore.
"It could backfire if regulators bail-in one bank's senior debt to save taxpayer money, but it negatively affects all banks, creating a bigger systemic risk."
So far, Asian regulators appear uncomfortable with the concept of bailing in senior debt. Australian banks see such securities as having a significantly destabilising effect on the financial system, according to a report the country's Financial System Inquiry released last December.
"Senior bail-in bonds may not be popular with securities regulators in Asia," said one FIG banker. "I think in Asia it might be implemented in a slightly different way like in places such as Hong Kong."
The FSB has proposed the use of holding companies to subordinate loss-absorbing debt structurally, but that could be difficult to achieve in Asia. Few Asian lenders, like their European peers, have holding companies, with the exception of a handful of banks in Singapore, Japan and South Korea.
Even Japanese and Korean banks have been selling senior debt from the operating level, which means a switch to issuing from the holdco would inevitably raise funding costs.
The TLAC regime, when it arrives, will challenge expectations of state support for Asian banks. Asian governments, such as Japan, have pledged support for their banks during insolvency. China's three G-SIBs - Agricultural Bank of China, Bank of China and ICBC - are all government owned.
Because of these hurdles, bankers say Asian regulators could implement a less-stringent interpretation of TLAC, even at the cost of a lower capital buffer.
To tailor to local tastes, Asian regulators may consider simply raising capital ratios instead of having to introduce senior bail-in bonds to meet TLAC ratios of up to 25 per cent of risk-weighted assets.
"This could be through additional regulatory capital requirements in the form of, for example, T2, or indeed other instruments similar to those proposed by the FSB for the G-SIBs," said Sean McNelis, head of financing solutions for Asia Pacific at HSBC.
Asian banks could also hope for a move similar to Germany, where regulators outlined draft legislation last month that would make all outstanding senior bank bonds subordinated to other senior-ranking liabilities.
"If you had a choice, a statutory subordination may be the best option," said John Lee, partner at the international capital markets group at Allen & Overy.
"That might be easier to market, because you're saying it's not bank-specific; it's the entire country and there's nothing we can do."
"When they are out there marketing to investors, that might be an easier sell as opposed to saying our competitor is issuing senior notes out of the holdco, but we have to issue subordinated notes out of the opco."
Yet, statutory subordination could cause outstanding senior spreads to jump. Deutsche Bank saw the Z-spread on its March 2025 euro bonds widen 8bp to 87bp on March 24 after Germany announced its Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive, though it has since recovered.
For now, issuers like Maybank's Ms Wong are still waiting for guidelines to be finalised before moving ahead.
"I don't think we want to put more pressure on our funding costs by pre-funding because that raises your wholesale component," she said. "That would be overdoing it and the funding costs would go up."
REUTERS

China knocking on door of IMF's major league, US wavers

China knocking on door of IMF's major league, US wavers

[BRUSSELS] China is closer to joining the major league of reserve currencies with a deal possible later this year to include the yuan in the International Monetary Fund's unit of account, international finance officials say.
However the United States, where China's growing economic and political muscle is a source of strategic concern in Congress, is reluctant to add the yuan so soon to the basket of currencies that make up the IMF's Special Drawing Rights.
US Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said after a visit to Beijing this week the yuan was not yet ready to join the virtual currency that defines the value of the IMF's reserves, used for lending to countries in financial difficulty.
"While further liberalization and reform are needed for the (yuan) to meet this standard, we encourage the process of completing these necessary reforms," Mr Lew said in a speech in San Francisco on Tuesday.
The yuan, also known as the renminbi or RMB, is already the world's fifth most-used trade currency. Beijing has made strides this year in introducing the infrastructure needed to float it freely on global capital markets.
European members of the Group of Seven major industrialised economies - Germany, Britain, France and Italy - favour adding the yuan this year to the basket that comprises the dollar, the euro, the yen and the pound sterling. Japan, like the United States, is more cautious, the officials said.
The IMF's board will hold an initial discussion in May on China's request and a full five-yearly review of the SDR's composition will be conducted later in the year ahead of a decision expected in November, IMF officials said.
"The German side supports China's goal to add the RMB to the SDR currency basket based on existing criteria," Joachim Nagel, a member of the executive board of the German central bank, said last weekend at a high-level forum in Boao, on the southern Chinese island of Hainan.
The upcoming review could be a good opportunity to introduce the yuan into the basket, he said, adding: "We appreciate China's recent development and progress towards liberalisation."
Chinese Premier Li Keqiang asked IMF chief Christine Lagarde last month to include the yuan in its SDR basket, pledged to speed up its "basic convertibility" and said China hoped to play an active role in international efforts to maintain financial stability, state news agency Xinhua said.
A eurozone central bank source said one route could see a phased entry into the SDR, linked to fulfilling the official criterion that the yuan must be "freely usable", which Western officials interpret as full convertibility.
It would be the first emerging market currency to join the SDR, marking another stage in China's rise as a global economic player and requiring the United States to accept a dilution of its unrivalled power in international finance.
While the Europeans are vying for commercial advantage in the world's second biggest economy, Washington sees Beijing also as an authoritarian strategic challenger that may not feel bound by rules written by the West.
The US Congress has held up ratification of a 2010 reform of voting rights in the IMF intended to give China and other emerging economies more say.
Britain, keen to secure pole position for London as an offshore centre for international trading in yuan, has taken the lead in pressing publicly for China's admission to the SDR.
David Ramsden, chief economic adviser at the UK Treasury, said much had changed since the makeup of the virtual currency was last reviewed in 2010, and including the yuan was now a"very live issue".
Germany has ambitions to lure yuan trading to Frankfurt, home of the European Central Bank, and was irked when Britain last month jumped ahead of its EU partners to become a founder member of the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank.
Washington suffered a diplomatic reverse after trying to dissuade its allies from joining the Chinese initiative, seen as a potential rival to the World Bank and Asian Investment Bank, dominated by the United States and Japan.
Keen to avoid a second rift with Europe - even though the United States can block IMF decisions - Mr Lew focused on the terms for admitting the yuan to the SDR rather than the timing.
"China will need to successfully complete difficult fundamental reforms, such as capital account liberalization, a more market-determined exchange rate, interest rate liberalization, as well as strengthening of financial regulation and supervision," he said.
While Washington believed Beijing has stopped intervening to weaken its currency, Mr Lew said the true test would come when market pressure increased for the yuan to strengthen.
David Marsh, managing director of the central banking think-tank OMFIF, sees a "grand bargain" between China, the United States and the IMF taking shape under which Beijing would enter the heart of global finance in exchange for turning the yuan into a strong currency on world financial markets.
The Chinese central bank was using its US$3.8 trillion in reserves to keep the yuan steady against the dollar. The Chinese currency has appreciated by 11 per cent in trade-weighted terms in the past year.
"All of this is a potential challenge for the dollar and its pivotal position in world money," Mr Marsh said in a briefing.
While there is no fixed set of indicators to measure the eligibility of a currency for the SDR basket, in 2011 IMF staff set out a number of indicators that could show whether a currency is "freely usable": - currency composition of official reserve holdings; - currency denomination of international banking liabilities; - currency denomination of international debt securities; - volume of transactions in foreign exchange spot markets.
More than 60 central banks hold the yuan in their reserves, according to China-focused bankers in London. Offshore trading in the yuan soared some 350 per cent on Thomson Reuters trading platforms last year and rival platform EBS said the yuan was one of its top five traded currencies.
A former high IMF official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said 2015 was too soon for the yuan to qualify, but the Chinese central bank could use the review to persuade Communist Party leaders to move further towards convertibility.
Zhu Min, the IMF's Chinese deputy managing director, noted the yuan was increasingly used in trade and was also growing in capital markets.
"Clearly the RMB is already qualified, in a sense, on trade activity," he told reporters at the Boao Forum. "But on the freely usable side ... there are still some obstructions."
REUTERS

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