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To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Securitised debt could give Europe's economy the kiss of life
Date: Tue, 22 Apr 2014 00:02:26 +0000
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From: Daniel
Date: April 21, 2014 at 7:56:11 PM EDT
To: < >, ci
Subject: Securitised debt could give Europe's economy the kiss of life
Haha - sound familiar?! (Check out highlighted paragraph.)
Securitised debt could give Europe's economy the
kiss of life
By Jacques de Larosiere
Investors can earn better returns from industrial companies than banks, says
Jacques de Larosiere
T
ougher financial regulation has made European
banks more resilient. But the drought of credit now
confronting promising businesses across Europe is
making the continent's economy more fragile. These facts are linked — and the second cannot be
ignored.
European banks have strengthened their capital reserves, which have doubled on average since the
financial crisis. And they have reduced their exposure to risk, notably by scaling back speculative
trading activities. At the same time, their diminished profitability is making it difficult to find the
fresh capital they need to meet the tightened rules. Investors can now earn higher returns by
investing in industrial companies rather than financial institutions, a reversal of the situation before
2008.
With fresh investment capital no longer forthcoming, stringent
liquidity and capital adequacy ratios can be met only through a
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reduction in assets, including loans. American banks, too, face harsher
rules. But - for now at least — they can offload a large portion of their
ON THIS STORY
mortgage loans to government-backed entities such as Fannie Mae and
Editorial Bundled debt will quicken Freddie Mac.
recovery
Interview ECB joins BoE on 'toxic'
assets Rising defaults on corporate loans in the eurozone periphery are also
ECB and BoE push for high-risk discouraging banks from extending credit. That hurts business profits,
loan return and deters companies from committing to investment projects that
Markets Insight Time running out would have to be funded by debt. Consequently, many businesses are
for the market riggers
struggling to obtain the credit they need. This problem first emerged in
EU to ease rules on 'toxic sludge'
to boost credit the countries of the periphery but is now affecting several states across
the EU. By the end of 2013, 29 per cent of applications for bank loans in
ON THIS TOPIC
France were facing obstacles such as rejection, partial coverage or high
Fund answer to bond investors'
dilemma price.
Wage rises seen as threat to low
US rates In Italy, the figure was 48 per cent. Part of the explanation may be that
Comment China's $90bn credit the most eligible borrowers are not applying for loans. However, banks'
squeeze
unwillingness to lend is also part of the story. Many observers believe
Markets Insight Sceptics
underestimate Japan policy shift
this rationing of credit could be the prelude to sharper restrictions
down the road. And many lay the blame on the prudential regulation
IN OPINION
that is supposed to be making banks safer.
A European energy union
John Delaney Plan to free
mortgage market
Fixing this is an urgent task. One option would be to make it easier for
John Lloyd Left cannot please the
smaller companies to gain direct access to financial markets through
poor equities or bond vehicles. But this would take time. Improving the
Misha Glenny Brazil's ugly flaws profitability of EU banks is also not feasible in the short term.
exposed
" Investors' A better answer is to revitalise the market
for securitised loans that has all but
confidence needs to be
vanished since the financial crisis. This is
rebuilt. This means the
supported by the European Central Bank,
quality of underlying
bank loans must be which has called for loans to small and
beyond question medium-sized enterprises to be repackaged
into standardised products that are easier
for rating agencies to assess and for
investors to price. Before this can happen, investors need to be freed from the regulations that
diminish their appetite even for high-quality assets.
Investors' confidence needs to be rebuilt. This means that the quality of underlying bank loans must
be beyond question. Central banks have already defined rigorous quality thresholds that determine
which loans they will accept as collateral, and some of them employ teams of specialists to assess
these risks. Those standards could be applied more widely. European central banks should work
together to create securitisation conduits in eurozone countries, which would purchase SME loans
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complying with these strict criteria and bundle them into highly rated securities that could be sold on
to investors.
European states, acting via national and multilateral development banks, should offer guarantees on
these securities to insulate investors from losses if the loans turn sour. The ECB in conjunction with
national central banks should also stand ready to purchase such asset-backed securities temporarily
if needed, to provide liquidity to the market. Such government action is necessary to foster
confidence in an asset class that has all but disappeared since the financial crisis. They should not
prove costly to taxpayers, so long as the underlying loans are of high quality.
Until enterprises and households have access to adequate sources of financing, there will be no
convincing return to growth. Reviving the market for securitised loans is the fastest way to bring
Europe's credit shortage to an end.
The writer is a former governor of the Bank of France and president of Eurofi, a think-tank
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