So far, each financial crisis in the series that began with the junk bond
bubble of 1989 has been noticeably different from its predecessors. New instruments,
new malefactors, new monetary policy experiments in response.
But the one that's now emerging feels strikingly similar to what just happened
a few years ago: Banks overexposed to assets they thought were safe but turn
out to be highly risky see their balance sheets deteriorate, their liquidity
dry up and their stocks plunge.
This time it's starting in Europe, where bank stocks are down by over 20%
year-to-date and credit spreads are exploding. For a general look at this process
see Is
Another European Bank Crisis Starting?
Not surprisingly, the scariest stories are emanating from Italy which, despite
inventing the mega-bank concept during the reign of the Medici, seems unable
to grasp how money actually works. Check out the following Wall
Street Journal chart of non-performing loans. When 16% of an entire country's
borrowers have stopped making their payments, that country is pretty much over.
All eyes are therefore on Italy's Banca Monte dei Paschi, which has a non-performing
loan ratio of 33% and, as a result, a plunging share price. When the Italian
economy finally blows up, this will probably be where it starts.
But here the story takes an even more disturbing turn. It seems that the other
lender now spooking the markets is none other than Deutsche Bank, pillar of
the world's best-performing economy. Shockingly-bad recent numbers have combined
with questions about its mountain of derivatives and exotic debt to put DB
in a very uncomfortable spotlight. Excerpts from analysis of the aforementioned
debt:
What
Deutsche Bank's Plunging CoCo Bonds Just Said about the Bank's Future
(Wolf Street) - Shares of scandal-plagued, litigation-hammered, loss-ridden
Deutsche Bank, one of the largest and least capitalized megabanks in the
world, closed at €16.32 today in Frankfurt, down 50% from April last
year. Investors are fidgeting in their seats, cursor on the sell-button.
In October, it had announced that it would shed divisions, clients, and
employees, and hopefully some risks, and that it would scrap its dividends.
January 20, the bank reported "earnings" - in quotes because it was a sea
of red ink. It had lost €2.1 billion in the fourth quarter, including €1.2
billion in its investment banking division where revenues had plunged 30%.
This brought "earnings" for the year to a record loss of €6.8 billion.
All these losses, write-offs, and fines have eaten into Deutsche Bank's
already low capital buffer. To prop up Tier 1 capital, Deutsche Bank had
issued the equivalent of €4.6 billion (about $5 billion) in "contingent
convertible bonds," spread over four issues, two in dollars, one in euros,
and one in pounds - something for everyone.
These CoCo bonds, as they're called, are special: The bank can call them
after a certain date but doesn't have to redeem them; annual coupon payments
are contingent on the bank's ability to stay above certain cash and capital
requirements, as specified by German and European banking regulations; and
investors cannot call a default if the bank fails to make the coupon payment.
Despite the risks, yield-desperate investors eagerly gobbled them up. Now
Deutsche Bank is just a hair away from breaching the limits. And there's
a lot of nail-biting.
For example, its 6% euro CoCo bonds had been beaten down to a record low
of 85.5 cents on the euro by January 21, from a 52-week high in April last
year of 102.11, and down from their peak in early 2014 of 104, shortly after
they'd been issued.
Meanwhile, it's not clear what policy changes, if any, will save the day:
A
Wounded Deutsche Bank Lashes Out At Central Bankers: Stop Easing, You
Are Crushing Us
(Zero Hedge) - Ten days ago, when Deutsche Bank stock was about 10% higher,
the biggest German commercial bank declared war on Mario Draghi, as we put
it, warning him that any further easing by the ECB would only push stocks
(with an emphasis on DB stock which has gotten pummeled over the past few
months) lower. What it got, instead, was a slap in the face in the form of
a major new easing program when the Bank of Japan announced it is unveiling
negative rates just three days later.
Which is why overnight a badly wounded Deutsche Bank has expanded its war
against the ECB to include the BOJ as well, and in a note titled "The Risks
From Further ECB and BOJ Easing" said the benefits to risk assets from further
easing no longer exist, and in fact the "impact has been exactly the opposite."
In other words, we have reached that fork in the road within the monetary
twilight zone, where Europe's largest bank is openly defying central bank
policy and demanding an end to easy money. Alas, since tighter monetary policy
assures just as much if not more pain, one can't help but wonder just how
the central banks get themselves out of this particular trap they set up
for themselves.
The Zero Hedge article is long and a bit technical but well worth the effort
for anyone who wants to understand the bind in which big banks -- and their
central bank benefactors -- find themselves. To sum up: the current situation
is untenable, easier money will make things worse, and tighter money will make
things a lot worse.