N.Z Banks: How Safe is your Money?
Most of
the developed countries of the world operate some form of retail deposit
guarantee scheme designed to protect deposits in the event of a bank collapse.
Many had been in existence for some years prior to the 2008 GFC and those
countries that didn’t have them quickly implemented them as the crisis
developed.
I briefly
mentioned the N.Z Retail Deposit Guarantee Scheme back in June, in my post ‘Don’t
be a Rabbit in the Headlights’ http://kiwiblackers.blogspot.co.nz/2012/06/dontbe-rabbit-in-headlights-as-we.html
Here’s a quick reminder-
In New Zealand, the Retail Deposit
Guarantee Scheme that was introduced during the depths of the 2008 crisis has
now been wound down. It was brought in out of necessity because Australia had
already done the same thing and if NZ had not followed suit there would have
been a mass exodus of funds across the ditch.
The sole reason the schemes were rushed into being around the globe was to restore investor confidence and prevent a ‘bank run’. Were a serious bank run to occur and the banking system collapse, neither the NZ Government nor many other Governments have the necessary financial muscle to actually guarantee the deposits in their banking systems, it would effectively bankrupt the country. The banking sector is simply too large.
The sole reason the schemes were rushed into being around the globe was to restore investor confidence and prevent a ‘bank run’. Were a serious bank run to occur and the banking system collapse, neither the NZ Government nor many other Governments have the necessary financial muscle to actually guarantee the deposits in their banking systems, it would effectively bankrupt the country. The banking sector is simply too large.
The fact
that the guarantee has lapsed has not been an issue over the last few years.
During this period N.Z has experienced relative calm after the shock felt
during the initial stage of the GFC, so the fact that savings could be lost in
the event of a bank collapse has not been a matter for concern in the minds of
depositors.
Meanwhile
the Government and the Reserve Bank have been working to improve New Zealand’s
ability to withstand another shock to the financial system and their solution
is the Reserve Bank’s Open Bank Resolution (OBR) policy.
This
policy was flagged some months back and is designed to act as a new tool in the
case of a bank failure.
In
general terms the process works like this –
- A statutory manager is appointed
- All means of depositing or withdrawing money are frozen, as are all of the bank’s liabilities.
- A portion of customer accounts are frozen and all other creditor’s claims are frozen in full (the amount frozen will be determined by the size of the bank’s losses plus a certain degree of slack).
These
processes occur immediately, and are completed on the day the bank folds, then
the following morning,
- Bank reopens for core transaction business and to allow depositors to access all bar the frozen portion of their funds.
After
that, once the final assessment of losses is known, additional funds will be
distributed if available.
There are
undoubtedly some good aspects to this policy, especially the quick ring-fencing
of liabilities, allowing people swift access to the majority of their funds,
but the inclusion of customer deposits in the assets that could be frozen will
come as a shock to most people.
Many New
Zealanders wrongly think that their savings are still guaranteed should a big
bank go under, in spite of the expiry of the N.Z Government’s scheme, and as a
consequence are more trusting of the banking system than they probably should
be.
Even with
the addition of the OBR policy, should a bank get into trouble I believe things
will play out in a very similar fashion to previous ‘bank runs’.
- Once the OBR policy is triggered, depositors will become aware for the first time that some of their funds are at risk
- As awareness of the implications of OBR policy become known, depositors will immediately start withdrawing their funds from banking entities with the same risk.
- This will in turn create a problem for these institutions likely resulting in another OBR event with another bank, and so on.
- Depositors will be desperately searching for a safe home for their funds and at this point, the Government will have no choice but to once again underwrite the entire banking system or face a massive exodus of funds from N.Z to the many jurisdictions that do have a retail deposit guarantee, creating a system wide banking collapse.
I fail to
see what good the OBR policy will do as we will inevitably get the same end
result. It seems more of a crisis management tool, designed in part to move
some of the risk onto depositors, and little to do with making the banking
system more robust and less likely to fail.
Rather
than playing ‘pass the buck’ and just
focusing on the management of the next crisis, why don’t they instead look to
ways of making the system more balanced, less exposed to risk and therefore
less prone to a crisis in the first place?
Let’s
have a look at some of the more obvious things that Government and the Reserve
Bank could do:
- Work to decrease our massive reliance upon Australian owned banks.
They
currently account for around 90% of New Zealand’s banking sector, a situation
that is virtually unprecedented anywhere else in the world. Aside from the fact
that our balance of payments problems are exacerbated because so much of their
profit is generated in N.Z but returned to Australia , the very fact that so
much of our banking is foreign owned and therefore subject to problems within
the Australian banking system, increases the risk within our own.
- Legislate to prevent banks from offering mortgages on ridiculously high Loan to Value ratios (LVR’s).
Banks
have repeatedly shown themselves unable to self regulate when it comes to
mortgage lending. When the housing market is running hot they chase the
perceived ‘easy money’ by offering higher and higher leverage until the obvious
happens and the bubble bursts, disrupting the entire banking system. If these
LVR’s were capped it would both deprive the housing boom of the fuel it needs
to flourish, and stop the imbalances developing in the system in the first
place.
- Raise the risk profile of mortgage lending on the banks books. This will stop them pumping money into the over-inflated and under-productive housing sector
By making
mortgage lending ‘riskier’ to the banks, it restricts the volume of mortgage
lending they can undertake, and increases the relative attraction of other
forms of lending. Over time this will result in a rebalancing of the banks’
lending profile which decreases their overall lending risk, and drives more
capital into the business sector where jobs and profits are ultimately generated.
- Curtail the banks ability to access the wholesale funding markets, forcing them to pay more for domestic savers funds.
Currently
the banks are sourcing approximately 30% of their funding from the overseas
wholesale market at cheap interest rates. This allows them to offer lower rates
to domestic depositors because they are not so dependent upon these funds. This
high dependency on overseas money dramatically increases the systemic risk, as
should this money flow suddenly dry up things would get very ugly, very
quickly!
This is particularly pertinent as the
overwhelming majority of money in the wholesale markets originates from the
euro-zone, and when the next leg of the GFC hits, it is there that the impacts
will be most felt, with wholesale markets freezing up and likely remaining so
for some time.
By
restricting their access to overseas funds, you force the banks to chase
domestic savings. This will drive up the rates offered on domestic deposits,
benefiting savers, and decrease our reliance upon this riskier overseas money.
It will also benefit our balance of payments as the interest payments will be
staying in the country rather than going overseas.
None of
these solutions are in themselves a silver bullet, but implemented as part of a
broader strategy might help to make our system more robust, less prone to
external shock and with a better lending balance.
It is
possible to have a banking system we can rely upon in times of global strife
rather than one with obvious weaknesses that will more likely be an ‘Achilles
heel’.
Unfortunately
the chances of any meaningful change are remote. In his inaugural speech, the
new Governor of the Reserve Bank Mr Graeme Wheeler seemed to agree with the
pre-existing orthodox approach of his predecessor Mr Bollard, and suggested
that although new measures might be introduced they would be more tinkering
around the edges than a fundamental overhaul of the system.
It would
appear therefore that the fallout from the 2008 GFC didn’t frighten the powers
that be sufficiently to undertake any meaningful change. They seem content to tweak
the system rather than undertake the required action (like rearranging the
deckchairs on the Titanic), and as a result the safety of deposits during a
serious banking event will remain questionable.
I would
be very careful where you hold your savings, and be ready and able to move them
should the storm clouds start to gather.
The
Government and Reserve Bank may be quite sanguine about the risks, believing
that the prospects for the global economy are improving and that another risk
event like 2008 is quite a remote possibility.
I don’t share their enthusiasm.
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