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27.08.2007
Another Landesbank bites the dustThree German financial institutions have filled the traditional news gap during this summer. WestLB, IKB Deutsche Kreditbank and SachsenLB, are all, or partly, publically owned banks, and they suffered severe liquidity problems, partly as a result of exposure to subprime investments. Two questions arise from this fact. The first is: Are German banks more exposed than others? The second question is: is it accidental that these are all public sector institutions. The answer to these two questions is no, and yes.
Germany is not particularly exposed to subprime, not more than the UK and other countries. I bet that we are going to get some very bad news from some UK-based investment banks this autumn. Another country with a significantly larger exposure to subprime credit is China, from where news of problems has barely surfaced. If German banks have a crisis, Chinese banks must be down under.
The more interesting point is whether it is accidental that all the German banks in trouble are essentially publically owned. The German public sector banks enjoy effective protection against default. This is important. Their default-free status is not implicit, as for example similar to the status of the US mortgage institutions Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac. Their protection is guaranteed, and everybody who works for these banks knows it. It is this guarantee that has made investment managers and traders – and their superiors - far more risk-prone than their counterparts in the private sector. Of course, Deutsche Bank has also suffered some losses, but its risk management systems are far more sophisticated than at those provincial banks.
The episode tells us, once again, that Germany has too many banks, and in fact, too many bankers. Most of the supervisory board members of these insitutions are themselves financially illiterate and do not fully understand the ins and out of investments in new financial instruments, such as CDOs or CDS. They have failed to implement proper risk managerment systems – something which a private bank could ill afford. They are the kind of banks that yields few public benefits to society in an age of deregulated financial markets. Yet their bailout is going to cost the German taxpayer a double digit billion heap of euros. I would not exclude a full-blown savings and loan crisis, as big in scope as the US crisis of the late 1980s. The bailout of these institutions will become a persistent nightmare for successive governments.
From a purely European perspective, this crisis is a welcome reminder of how badly the euro area in general, and Germany in particular, needs further banking concentration. The public policy case for Landesbanken has been getting weaker by the decade. Through their subprime adventures, these insitutions now stand discredited. It is time to reduce the public sector involvement in the financial industry, and to allow these institutions to merge and regroup within the private sector. With the strictures of monetary union and the single European market, such a concentration process should not happen at national level, but across Europe. Here I see German banks not as predators, but as prey. The best thing the German public entitites could do now is to extract the highest possible price for the badly managed banks they own. Unfortunately, they seem minded to go the other way, to consolidate among themselves and to form even larger public entities - national champions that are once again “too big to fail”. This kind of merger, as just happened in the case of SachsenLB, is not going to solve a single problem.
The public sector banks are at the root of Germany’s system of managed capitalism – the Social Market Economy. But this root has become increasingly rotten. As this crisis moves from subprime to other categories of credit, expect the pressure on the German financial system to mount.
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Comments
Papadopoullos from Canada
Tuesday, 04-09-07 04:44
A lot of information is still not available. For example why was the injection of funds by the ECB in the Hundreds of billions whereas the Fed only intervened in the tens. It seems that the diffussion of bad debt was asymmetric.
Contrary to Mr Munchau's views i tend to be very suspicious of these events. In other words the directors were probably taken advntage of.
The remedy is to write rule book for these institutions disallowing certain types of vehicles.
The idea that apriori public instiutions are bad private are good is not warranted from the empirical evidence.
Following your suggestions we should be considering the privatization of the ECB.
I do not consider Goldman Sachs, Bear Stearns etc virginal specimens in this issue.
This problem is definetely much more complex than is presented here.
The rating agencies are a problem. (Lack of competent personnel and probably deliberate misrepresantation of complex products).
Some of the debt products were probably too difficult to handle.
There are other issues as well.
fionn huber from switzerland
Wednesday, 29-08-07 08:15
It's worth looking at the shape of bank consolidation in Switzerland. At least some of the cantonal banks are privatised and their shares have performed well (the Basler and the St. Galler for example).
The Raiffeisen group www.raiffeisen.ch is the result of the successful consolidation of small cooperative banks at commune level.
Are any heads going to roll in the German banking sector as a result of the Subprime disaster? In Switzerland, the UBS chief Peter Wuffli has already been replaced and so was the top man at the Zürcherkantonalbank (though the reasons there were rather different).
David Wilkins from UK
Tuesday, 28-08-07 07:41
I think the analysis and suggestions for reform are absolutely correct but it's worth mentioning that beyond the ranks of banking experts, despite all of the problems, public sector banks are still pretty popular with the Germans, who often prefer them to the more overtly 'capitalist' private sector banks (although this attachment probably applies more to the Sparkassen than the Landesbanken). That could make it difficult to introduce really far-reaching changes.
fionn huber from Switzerland
Monday, 27-08-07 19:24
Are these "conduits" with exotic names like Arabella and Kaiserplatz off-balance sheet vehicles like the SPEs which featured prominently in the Enron affair?
I am sure Mr Munchau is right that the Subprime schock is the catalyst for a catharsis in the German regional banking sector and maybe the bailouts which have already begun are never likely to be repeated. In other words, making mistakes of the same magnitude again will not result in any future bailouts for any regional banks - or even Sparkassen?




