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BANKING CRISES LESSONS FROM THE SWEDISH EXPERIENCE

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Title: BANKING CRISES LESSONS FROM THE SWEDISH EXPERIENCE


1
BANKING CRISES LESSONS FROM THE SWEDISH
EXPERIENCE
  • Klas Eklund, SEB
  • Istanbul, June 22, 2001

2
Financial crises
  • Currency crisis
  • Foreign debt crisis
  • Banking crisis
  • The ERM crisis in 1992-93 A typical currency
    crisis
  • American savings and loan problems in 1980s A
    banking crisis
  • The Asian crisis 1997-98 A combination of
    currency, debt and banking crises that occurred
    simultaneously
  • Turkey 2001 All three components

3
Frequent financial crises
  • 75 of IMF members have experienced financial
    crises in the past 15-20 years
  • Latin America in the 1980s
  • American SL crisis 1980s
  • The Nordic countries 1980s and 90s
  • South East Asia 1997-99
  • Brazil 1999
  • Turkey 2001
  • Resolution costs are higher in developing and
    transition economies than in developed countries

4
Why are banks important?
  • Banks have a special position. A bank failure -
    or rumours - can lead to systemic risk
  • Banks transmit financial problems through
    maturity/FX mismatches
  • Banks can conceal problems by rolling over bad
    loans and secure funding by paying more
  • Banks are less transparent than non-financial
    firms as they can defer a crisis

5
Effects of a banking crisis
  • The real economy is hurt by macro-economic
    instability, higher credit costs, credit squeeze
    and a less efficient allocation of savings
  • Growth will suffer
  • Monetary and fiscal policy may have to
    accommodate a weak banking sector
  • Other countries are effected by contagion and/or
    decline in external demand

6
Factors behind a crisis
  • Macroeconomic volatility
  • Lending booms
  • Maturity/currency mismatches
  • Badly prepared or wrongly sequenced
    liberalisation
  • Rigid exchange rate regimes
  • Micro problems
  • Weakness in accounting, disclosure and legal
    framework
  • Fraud
  • Political involvement
  • Too many eggs in one lending basket

7
Macroeconomic instability
  • Instability more pronounced in emerging markets
    due to less diversified economies, structural
    rigidities and less developed markets
  • Makes them more exposed and less able to absorb
    shocks
  • Leads to more volatility in exchange rates,
    interest rates and terms of trade

The roots of a banking crisis often lie in bad
policies
8
Stability and sound systems go hand in hand
  • In a financial crisis, causality between
    macroeconomic environment and financial sector
    soundness runs in both directions
  • Macroeconomic instability weakens financial
    institutions
  • An unsound financial sector undermines
    macroeconomic performance
  • Severe external shocks are easier to overcome in
    an environment with sound financial systems

9
Resolution costsFiscal and quasi-fiscal outlays
as share of GDP, .
10
THE SWEDISH CASE
11
The bubble years
  • Devaluations in 1981-82 High inflation and rapid
    wage increases
  • Deregulation of domestic credit in 1985 gave an
    increase of bank lending due to pent-up credit
    demand
  • Fixed exchange rate blocked monetary policy,
    politics blocked fiscal policy
  • Result Credit expansion, overheating, rising
    asset prices, business boom, huge lending to the
    real estate sector

12
The bubble bursts
  • In 1990, the boom in real estate ended. Asset
    prices fell
  • Governmental crisis and tighter policy
  • Inflation fell, growth turned negative,
    unemployment rose
  • Tax reform, higher real rates
  • The result A sharp credit contraction,
    increasing bank losses
  • Problems exacerbated by ERM crisis 1992
  • Capital outflow forced tight monetary policy with
    high interest rates
  • Forced a change of currency regime the fixed
    rate was abandoned

13
Sweden Indicators
14
Lending to non-bank public 1970-1997
15
Banks earnings and losses 1990-97
16
The events
  • Summer 1990, a major finance company suspended
    payments. A liquidity crisis for commercial
    papers issued by finance companies
  • Problems spread to banks two major banks needed
    new capital in 1991
  • Currency crisis Aug-Sep 1992 caused sharp rise of
    key rates
  • Dramatic situation. Loss of credibility in
    international markets. The stability of the
    system at risk in the autumn 1992

17
The recipe
  • 1. State depositors and credit guarantee
  • political consensus
  • 2. All-encompassing work-out process
  • government-controlled, but with foreign and
    private experts

18
The state bank guarantee
  • The state guarantees that banks and certain
    other credit institutions can meet their
    commitment on a timely basis.
  • The purpose is to ensure the stability of the
    payments system and to safeguard the supply of
    credit
  • The guarantee is not directed to a specific
    creditor

Important Political consensus - because of the
dangerous situation
19
Why was the guarantee accepted?
  • Deep and acute crisis in 1992
  • Acute loss of credibility
  • Dependence on international borrowing
  • Caused risks of a payments system breakdown
  • Rapid measures were necessary

20
The work-out process
  • A Bank Support Authority was set up, evaluated
    all banks
  • 1. Credit portfolios were classified and valued
  • 2. Property collateral was valued
  • 3. Sensitivity analyses were carried out
  • Three solutions identified
  • 1. Private solution, owners put up new equity
  • 2. Semi-private solution with equity guarantee
  • 3. Total restructuring
  • The core task Separate bad loans from good -
    split bad banks from sound. Create work-out
    companies

21
Three main cases
Capital ratio
No help
Temporary help
Close down
22
The rescue
  • The state support consisted of guarantees, loans
    and share capital
  • It covered all banks with a Swedish charter. The
    banks should be able to meet all their
    obligations. The guarantee did not cover share
    capital and subordinated debt
  • Government worked closely with the Bank Support
    Agency, the SEC and the Central Bank.
  • The Central Bank made it clear that its role was
    limited to supply liquidity to solvent banks

23
Results
  • Direct costs around 65 bn SEK (4 of GDP)
    private owners raised 13 bn in new equity
  • Currency depreciation plus lower rates created
    favourable macro background
  • Work-out lasted 4 years
  • The economic recovery was swifter than expected
  • Costs have been recovered
  • The state guarantee was abolished July 1, 1996

24
Why was the rescue successful?
  • The rescue action came early, was comprehensive
    and fully transparent
  • Implemented without delay
  • Broad political consensus about the support
    program
  • No nepotism or protection of vested interests
  • Market pricing of bad debt
  • Immediate credibility among foreign investors and
    creditors

25
WHAT HAVE WE LEARNT?
26
Crises will occur - but they can be amended
  • Swift deregulation and credit expansion can cause
    bubbles
  • After bubbles burst swift measures are needed
  • Bank restructuring, political consensus important
  • The tool-box is there1. Thorough evaluation of
    assets and liabilities2. Split into good
    and bad banks3. Do not protect owners or managers

27
What to do?
  • 1. Volatility
  • improve economic fundamentals
  • pay attention to price stability
  • allow foreign-owned banks
  • hedge against risks
  • increase the banks capital base
  • more prudence in risk taking
  • 2. Mismatches
  • high reserve requirements in normal times
  • long term funding in foreign currency

28
What to do?
  • 3. Lending booms
  • improve internal risk controls
  • strengthen supervision
  • diversify lending
  • look at collateral and cash flow
  • price products according to risk
  • 4. Government involvement
  • enhance transparency
  • establish an equal playing field for all banks
  • public ownership is no guarantee for sound banking

29
What to do?
  • 5. Liberalisation
  • introduce tough fit and proper tests
  • strengthened supervision must precede
    liberalisation
  • 6. The framework
  • adopt best international practices
  • aim for universal banks
  • 7. Exchange rate regime
  • apply a sufficiently flexible regime
  • do not defend an unsustainable rate

30
What to do?
  • 8. Incentives for prudence
  • strong capital base
  • no general bail-out policy
  • equity always at risk
  • 9. Fraud
  • too many want a banking license
  • fit and proper test cannot sort out all criminals
    and others that are unfit
  • a banking license is not forever
  • a good criminal law is important
  • law enforcement is a must

31
Global financial architecture
  • International rules and supervision
  • Internationally accepted standards for best
    practices in the financial sector (banks,
    securities, accounting, auditing, asset
    valuation, corporate governance )
  • More transparency (fiscal and monetary policy,
    foreign currency positions in public and private
    sector)
  • Private sector participation in the prevention
    and resolution of financial crises (the role of
    investors)
  • Apply the rules to more than banks
  • Banks are financial supermarkets and complex
    conglomerates. Non-banks are also becoming too
    big to fail
  • The moral hazard danger relates not only to banks

32
The global currency system
  • Banking crises often connected to currency crises
  • Three tasks for the currency system
  • Liquidity
  • Stability
  • Sovereignty
  • But the existing systems cannot fulfil all tasks
  • Target zones and fixed rates block liquidity
  • Floating rates do not give stability
  • Currency boards and dollarisation do not allow
    sovereignty
  • The world will move towards fewer currencies

33
Conclusion
  • Several types of financial crises
  • Successful solution needs both macro and micro
    policies
  • The tool-box for solving banking crises is there
    Corporate finance techniques
  • Speed, political consensus and honesty are key
    words
  • More transparent international institutions,
    common standards
  • Monetary union diminishes the risk of currency
    crises in Europe. But no option for Turkey today.
    Qualifying for the monetary union is a very long
    process
  • Domestic work-out process is priority 1.
    Long-term there will be fewer currencies
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