Title: The Swedish Banking Crisis and the Swedish Model.
1The Swedish Banking Crisis and the Swedish Model.
- Pehr Wissén
- Institute for Financial Research SIFR
- June 23 2009
2 How did you go bankrupt? Bill asked. Two
ways, Mike said. Gradually and then suddenly.
Ernest Hemingway The Sun also Rises
31. Background Macro
4Market share for the five largest banks
- Finland 90
- Denmark 87
- Sweden 83
- Norway 60
- EU15 58
- Source Swedish Bankers Association 2000
5Deregulations
- Deregulation 1982-1985
- Lending ceilings
- Interest rate controls
- Liquidity quotas
- Capital controls
6After the deregulation
- Credit boom
- New market environment for the banks
- Increased competition
- Lax lending standards
- Lending boom outside the banking sector
7Macro policy
- Inflationary fiscal policy
- Fixed exchange rate
- Tax policy
- Nominal interest deductible at 50 marginal tax
rate - Low property tax
8The fixed exchange rate
- Customers borrowing in baskets of foreign
currencies, investing in domestic commercial
property - Banks intermediaries
92. The Housing Bubble
10Climate for a Bubble
- The combination of
- A fixed exchange rate
- Deregulation.
- Deductability for interest payments
- Low after tax interest rates
- Capital controls which locked in investments
- gave good ground for a bubble
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12Prices of office buildingsReal price indexes for
prime location office buildings
Source Newsec and Sveriges Riksbank
13Swedish house pricesNominal house price indexes
Source Statistics Sweden
143. The financial/banking crisis.
15The Crisis
- Triggers
- ERM crisis
- Tax reform
- Propagating mechanisms
- The demise of the finance companies
- Liquidity disappearing from the commercial paper
market - Commercial property
- Fire sales
- Illiquidity
- Massive credit losses
- Housing The third wave
- Transaction volumes down
- Small credit losses.
16The sequence of events
- Fall 1991 Nordbanken and Första Sparbanken in
crisis. Government providing equity for
Nordbanken. - Spring 1992 Situation worse for Nordbanken,
Första Sparbanken and Gota. - Considered a systemic crisis.
- Fall 1992 Government blanket guarantee.
Political consensus.
17Sequence of events.
- Fall 1992 Liquidity in foreign currency from the
Central Bank. - Riksdag decided on an unlimited frame for
government support - Spring 1993 Bank Support Authority formed.
- All major banks exept one ( Handelsbanken )
applied for government assistance. - Nordbanken and Gota nationalized
18Sequence of events
- Spring 1993 The other banks raised equity from
private sources. - Bad banks formed by all banks. Securum and
Retriva for the government owned banks. - July 1st 1996 Blanket guarantee and special
legislation abolished.
19Losses then and nowOperating profits and credit
losses, major Swedish banks, billion SEK, 2008
prices
Source Sveriges Riksbank
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214. The Swedish Model
22The Swedish model
- The blanket guarantee.
- There was no deposit insurance
- Funding the banks in foreign currency
- Takeover of failed banks
- Forming bad banks for the acquired banks
- Private banks setting up bad banks
- Eventual sale of bad banks and acquired banks
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25The bad banks
- Securum and Retriva
- Set up to allow normal management of the good
banks. - Not a purchase of assets
- Bad loans set aside one bad bank for each bank
- Careful valuation of the bad assets
- Full tranparency
26The bad banks
- Expected to be in operation 10-15 years
- Wound up in 1997 with a better result than
expected
275. An International Comparison
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336. The present crisis and the Swedish banking
system
34Source Hyun Song Shin 2009