Europe braced for landmark banking review by the ECB

Permanent TSB among 25 European banks found to be holding too little capital at the end of last year

After putting the euro zone’s top 130 banks through their paces, the European Central Bank will face a test of its own today - will its landmark health check succeed in convincing investors the region’s lenders are safe? Photograph: Martin Leissl/Bloomberg
After putting the euro zone’s top 130 banks through their paces, the European Central Bank will face a test of its own today - will its landmark health check succeed in convincing investors the region’s lenders are safe? Photograph: Martin Leissl/Bloomberg

After putting the euro zone's top 130 banks through their paces, the European Central Bank will face a test of its own today - will its landmark health check succeed in convincing investors the region's lenders are safe?

The ECB will announce the names of 25 banks that held too little capital at the end of last year, along with details of around 10 banks that have not yet made up the shortfall. The announcement is due at 11am.

Permanent TSB has failed the stress tests while Germany's Deutsche Bank and Greece's Alpha Bank passed.

With much of the news revealed in advance, the major remaining question is whether the exercise will be judged credible enough to banish lingering fears about euro zone banks, freeing them up to lend again and tempt US investors back to European banking shares.

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The ECB has staked its reputation on delivering an independent assessment of the euro zone banks before it takes over as their supervisor on November 4th.

The European Banking Authority (EBA), which will include the ECB results in an announcement of EU-wide stress test results at the same time today, is hoping its exercise will prove more convincing than previous rounds in 2009, 2010 and 2011.

The euro dipped on Friday amid uncertainty about the results, while euro area banking stocks were volatile as rumours swirled about who had passed and who had not. Initial comments from investors today and trading in banks tomorrow will be the first real indication of how the tests are judged.

“At least we will get a true picture of what the banks have genuinely in their books,” said Alan Lemangnen, Europe economist at Natixis in Paris. “We see that the solvency of the European banking sector will improve and has already improved.”

Sources familiar with the tests say the ECB’s findings on whether banks have overvalued their assets, and what kind of corrective action it demands, will be at least as significant as who passes or fails.

A forensic review of how banks value their assets marks these health checks out from three previous EBA tests. While just 20 percent of banks have failed the ECB tests, most lenders are expected to be found to have overvalued their assets.

If the ECB judges banks’ assets to be worth far less than the banks do, it will not force a bank to immediately take additional loan losses.

However, banks will have to hold more capital to reflect the ECB’s assessment of their likely future losses as asset values fall to what the ECB believes they are now. This will leave banks with less flexibility to expand, lend or pay dividends.

Any outcome that depresses lending would be at odds with the ECB’s objective of getting banks to pump more credit into the euro zone economy to revive much-needed growth.

“Banks shied away from taking on new risks in order to look as safe as possible,” Berenberg analysts said. “Their uncertainty slowed the credit cycle over the last year, and prevented job-creating business investments from going ahead. This uncertainty should fade now.”

France’s central bank governor, Christian Noyer, said on Friday the exercise was “more rigorous than what was done in other big countries” and would restore credibility in the sector.

The results will be closely watched for any sign of political favouritism. Sources said on Friday that the checks found that banks in Greece, Cyprus, Slovenia and Portugal had fallen short of the capital benchmarks at the end of last year, while lenders in Spain and France had fared, by and large, better than expected.

In Germany, the president of the association of German private-sector banks, Juergen Fitschen, said on Thursday the results would probably give German lenders a clean bill of health, something that may raise eyebrows given widespread concerns about some areas of German banking like shipping lending.

Mr Fitschen is also co-chief executive of Deutsche Bank . Sources said that the lender passed the stress test by a wide margin, showing balance sheet strength well above the minimum requirements.

The ECB review is running in parallel with an EU-wide stress test, and the results for both will be announced simultaneously. ECB vice president Vitor Constancio and chief supervisor Daniele Nouy will brief the media at 11.30am today. The ECB’s passmark is for banks to have high-quality capital of at least 8 per cent of their risk-weighted assets in the most likely economic scenario for the next three years, and capital of at least 5.5 per cent in an adverse scenario.

The assessment is based on banks’ positions at the end of 2013. Since the end of last year, however, banks have already strengthened their balance sheets by issuing new shares, retaining earnings or selling assets. This may mean that even if banks fail, they may have already dealt with their problems.

Since mid-2013, efforts by banks to boost their balance sheets have amounted to 203 billion euros, the ECB said.

Banks with a capital shortfall will have to present the ECB within two weeks with a plan that details how they intend to close the gaps. They will then be given six to nine months to do so, depending on where in the review the shortfalls occurred.

Reuters