It would not only be a show of unity, but an essential step to boost financial stability across Europe.
The euro region has taken several steps to centralize banking
regulation and supervision, but there is little sign that lenders are
interested in seeking to merge beyond national borders. Two recent deals
— one has been proposed in Spain, the other occurred in Italy — show that, for all the good intentions, Europe’s “banking union” remains incomplete.
The
European Central Bank — the euro zone’s top supervisor — will be
content with domestic mergers for now, since these can still help reduce
excess capacity in an overcrowded industry. But politicians and
regulators must redouble efforts to harmonize the rules in the monetary
union, so that bankers have more reasons to look abroad. The euro area
needs more cross-border mergers not just as a further show of unity, but
as an essential step to boost financial stability.
Yet domestic mergers are still the only game in town. Two
weeks ago, CaixaBank SA and Bankia SA said they were exploring an
all-share deal that would create Spain’s largest domestic bank. The
announcement came only weeks after Intesa Sanpaolo SpA took over rival
Ubi Banca SpA to become Italy’s largest lender by assets.
There is no doubt that, especially during times of crisis,
the most obvious combinations are those not far from home. The easiest
rationale for merging banks is that cutting costs and redundant branch
networks can yield significant savings.
However, cross-border mergers offer excellent opportunities for
revenue diversification. These may be less obvious during a pan-European
recession, but they are especially helpful when an economic shock hits
one market more than others.
The ECB has no preference between domestic and cross-border
mergers. A national combination can help increase a country’s financial
stability when it leads to higher profitability or combines a stronger
bank with a shakier competitor. In theory, allowing weak banks to exit
the market in an orderly way can also reduce systemic vulnerabilities,
but Europe has proved stubbornly incapable of letting lenders fail. A merger is often the only realistic alternative.
But
transnational deals offer additional gains to supervisors: Above all,
they can loosen the dangerous ties between a bank and its home state.
This means that when a country is in trouble, the lender will suffer
less; and when the bank is in poor shape, its difficulties will be
spread across different economies. This diffusion can be particularly
beneficial in the euro zone, since a shared currency and monetary policy
means individual governments have fewer tools to address isolated
crises.....more at Bloomberg
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