Wide-ranging interview...Despite the public health crisis, European banks are currently in a fairly strong position. In contrast to the financial crisis of 2008, the current economic crisis did not originate from excessive risk-taking or outright misbehaviour by banks.
We are now 11 months into the pandemic. Are European banks in good health? Can a banking and financial crisis be ruled out?
Banks were hit just like any other firm
by the heavy recession triggered by the pandemic. Over the last decade a
great effort has been made to strengthen the financial system, through
regulation, by imposing capital buffers and by improving its overall
resilience to economic downturns. And now, European banks’ core capital
ratios, which supervisors use as one of their main metrics to assess
banks’ resilience to possible shocks or a deterioration of macroeconomic
conditions, are at the highest level since the establishment of the
banking union. This means that banks are in a position to absorb a
significant amount of losses and continue supporting households, small
businesses and corporates through these difficult times.
It is
also worth mentioning that, so far, the sharp decline in economic
activity caused by the pandemic has not resulted in an increase of
non-performing loans. According to the latest available information,
significant banks in the banking union held €485 billion of
non-performing loans at the end of September 2020, which is less than 3%
of total loans. By contrast, in 2015 non-performing loans stood at
almost €1 trillion – more than 7% of total loans.
Let me add,
however, that the fallout from the pandemic is not yet fully reflected
in banks’ balance sheets. This is why we have been saying that banks
must pay further attention to credit risk, as many observers have
flagged that there is likely to be an increase in corporate defaults
once the government support measures are lifted. It is therefore crucial
that banks proactively manage credit risk, reclassify loans on a
case-by-case basis and ensure prudent provisioning. They should
proactively address the challenges they face so that they can support a
speedy economic recovery.
Why are banks not like other companies?
Banks
play a central role in our economy. They accept deposits from
households and businesses and provide loans to other households and
businesses that need to consume or invest. In doing so, banks engage in
liquidity and risk transformation: they transform very liquid sight
deposits into longer-term loans to support economic activity, and they
use financing with instruments considered to be low risk – namely
deposits and senior unsecured funding instruments placed in the market –
to invest in riskier loans and securities. These functions are
essential to support the economy. But the mismatch between the liquidity
and risk characteristics of banks’ assets and liabilities, together
with the potentially high level of leverage of banks’ operations, could
make banks fragile during a recession or a major crisis. To stay safe
and protect deposits, banks have to be able to absorb losses and
continue fulfilling their essential functions, in good times and in bad.
This is where we come in: our job as banking supervisors is to monitor
the financial health of banks. And it is in everyone’s interest that
banks are resilient and can cope with stress.
Looking at the
response to the ongoing coronavirus (COVID-19) crisis in particular, we
can say that banks entered this crisis in much better shape than at the
start of the global financial crisis. This time banks were not the
source of the problem, but they are a key part of the solution: their
capacity to absorb losses and to keep lending to the economy is
essential for a sustained recovery.
The links between
banks and power are historically strong, especially in France. How is
this useful? Or is it dangerous? Should the comings and goings between
the financial authorities/ ministry of finance and banks’ management
(revolving doors) be regulated, or are there advantages to these two
spheres being so closely connected?
When I started
working as a supervisor in the late 1980s, the public sector, both at
the national and local levels, owned a very significant share of the
banking market in several Member States. Authorities directly appointed
bank managers, often paying more attention to political affiliation than
to technical expertise. Even after the banking sector opened to private
capital and many institutions became joint stock companies during the
1990s, national governments and financial authorities maintained a
certain closeness with local banks. Often, regulatory and supervisory
tools were used to favour national players and to ensure that they were
better positioned than their European and international competitors.
This led to a watering-down of the safeguards put in place to protect
against banking crises and helped to create the conditions for the great
financial crisis. The regulatory reforms adopted in recent years,
following robust international standards and the centralisation of
supervisory responsibilities within the banking union, have
re-established a healthy arm’s-length distance between public
authorities and the financial industry. A truly independent supervisor
and a decision-making process sheltered from national interests are a
significant improvement on the previous institutional set-up.
The
revolving doors between authorities and banks have to be subject to
strict scrutiny and internal rules. In principle, it is not a bad thing
that former regulators join boards of banks: they could bring a culture
of compliance and a greater awareness of the broader public interests at
stake in the banking business. Similarly, former bankers could bring
much-needed knowledge of banking practices when they join regulatory or
supervisory authorities. Still, there is a timing issue and a need to
manage a host of potential conflicts of interest. At the ECB we have
very strict internal rules. For instance, when I finish my mandate I
will be required to wait up to two years before I can take up any job in
the financial industry that could raise conflicts of interest.
What
will banks look like in the future? Are branch closures and job cuts
inevitable in the digital age? Where will banks fit in if a digital euro
is launched and big tech becomes more influential in the payments
industry?
It is clear that digitalisation will become an
integral part of the business models of banks, changing their internal
operations and how they do business. Banks will therefore need to invest
more in technology and digital transformation. The ongoing digital
revolution not only enables banks to enhance the quality of the services
they provide to their customers, it also provides opportunities for a
much-needed increase in cost efficiency.
It is not an exaggeration
to say that the current pandemic has catapulted us into the future. To
ensure business continuity, banks have adjusted their operations to
accommodate remote working and accelerated their efforts to provide
digital products and services. To some extent, this has meant closing
some branches which were no longer sustainable and reinforcing the trend
towards network rationalisation, which has been ongoing since the
global financial crisis. Some banks have not yet addressed the issue of
bloated structures and unviable business models, which result in
operating costs eating up almost all of their earnings. For these banks
the transformation process will also entail some degree of job cuts. But
banks will also need new skills and professionals to effectively
develop new products and distribution practices.
As for the
digital euro, the ECB is currently exploring its potential benefits and
challenges, and a lot will depend on the design. This is still a work in
progress. The digital euro would allow people to use electronic central
bank money directly in their daily transactions and the Eurosystem will
try to avoid it having any negative consequences for the financial
sector. A digital euro would be a new form of money for retail payments,
and certainly a store of value, but it should not become an investment
product. Saving is not the purpose of a digital euro, just as it is not
the main feature of cash.
Alternative means of payments and
platforms are increasingly competing with banks. Therefore, banks must
come up with innovative solutions to stay ahead of the curve. By making
use of enhanced technological applications and cooperating with
technology firms, banks could improve the bundling of products and
increase customer satisfaction.
How can European banks restore their profitability?
First
and foremost, banks can navigate the challenging environment by
reducing costs and improving efficiency. Potential strategies range from
more traditional measures, such as downsizing and closing branches,
which of course are not easy decisions, to adopting new cost-saving
technologies aimed at digitalising financial intermediation services,
including increasing reliance on online banking. In addition to cutting
costs, banks can also improve their income-generating capacities, again
through digitalisation or by enhancing their fee and commission-based
activities, for example. Finally, the current environment could also
trigger consolidation efforts in the sector, which could lead to
synergies and greater efficiency, removing the excess capacity that has
been in the sector since the great financial crisis.
SSM
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