Follow Us

Follow us on Twitter  Follow us on LinkedIn
 

09 December 2019

Financial Times: Worrying signs that a great global deregulation has begun


The great global deregulation has begun. The signs are subtle so far, but last week threw up four pieces of evidence that the US and Europe are poised to compete to ease bank regulation — in turn threatening the co-ordinated global approach that has helped make the international banking system safer in the decade since the financial crisis.

Exhibit one: a week ago, Valdis Dombrovskis, the EU’s financial services commissioner, warned that the UK would only retain full market access to EU clients post-Brexit if UK rules remained “equivalent” to — or closely aligned with — the rules of the EU27. Brussels has made a similar point before. This time, though, there was a more explicit deregulatory agenda. Market access, he spelt out, would be dependent on “not starting to engage in some kind of deregulation”.

To wit, exhibit two, which followed when UniCredit, Italy’s biggest bank, announced there would be a significant financial benefit from tweaks made to new capital rules. The Italian bank is the first to quantify the capital relief generated by the EU’s CRD5 bank capital directive relative to the updated “Basel IV” global banking rules, which CRD5 is supposed to implement.

Exhibit three: Randy Quarles, the Fed governor in charge of financial regulation, and the head of the global regulatory oversight body, the Financial Stability Board, told a Congressional hearing on Wednesday that overall capital levels at US banks should not rise, despite the extra demands of Basel IV. “We don’t believe that the aggregate level of loss absorbency needs to be increased,” he said in comments that suggested ways will be found to offset increased headline capital demands.

Exhibit four is a small but important initiative being pushed by banks such as Deutsche Bank and HSBC (with a sympathetic hearing from some European regulators), to grant environmentally friendly investments a lighter capital treatment. Addressing climate change is a crucial topic but incentivising green finance in this way looks like a recipe for distorted risk-taking.

Taken in isolation, all of the above might simply suggest pragmatism. Banks are far safer than they were in 2008. Capital levels have increased as much as tenfold over the past decade.

But there are clear signs that Brussels and Washington are eyeing each other with suspicion, spurring fears at the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, authors of the Basel capital rules, that the globally harmonised approach to regulation could break down.

Competitive pressures to deregulate could not come at a worse time. Geopolitical uncertainties — from Brexit to Hong Kong — threaten economic stability. President Trump’s bellicose trade policies and a domestic Chinese slowdown are hurting global growth. And in financial markets, asset bubbles remain ripe for puncture, as quantitative easing and ultra-low interest rates have inflated the value of everything from house prices to private equity targets. If at this juncture we fail to preserve a robust and harmonised global approach to banking regulation, history is likely to judge us harshly.

Full article on Financial Times (subscription required)



© Financial Times


< Next Previous >
Key
 Hover over the blue highlighted text to view the acronym meaning
Hover over these icons for more information



Add new comment