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Archive for the ‘Banking’ Category

Net exports from the UK financial sector fell last year

Tuesday, August 3rd, 2010

Net exports of the UK financial sector fell by 17% in 2009 to £41.8bn. This was the second highest figure on record but was, not surprisingly, down from £50.6bn in 2008 as a result of the ‘credit crunch’. These figures were published yesterday by TheCityUK, an independent body which promotes the UK financial services industry.

Although securities dealers contributed £1.4bn, fund managers £2.9bn and professional services £6.4bn, banks were by far the biggest contributor. The banking sector recorded net exports of £31.0bn in 2009, down from £25.3bn in 2008.

These figures are really important because the £41.8bn in net export earnings from the UK financial sector is helping to offset the £82bn trade deficit in goods. And, the banks’ contribution is nearly three-quarters of the financial sector surplus account.

So, love them or hate them, the banks are important to the UK economy. This means that the government is having to tread warily in its dealings with banks and has not yet introduced any financial reforms. Basically, they have asked the banks to act in a grown-up and honourable fashion, when the investment arms seem to be run by risk-taking, overgrown kids, intent on creating the biggest bonus they can. It’s like the children running the school.

Just this week HSBC has announced that it is putting $2.52bn (£1.6bn) into a piggy bank for the first six months of its financial year, to hand on to its investment banking arm. This is up $300m on last year even though the bank’s operating income has dropped by $10.3bn. HSBC is not alone in its desire to keep bonuses buoyant.

Just two years ago UBS put a stop on bonuses which almost led to the collapse of its investment bank, as bankers went elsewhere to where the grass was greener. So, unilateral action taken by a single bank has been seen not to work. This then begs the question, supposing the government, as has been threatened, caps all UK bonuses. Does this mean that we will have an emigration flood to Frankfurt, New York and Tokyo as bankers seek more lucrative employment in a less regulated market.

This is a dangerous game of ‘call my bluff’ which the government cannot afford to lose, given the earning power of the financial sector. The banks are still in the mindset of taking mega risks, for mega profits to supply themselves with mega bonuses. The knowledge that the government will act as lender of last resort, as in the recent banking crisis, and bail them out of their own indiscretions, is not going to help.

The government has got to draw a fine line between giving the ‘golden goose’ a good slapping and killing it altogether.

Recovery being hindered by lack of credit

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Tight credit conditions and a rise in the cost of borrowing are likely to weaken the UK’s recovery according to Britain’s manufacturers. This is the result of a survey just conducted by the EEF, the manufacturers’ organisation. It is particularly surprising given the historically low level of the Bank of England’s base rate at 0.5% and the efforts the Bank has made to pump liquidity back into the system through its scheme of “quantitative easing”.

 

The main result of the EEF survey shows that 47% of firms reported an increase in the cost of finance in the past two months. This compares with 44% in the second quarter of 2009 and only 37% in the first quarter. Also, only 7% of firms saw a fall in the cost of borrowing, down from 10% in the second quarter. On top of this 56% of manufacturers said that costs had risen on new lines of borrowing (up from 51% in the second quarter), fees were up for 43% compared to 39% previously, and interest rates were up for 29% compared to 26% previously.

 

A third of companies saw a fall in the availability of new lines of borrowing, which was an improvement on figures of 42% in the second quarter and 49% in the first. However, small firms were being harder hit than larger firms. In fact 36% of small firms reported a fall in credit availability compared to only 17% of larger firms.

Manufacturers still struggling to borrow money at reasonable rates.

Manufacturers still struggling to borrow money at reasonable rates.

 

In summary, Steve Radley, EEF Director of Policy said: “Despite historically low levels of interest rates and significant intervention by the Government and the Bank of England, credit conditions remain very tight for most manufacturers.

 

“Given the severe damage done to banks’ balance sheets by the recession, this is likely to remain the case for some time and will dampen the recovery as meeting new orders puts increasing pressure on manufacturers’ cashflow. This suggests that the Government and the Bank will need to move very carefully in removing the current levels of support for the economy.”

 

This seems a relatively mild response to the quandary that many small businesses find themselves in. We should be asking the question as to why the government is allowing banks to get away with charging such high rates of interest in the current climate or refusing to lend at all. What about the banks that have come into public ownership? Why is the government not “cracking the whip” here and “encouraging” more generous lending terms? Something needs to be done soon if the recovery is not to stall.

Do we need a High Pay Commission?

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Today the centre-left political pressure group, Compass, and 100 leading public figures launched a campaign to curb excessive pay. They called on the government to establish a High Pay Commission.

 

The statement says: “The crisis we find ourselves in is one significantly caused by greed. The salaries of those at the top raced away while the median wage stagnated. Inequality grew, and an economic crisis ensued. The unjust rewards of a few hundred ‘masters of the universe’ exacerbated the risks were all exposed to many times over. Banking and executive remuneration packages have reached excessive levels.”

 

The group claimed that performance pay cycles were too short and that some executives were being rewarded for failure, often at the expense of their own companies and the economy at large. Just as a Low Pay Commission was set up in 1997 to advise on introducing a minimum wage, so a High Pay Commission should be set up to launch “a wide-ranging review of pay at the top.”

 

Brendan Barber, TUC general secretary argued that: “The growing gap between executive and employee pay has a damaging impact on staff engagement and has created a new class of super-rich that float free from society. The government can no longer afford to ignore this.”

 

Just yesterday the Chancellor, Alistair Darling, gave an interview on this subject to the Sunday Times, saying that the government was ready to intervene. He said: “I am quite clear that some of the problems we have today were caused by the fact that some traders were incentivised to take risks which neither they nor their bosses fully understood.”

 

One of the major problems has been one of “moral hazard”. This occurs when traders and bankers receive financial rewards based on the volume of business which they are engaging in, knowing that if they make wrong decisions, their companies are so large that the government would have to intervene. It can be argued that if this view is widespread then any reasonable levels of business caution will go out the window.

 

The government is waiting for Sir David Walker to deliver an independent review of bonuses and the way companies are run, before making a final decision on whether to legislate.

Major losses at State rescued banks

Wednesday, August 5th, 2009

Northern Rock, the nationalised bank, reported losses yesterday which had risen by 24%. The bank was nationalised in February 2008 because it was unable to fund its business in the money markets and customers were defaulting on their loans. It reported a total loss of £724.2m in the first six months of this year, which compared with a loss of £585.4m for the same period in 2008. It now owes the government £10.9bn.

 

If house prices continue to fall and unemployment continues to rise then even more of Northern Rock’s customers are going to struggle to meet their repayments. In fact, many of their customers are now in negative equity, whereby their home is worth less at current market rates than the total value of the mortgage loan they have taken out. The statistics show that the number of their customers whose properties are currently worth less than their mortgages has risen to 39%, which compares with 33% at the end of 2008.

 

This morning Lloyds Banking Group reported their half-yearly figures. Lloyds took over HBOS in January, and announced a loss of £4bn in the first six months of this year after writing down the value of assets which were worth less than they had originally thought.

 

Lloyds Banking Group is 43% owned by the government and had to take a £13.4bn charge in its accounts which was mainly due to bad loans. Of these bad loans, 80% were attributed to HBOS.

 

These figures reflect the extraordinary risks which both Northern Rock and HBOS were taking on their lending books during the global financial free-for-all which sparked off the credit crisis and subsequent recession around the world. Although the worst should now be over for both of these institutions it is unlikely that the government will be able to sell its stake in either group before the next election – especially if it wants to make a profit on the sale.

Pound rises to its highest value against dollar for 10 months

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

At one point yesterday sterling rose to $1.6850 against the dollar – its highest level since the middle of October 2008. Although this is still well down on the $2 to the pound level seen last July, it does mean that the pound has risen by a quarter since January 2009. Sterling also rose against the euro to its highest value for a month.

 

Why has sterling recovered to this extent? Partly it is due to sentiment turning against the dollar. The huge fiscal deficit and health care reforms in the US have enticed some investors into other currencies.

 

The pound has risen 25% against the dollar since January

The pound has risen 25% against the dollar since January

On the other hand, sterling was buoyed by some good news. Some of you older readers might remember what that is. In fact, a new survey has just been published by the Chartered Institute of Purchasing and Supply (CIPS) and Markit. Their index figures showed that the UK manufacturing sector was expanding. Figures below 50 for the index show contraction and above 50 reflect expansion. The UK index actually rose from 47.4 in June to 50.8 in July, which is the first time it has been above the 50 level since March 2008. Markit described the figures as being “remarkable”.

 

Sterling also received positive sentiment as a result of the strong profits revealed by Barclays and HSBC yesterday which suggested that there will be little further need for the government to support the UK banking sector.

 

On the negative side, the recent rise in sterling will make it more difficult for our exporters but lower import prices may help fuel an increase in consumption which would boost growth.

Inflation Targeting: Learning the lessons from the financial crisis

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

On Tuesday of this week, Spencer Dale, Executive Director and Chief Economist at the Bank of England, used the above title as his talk to the Society of Business Economists, and I will try to summarise his main themes.

 

He noted that the sudden end to a long period of economic stability has led to the inflation targeting framework to be questioned. The Bank had cut interest rates by 4.5 percentage points in just six months, which was twice the size of any reduction made by any other G7 central bank over the past eighteen months. Also, the MPC had decided to purchase £125bn of assets financed by issuing central bank money, which was equivalent to around 9% of annual GDP. It was this “courageous” action which showed the strength of inflation targeting.

 

He stated that the current inflation targeting framework should continue to be central to the design of macroeconomic policy in the UK, but that it was not sufficient in itself to counter asset price rises and economic bubbles as we have seen recently. It has been suggested that the Bank take note of such developing movements in the future, but this may mean making interest rate movements against a perceived problem which might take years to reveal itself to the nation. Such a policy would be difficult to operate in practice – something he calls ‘leaning against the wind’.

What lessons have been learned from the financial crisis?

What lessons have been learned from the financial crisis?

 

He asks, at which point did it become clear that sub-prime lending had ceased to be a beneficial financial innovation to allow those who found access to credit difficult the chance to buy their own house, and instead become a source of international financial instability? Such judgements involve “second guessing” outcomes generated by financial and economic markets. He therefore argues that “leaning against the wind” to prevent a bubble inflating might seem that the Bank was responding to phantom concerns. The required policy of raising interest rates, undershooting the inflation target and inflicting what would appear unnecessary economic hardship would undermine faith in the inflation target and the MPC.

 

He thus argues that a range of new instruments will be required to deal with asset price bubbles and economic imbalances and allow interest rates to be the primary tool to hit the inflation target in the short-to-medium term.

 

He also looked at some criticisms of the Bank’s asset purchase programme. One of these criticisms was that these purchases have been too heavily skewed towards gilts and that more private sector debt should have been bought. However, he argues that given the modest size of corporate credit markets, such purchasing would not have improved their functioning, and large scale asset purchases could risk crowding out private debt markets.

 

A second criticism was that some of the gilts purchased have been from foreign investors and that these funds would not have been allocated back into sterling assets. He argues that even if that were the case there is still the effect of a lower exchange rate as sellers sell sterling to buy assets in other currencies and that this is a key channel through which the monetary easing may be transmitted.

 

The final criticism he deals with concerns the need to articulate an exit strategy by the MPC. He says that the when economic prospects recover, the MPC can tighten policy both by raising Bank Rate and selling assets. The most difficult issue concerning an exit strategy is the question of timing as far as tightening policy is concerned. He says: “Although that decision will be highly uncertain and subject to intense scrutiny, the strategy guiding the decision – and the primacy of the inflation target within that strategy – should be clear.”

 

To read the full speech, click here.

 

Lending to UK businesses remains weak

Friday, May 22nd, 2009

A study by the Bank of England entitled “Trends in Lending” has just been published. This shows that net lending to businesses has remained weak. The official data covers lending by all banks and building societies and shows that the monthly flow of net lending in March 2009 was “subdued, though positive.”  When looking at the three month annualised growth rate in Table 1A below, it can be seen that there is a marginal upward trend from 2.1% in January, to 2.2% in February, and reaching 2.6% in March. However, by contrast, the comparable figures for 2007 and 2008 were 19.4% and 10.8%. The 12 month growth rates shows a steady deterioration from 8.1% in January to 4.1% in March.

 

Lending Panel data, which is less reliable, shows in Chart 1.1 that the value of gross new corporate loan facilities provided by the major UK lenders fell in April after increasing in March. It also shows that gross new lending was more than offset by loan facilities which were removed or reduced.

Source: Bank of England

Source: Bank of England

 

Much of the reduced lending has been due to the depressed state of a number of sectors of the economy. A major contribution to the fall in the annual growth rate of lending has been due to the cutbacks in the commercial real estate sector, responding to the fall in the housing market. But wholesale and retail trade and manufacturing have also seen sharp falls in lending over the past year.

Lending to the commercial real estate sector has been depressed

Lending to the commercial real estate sector has been depressed

 

One positive note is that there has been more movement in the capital markets in recent months and some large companies have been able to raise more money through issuing new equity. On the one hand, this reduces the need for more expensive bank borrowing, but there is evidence that some of this new money has been used to pay off existing debts to the banking sector.

 

It is also noted that there have been sharp increases in fees and interest rate spreads for companies trying to raise fresh capital or to extend existing bank facilities. This is obviously going to make borrowing less desirable but for many companies they have no choice but to accept the banks’ terms or go under. This is particularly true of small and medium sized enterprises (SMEs). The recent picture shows that fewer SMEs are attempting to borrow money. On top of this, approvals of new borrowing considered as a ratio to applications, have fallen for smaller businesses.

 

This means that the banks are tightening up their lending criteria as they review their credit risks, with the effect that the flow of new loans has been considerably lower than in the same months of 2007. Not surprisingly, the use of overdrafts was higher in 2009 than two years previously, as firms became desperate to cover falls in cash flow. This, of course, is a relatively expensive way of borrowing, but perhaps the only outlet for many small companies.

G20 is a hit, but Brown’s battleship stays afloat

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

“This is the day that the world came together to fight back against the global recession, not with words, but with a plan for global recovery and for reform and with a clear timetable for delivery,” was the way Gordon Brown summarised the outcome of the G20 summit in London.

 

According to the communiqué issued in the name of the Leaders of the Group of Twenty:

 

“We have today therefore pledged to do whatever is necessary to:

 

  • restore confidence, growth and jobs;
  • repair the financial system to restore lending;
  • strengthen financial regulation to rebuild trust;
  • fund and reform our international financial institutions to overcome this crisis and prevent future ones;
  • promote global trade and investment and reject protectionism, to underpin prosperity; and
  • build an inclusive, green and sustainable recovery

 

By acting together to fulfil these pledges we will bring the world economy out of recession and prevent a crisis like this from recurring in the future.”

 

On the whole the outcome was quite impressive and Gordon has worked hard prior to the summit to get this level of consensus. But, as usual the devil is in the detail. The prime minister said that the largest fiscal stimulus in history had been put in place, totalling $5,000bn. However, this was not an announcement of new money but a summation of all the increased expenditure previously announced and introduced by the G20 countries.

 

In particular, there was no agreement to meet the IMF’s call for a further fiscal stimulus worth 2% of GDP, and it looks as though this was quietly shelved, as Germany and France, for example, were very much set against any further fiscal expansion.

 

Also, there was no real agreement what to do with all the toxic assets held by banks around the world, and we are still left in doubt about whether there is some sort of underlying time bomb waiting to surprise us at a future date.

 

Having said that, what was actually agreed? The published headline was that the G20 nations had reached an agreement to tackle the global financial crisis by implementing measures which would be worth $1 trillion (£681bn). There were four main areas of agreement:

 

  • $500bn was pledged to the IMF in increased funding – although much of this had been offered previously and was already on the table.
  • $250bn to be allocated in trade finance to boost world trade – this is the amount of trade that will be financed or covered by guarantee over the next two years, and again most of the money is not new.
  • $100bn will be made available to international development banks to lend to the poorest countries – whilst some of this may be brought forward from future budgets it will substantially come from increased borrowing and new resources.
  • $250bn for a new allocation of Special Drawing Rights at the IMF. This is money which will be ‘created’ in a quantitative easing format.

 

It was also agreed to have tighter regulation of hedge funds and to clamp down on tax havens worldwide.

All in all, perhaps the best assessment comes in a leader from the Financial Times today:

“Some useful progress, but still a way to go.”

Flight of capital from the UK

Monday, March 9th, 2009

Money held in UK banks on the behalf of foreign investors fell by just over $1 trillion or £707 billion over the last three quarters of 2008. These figures are classified as the external liabilities of the major banks operating in the UK. There was an outflow of funds amounting to $682.5 billion in the second quarter of 2008, followed by a positive inflow in the third quarter, and then another massive $597.5 billion outflow in the final quarter of 2008.

 

The largest falls in foreign holdings in the UK in the final quarter were $219.7 billion from US residents, $93.5 billion from Russia and $70.5 billion from Switzerland

 

Chart 1, produced by the Bank of England, also shows the huge drop in total outstanding liabilities during 2008 with the largest outflow of foreign funds during the final three quarters which the UK has seen for several decades. Total outflows meant the money held by foreigners in the UK fell from just over $7,000 billions to just over $6,000 billions.

runonuk

 

On the other side of the coin, the external claims of banks operating in the UK fell by $597 billion in the last quarter of 2008. This implies that British banks and investors are also repatriating large sums back to the UK.

 

Why is this happening? Basically there has been a drift towards “financial protectionism”. Money is flowing back to home countries as banks try to bolster their flagging balance sheets which have been severely damaged by the credit crisis. Also, some foreign investors will have been concerned about the sharp fall in sterling during the past year and will have switched their money elsewhere to avoid possible further falls in sterling during 2009.

 

It appears from the figures that the dollar and swiss franc are seen as safe havens as more money flows into the US and Switzerland. Given the importance to the UK of our financial services industry based largely in the City of London should we be worried by this net outflow? According to figures just published by the City of London Corporation, London is showing a great deal of resilience. Their Global Financial Centres Index which attempts to show the competitiveness of various international financial centres, showed a fall in the ratings of all major centres, with a greater fall for those at the bottom than those at the top. However, London held on to its place as the world’s top financial sector with New York and Singapore in second and third place. According to the report: “It would appear there is a genuine ‘flight to safety’, with people in financial services putting their faith in the quality of well-established financial centres.”

 

For the moment, at least, London is maintaining its position.

 

 

It’s getting scary out there

Friday, March 6th, 2009

So, interest rates are down to 0.5% and the Bank of England is given permission to begin “quantitative easing”. It is now considered nostalgic to look back to the balmy days of last summer and autumn (okay, so it rained most of the time) when interest rates were at 5% and we were all raising our eyebrows at the way Zimbabwe was printing money. Now the UK has decided to move into unknown territory. And, the scary thing is, no-one really knows what is going to happen as a result of this new policy but we mostly seem to accept that there is no alternative.

 

Yesterday, the Bank of England reduced interest rates for the sixth time since October, down to 0.5%. They will also start an asset purchase scheme to the tune of £75bn initially, although the Chancellor has given permission for this to rise to £150bn, which will be “financed by the issuance of central bank reserves” or “quantitative easing”. This is not exactly the printing of money but a situation where the Bank will be able to buy up government and corporate bonds in the market and so inject some liquidity into the financial system. The Bank reckons that it will take 3 months to complete their spending spree.

Interest rates down to 0.5%, quantitative easing introduced.

Interest rates down to 0.5%, quantitative easing introduced.

 

The Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Bank of England concluded that a further easing of their monetary policy stance was warranted because of the weakening of world activity; persistent problems in international credit markets; a sharp drop in UK output; further fall in business investment; rapid run-down in stocks; rising unemployment and a substantial risk of undershooting the 2% CPI inflation target.

 

However, the MPC did note that a very low level of Bank Rate “could have counter-productive effects on the operation of some financial markets and on the lending capacity of the banking system.” Institutions need to keep a margin between their lending rates and their borrowing rates. Savers are not going to lend their money to banks offering an interest rate of 0.1% and a lower Bank Rate at this level may well have little effect on private sector lending. What it may do, however, is give more scope to the government to raise money by issuing government bonds which the public may see as a safer option, and so help to fund its deficit – isn’t that good news? Remember the government will probably have to find £140bn during the coming fiscal year to fund its deficit which will amount to 10% of GDP.

 

Also, the quantitative easing may only end up in allowing banks to hoard more liquidity as they desperately try to improve their balance sheets and they may still be reluctant to lend to consumers and industry alike.

 

One important result of all these changes is the effect on savers and pensioners. Those who have prudently saved over their lifetime and put their money into savings accounts, equities and bricks and mortar have seen their capital values plunge and their incomes decimated. By contrast, those who got us into this mess can retire on protected pensions and continue to live the good life.

 

Governments around the world are attacking this global financial problem with every policy measure they can lay their hands on. But is it too little, just enough or even overkill. It’s the story of the three bears but with no-one having any idea as to what is “just right”. Will the creation of more broad money fuel a future boom which will be followed by an even greater crash? Will countries be impoverished for a generation or more as governments raise taxes and borrowings to pay for their current fire-fighting efforts? The story continues.

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