Basel, Jan 16 :
Global regulators gave banks four more years and greater flexibility to build up
cash buffers so they can use some of their reserves to help struggling economies
grow.
The pull-back from a draconian earlier draft of new global bank
liquidity rules, which aim to help prevent another financial crisis, went
further than banks had expected by allowing them a broader range of eligible
assets.
Banks had complained they could not meet the January 2015
deadline to comply with the new rule on minimum holdings of easily sellable
assets, known as the liquidity coverage ratio and devised by the Basel Committee
of banking supervisors, and at the same time supply credit to businesses and
consumers.
The committee's oversight body agreed to phase in the rule
from 2015 over four years, as reported, and widen the range of assets banks can
put in the buffer to include shares and retail mortgage-backed securities
(RMBS), as well as lower rated company bonds.
The new, less liquid assets
can only be included at a hefty discount to their value, but the changes are a
significant move from the draft version of the rule unveiled two years
ago.
Bank shares in Asia edged higher, with the MSCI financial subindex
for Asia Pacific shares outside Japan up 0.3 percent, while Hong Kong-listed
shares of HSBC Holdings Plc, which has high exposure to Europe where liquidity
concerns are greater, rose 1.1 percent.
The Basel Committee, drawn from
nearly 30 countries representing nearly all the world's markets, hopes the
amendments will stop banks from shrinking loan books to comply with the
rule.
"For the first time in regulatory history, we have a truly global
minimum standard for bank liquidity," the oversight body's chairman Mervyn King
told a news conference in Basel, Switzerland.
"Importantly, introducing a
phased timetable for the introduction of the liquidity coverage ratio ... will
ensure that the new liquidity standard will in no way hinder the ability of the
global banking system to finance a recovery," said King, who is also Bank of
England governor.
The amendments, endorsed unanimously, came after two
years of haggling among Basel Committee members.
They surprised relieved
bankers with their scope and will help kick-start the mortgage backed securities
market, languishing after being tarnished by the U.S. subprime mortgage crisis
which set off the 2007-09 financial crisis.
"The inclusion of good
quality RMBS in the liquidity buffer is a very welcome twelfth night present,"
said Simon Hills, executive director of the British Bankers'
Association.
"It will make a real difference to issuance volumes by
improving their marketability so that banks are better able to manage their
balance sheets and provide funding to the real economy," Hills said.
The
wider pool of assets will also make it easier to implement the rules for banks
in Asia, where illiquid government and corporate bond markets or low credit
ratings for emerging market debt had complicated the outlook for
compliance.
"Talking to the regulators around the region, I expect they
will begin to implement these regulations for their large domestic banks more
quickly now that they've got a bit of a victory on the run-off rate and a bit of
a victory on the definition of liquid assets," said Simon Topping, a former Hong
Kong bank regulator who is now Asia-Pacific head of KPMG's Financial Services
Regulatory Centre of Excellence.
However, there will be some concerns
that the easing of the rules will let banks off too easily.
"A lot of the
banks in Asia really do need to improve their liquidity risk management and my
fear is this will give them an excuse to delay doing anything," Topping
said.
The rule requires banks to hold enough liquid assets such as
government and corporate bonds to cover net outflows for up to a month, to avoid
taxpayers having to bail them out.
Basel Committee Chairman Stefan
Ingves, who also heads Sweden's central bank, said the changes mean that the
average buffer at the world's top 200 banks rises from 105 percent to 125
percent, putting it well above full compliance.
But many other banks are
well below full compliance, especially in some euro zone countries, and they
will have to find an estimated 1 trillion euros ($1.3 trillion) of assets over
coming years at a time when bank profitability is being
hammered.
Furthermore, liquidity held by some banks is on loan from their
central bank and will have to be returned at some point. A revived
mortgage-backed securities market would help to wean lenders off central
banks.
King said regulators want to be "crystal clear" that banks in
areas undergoing stress such as the euro zone could draw down their buffers
below minimum levels if the local supervisor agreed.
Jim Embersit, a
former Federal Reserve official and Basel Committee member and now with Ernst
& Young in Washington, said many banks would move to fully comply before
2019 given market pressures and the need to change business
models.
"Firms will not be eager to jump to full 100 percent
implementation quickly but would be expected to meet the required milestones on
their own prior to the designated deadlines," Embersit said.
The Basel
Committee also agreed to ease the "stress scenario" for calculating the amount
of liquid assets banks must hold, meaning the buffer would be
smaller.
Under the Basel regime, the rules would run alongside separate
rules governing banks' capital, intended to ensure their longer-term
stability.
Banks would start complying in 2015 when they are expected to
hold at least 60 percent of the total buffer, building up to 100 percent by
January 2019, when Basel's separate, tougher bank capital requirements also must
be met in full.
The liquidity rule is meant to avoid a repeat of the
scenario in which a short-term funding freeze brought down lenders like
Britain's Northern Rock early on in the 2007-09 financial crisis.
It is
part of the Basel III bank capital and liquidity accord agreed upon by world
leaders in 2010 and being phased in over six years from this month, although
there are delays in the United States and the European Union.
Ingves said
the Basel Committee is still committed to enacting a third plank of Basel III,
the net stable funding ratio to limit dependence on short-term funding, by the
end of 2018.
The Basel Committee will study how the introduction of the
liquidity rule affects the impact of central banks injecting liquidity into the
economy in a bid to spur growth.
Ends
SA/EN
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Regulators ease key bank rule to spur credit
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