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Topic: ITALY

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ITALY

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Italy’s bank bosses seek crunch solution to industry woes

A gathering in Rome this week has so far not yielded results

 

The Italian banking sector is trying to find buyers for its bad loans. Photograph: Reuters

The Italian banking sector is trying to find buyers for its bad loans. Photograph: Reuters

 

 

"Italy’s bank chiefs gathered in Rome this week to discuss what could be done to solve the industry’s woes. So far, they have announced precisely nothing.The silence reflects a stalemate that can’t be broken unless there is a major, but unlikely, shift from Italy’s banks or the European authorities.

At the root of the problem are Italian lenders’ €360 billion of non-performing loans. As a proportion of total lending, the country’s banks have more non-performing loans than in any other major European economy.That prevents them from issuing new loans to promote economic growth and stands in the way of consolidation - which, it is hoped, would create more profitable banks.There is no easy solution.

Governments in other countries, such as our own, that were saddled with bad loans in the wake of the financial crisis created state-backed bad banks such as Nama that took the most troublesome debt off lenders’ books, allowing the banks to continue lending. Big asset managers then bought the loans at a discount from the bad bank.

State-backed cleansing

In Italy, the crisis was not so deep and there was no state-backed cleansing of loan books. Since then, the Italian economy has struggled and more loans have soured - but European Union authorities have blocked further state aid for the banking industry.That leaves Italy’s banks trying to find buyers for their bad loans themselves, something that has proved difficult.

The lenders have already marked down their loan books a lot - the industry has taken provisions covering about 45 per cent of total non-performing loans, according to Barclays - but even at that level, buyers aren’t interested, and sales of Italian debt have been meagre.

A plan concocted by Italy’s government in January offered insurance, at market rates, against losses on securitised parcels of bad loans. It failed to generate much interest from investors, partly because nobody understood what the market rate really was, and partly because potential buyers were unconvinced about how the plan would work in practice.

There are other solutions, but none are especially workable.

A relatively strong Italian lender - Intesa, say - could buy a weaker domestic peer if the price were low enough. The argument goes that combining a good balance sheet with a bad one creates a mediocre one that can at least support more lending and help economic growth that benefits everyone. The problem, though, is that the acquirer’s shareholders would likely balk at the idea and there’s little incentive for management to take the risk.

Other options

It’s not clear Italian regulators would allow an overseas buyer to step in, either. Another option being discussed is the possibility of a fund backed by foundations, pension funds and others that could help recapitalise banks. But again, this looks difficult given European rules on state-sponsored bailouts.

Plans to inject more capital into some of the banks are increasingly crucial.

A proposed €1 billion initial public offering of Veneto Banco has been dogged by concerns it won’t draw enough backers. And Banco Popolare must pull off a €1 billion share sale to win European Central Bank approval for its planned merger with Banca Popolare di Milano - a move that could be a bellwether for further consolidation.

Meanwhile, Italian bank stocks are significantly under-performing European peers and the Italian market as a whole so far this year. A solution to the bank loan problem would flip that trend on its head. But it remains just a distant possibility."

 

 

http://www.irishtimes.com/business/financial-services/italy-s-bank-bosses-seek-crunch-solution-to-industry-woes-1.2601805

 



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RE: ITALY - Last Resort

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"Italy Seeks “Last Resort” Bailout Fund to “Ringfence” Troubled Banks, Meeting Monday; Italy vs. Austria
 
Italy’s finance minister, Pier Carlo Padoan, wants to "ringfence" its troubled banks.
 
Padoan called for a meeting of executive of the troubled banks in Rome on Monday. The banks allegedly will come up with a “Last Resort” bailout fund.
 
Last resort or first resort, is there a difference at this point in time?
 
Please consider Italy Pushes for Bank Rescue Fund. I highlight the key buzzwords and phrases italics.
 
Finance minister Pier Carlo Padoan has called a meeting in Rome on Monday with executives from Italy’s largest financial institutions to agree final details of a “last resort” bailout plan.
 
 
 
Yet on the eve of that gathering, concerns remain as to whether the plan will be sufficient to ringfence the weakest of Italy’s large banks, Monte dei Paschi di Siena, from contagion, according to people involved in the talks.
 
 
 
Italian bank shares have lost almost half their value so far this year amid investor worries over a €360bn pile of non-performing loans — equivalent to about a fifth of GDP. Lenders’ profitability has been hit by a crippling three-year recession.
 
 
 
The plan being worked on, which could be officially announced as soon as Monday evening, recalls the Sareb bad bank created in 2012 by the Spanish government to deal with financial crisis in its smaller cajas banks, say people involved.
 
 
 
Although the details remain under discussion, it foresees the establishment of a private vehicle that will include upwards of €5bn in equity contributions — mostly from Italy’s banks, insurers and asset managers — and then a larger debt component. The fund will then mop up shares in distressed lenders.
 
 
 
A second vehicle will seek to buy non-performing loans at market prices.
 
 
 
“It is a backstop fund,” said one person involved in the talks.
 
 
 
The Italian government can provide only limited financial backing because of EU state aid rules and because it is already struggling under a public debt load that amounts to 132.5 per cent of GDP.
 
 
 
People involved in the talks question whether the plan would have the financial scope to provide a buffer of last resort for Monte dei Paschi di Siena. Italy’s third-largest bank was the worst performer in the 2014 European stress tests, with about €170bn in assets and about €50bn in bad loans. It is considered by many bankers to be the major risk to Italian financial stability and regarded as too big to fail.
 
 
 
“Monte Paschi is the elephant in the room,” says one of Italy’s top bankers.
 
 
 
Monte Paschi is already trading at zero compared with its tangible equity value if its bad debt disposal is taken into account at current prices, says Johan De Mulder of Bernstein Research. By comparison, when Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008 it was trading at about 20 per cent of its tangible equity.
 
 
 
Berenberg analyst Eion Mullany argued that the “Italian banking sector is at a pivotal moment in its history”.
 
 
 
“We worry that a bail-in of an Italian bank may cause a chain reaction with ripple effects felt across the European banking system,” Mr Mullany added, referring to the possibility of bondholders and depositors in Italian banks being forced to participate in a rescue.
 
Key Buzzword and Phrases
 
Last resort
Ringfence
€360bn pile of non-performing loans
Sareb bad bank
Equity contributions, mostly from Italy’s banks, insurers and asset managers
Backstop fund
Public debt load that amounts to 132.5 per cent of GDP
Buffer of last resort
€170bn in assets and about €50bn in bad loans
Too big to fail
Elephant in the room
Trading at zero compared with its tangible equity
Lehman Brothers
Pivotal moment in its history
Bail-in of an Italian bank may cause a chain reaction with ripple effects
 
Those were the key buzzwords in order. Using those buzzword in the same order, let’s condense the article down to the essence with as few sentences as possible.
 
Mish’s Concise Summation
 
As a last resort to ringfence a massive €360bn pile of non-performing loans of Italian banks, Finance minister Pier Carlo Padoan has called for a meeting of minds in Rome on Monday. Padoan seeks a plan reminiscent of the Sareb bad bank structure in Spain, even though that plan blew up several times.
 
The bad bank will require equity contributions, mostly from Italy’s banks, insurers and asset managers to build up a backstop fund. This approach is necessary because Italy has public debt load that amounts to 132.5 per cent of GDP in gross violation of Eurozone rules.
 
The structure needs a buffer of last resort because Monte dei Paschi di Siena, Italy’s third-largest bank, has €170bn in assets and about €50bn in bad loans. Monte dei Paschi di Siena is regarded as too big to fail, a veritable elephant in the room, trading at zero compared with tangible equity. Lehman Brothers collapsed in 2008 it was trading at about 20 per cent of its tangible equity.
 
This is a pivotal moment in history because a bail-in of an Italian bank may cause a chain reaction with ripple effects that will be felt across the European banking system.
 
Comparisons
 
I used 4 paragraphs, the Financial Times used 20. I threw in bonus buzz phrases “meeting of minds” and “blew up several times”.
 
Italy is desperate to avoid the path Austria announced today, a 54% Haircut Of Senior Creditors In First “Bail In” Under New European Rules as commented on by Zerohedge.
 
100% bail-in for all subordinated liabilities
53.98% bail-in, resulting in a 46.02% quota, for all eligible preferential liabilities
Cancellation of all interest payments from 01.03.2015, when HETA was placed into resolution pursuant to BaSAG
Harmonization of the maturities of all eligible liabilities to 31.12.2023
 
In contrast, Italy is the “too big to fail”, “elephant in the room”. Should Italy try Austria’s solution, it presumably would cause a “chain reaction with ripple effects that would be felt across the European banking system.”
 
Instead, officials will attempt to “ringfence” the problem, hoping to “sweep it under the rug” where presumably a “€360bn pile of non-performing loans” will cure itself, eliminating the need for additional bail-ins"
 
..."ELIMINATING THE NEED FOR ADDITIONAL BAIL-INS"
 
 
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-04-10/italy-seeks-last-resort-bailout-fund-ringfence-troubled-banks-meeting-monday


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RE: ITALY

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Italy's "Last Resort" Bank Bailout Fails to Calm Investors' Fears

by  Geoffrey Smith
If only everything in Vicenza were as solid... Insights UIG via Getty Images

The sight of Italy’s two strongest banks at the bottom of the Milan Index’s performance table Tuesday tells you all you need to know about Italy’s new €5 billion ($5.7 billion) fund to stabilize its financial system.

Dress it up in fine language about financial stability, first steps in the right direction towards consolidation, give it a name that conveys a misleading impression of limitless strength, but the fact remains: Prime Minister Matteo Renzi is forcing healthy banks to prop up unhealthy ones. And as if the principle weren’t dismaying enough, he’s going about it with a lack of detail, transparency and accountability that makes one truly fearful for the future.

Italy’s banks have almost surpassed Greece’s public finances as the greatest fault line in the Eurozone. The stench of bad debts—the system holds over $410 billion of non-performing loans—is enough to deter most private-sector investors. The complex ownership and politically-tangled governance of the smaller institutes makes consolidation through mergers almost impossibly difficult, and a debt-laden government has neither the fiscal space nor the freedom under E.U. competition rules to inject enough capital to allow a fresh start.

It follows that what the government, banks, insurers, and asset management industry thrashed out last night in a meeting advertised as creating a “Last Resort” bailout fund was, at best, a short-term fix, in which the state mobilizes enough money to avert disaster at the worst problem banks, without falling foul of E.U. state aid rules.

Ostensibly, what happened was that a private sector asset manager called Quaestio raised an unspecified (naturally) amount for a fund named Atlas that will invest in a series of share issues and other actions aiming at restoring the capital levels of the problem banks. Quaestio isn’t saying who is investing in its fund, but at least some of it is coming from the state-owned lender Cassa Depositi i Prestiti.

The most pressing of these is the initial public offering of Banco Popolare di Vicenza, a mid-sized lender in the hinterland of Venice. BPdV had failed the 2014 stress test that the European Central Bank conducted before assuming responsibility for supervising the Eurozone’s biggest lenders. BPdV was to become a shining example of how the sector would tackle its chronic problems under a new and more vigorous supervisory regime. It demutualized earlier this year, with a view to attracting new, outside owners.

The trouble is, no one dared to take on the risk. That left Unicredit UNCFF -4.41% , Italy’s largest bank by assets and the IPO’s underwriter, potentially sitting on an unsellable majority stake in the bank that would have forced it to consolidate the chamber of horrors that is BPdV’s balance sheet: that would have undone all the work that it had done to get its own capital ratio back to something respectable (it was a risk-adjusted 10.9% at the end of last year—acceptable but nothing to brag about).

In all probability, Atlas will now become the anchor investor of the BPdV IPO. But this is not a strategy. This is, as Francesco Galietti of consultants PolicySonar says, simply a tactic that buys Renzi a bit more time.

But time to do what? In a free market, the answer would be ‘creative destruction’. The European Union’s new Directive on Bank Resolution and Recovery, which came into force at the start of this year, creates the legal framework for just that, allowing regulators to ‘bail in’ shareholders and creditors, even senior ones, and sparing taxpayers the pain of any more bailouts. But when Renzi and the Bank of Italy tested the new regime on four small provincial lenders last year, the scandal was so big that they quickly thought better of it (just like their Portuguese counterparts).

The latest noises from the Bank of Italy, like last night’s meeting, make it clear how little appetite there is now for experiments in Rome. In a speech last week, Salvatore Rossi, the BoI’s deputy governor, warned against the “rigid and mechanical” application of the new rules.

“It is like treating banks as all other businesses, such as a supermarket or an advertising agency; and not like companies that, while competing with each other, rely on the confidence of savers, that is an impalpable and volatile public good, the loss of which may threaten the stability of the entire financial system, thus of the entire economy,” Rossi said.

In other words: eight years after Lehman and six after the Greek bailout, if we let one bank fail, we still can’t guarantee that the whole system won’t collapse.

Atlas, you may remember, was the titan of Greek mythology who held the heavens on his shoulders. A better name might have been O’Reilly, the cowboy builder who ‘fixed’ John Cleese’s kitchen door in Fawlty Towers. Either way, the classical Atlas would think twice before swapping his old job for this one.

 

 

 

 

 



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RE: ITALY - last straw, trigger DB?

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The writedowns dilute their shares, and they can't take enough in this completely UNSUSTAINABLE condition....

"Italian Banks Are Crashing (Again) After Bad-Loan Writedowns Soar


Banco Popolare is dragging the rest of the Italian banking system drastically lower today after a "susprise" Q1 loss driven by soaring bad loan writedowns. Banco Popolare is down 14% on the day (25% in a week) to a record low, as Reuters reports the bank was forced to admit the reality of its bad loans by the European Central Bank as a condition for approving a planned merger with Banca Popolare di Milano that will create Italy's third-biggest banking group.

A week in the life of Italian banks... bloodbath...

 

As Reuters notes, Italian banks have lost nearly 40 percent of their market value so far this year, weighed down by concerns they could need additional capital to shoulder losses from sales of bad loans that rose to 360 billion euros ($410 billion) during a long recession.

A share rebound triggered by the hasty creation last month of the fund intended to inject capital into weaker lenders and buy their bad loans proved short-lived.

 

Banco Popolare said late on Tuesday that it had written down loans for 684 million euros in the first quarter, nearly four times more than in the same period of 2015, posting a net loss of 314 million euros for the first three months.

 

CEO Pierfrancesco Saviotti told an analyst call that the loan writedowns were the first step towards selling chunks of bad loans and that it would book further provisions this year.

 

He said the ECB wanted provisions to cover 62 percent of the most troubled loans up from a 60 percent coverage ratio the bank reached in the first quarter.

 

Bankers say other Italian banks are likely to follow in the steps of Banco Popolare and raise cash to make up for loan losses.

 

Loans to insolvent borrowers are valued on average at around 40 percent of their nominal value on Italian banks' balance sheets but market prices for these assets reach at most 30-35 cents on the dollar when the loan is backed by a good-quality property.

This won't end well... and yet everyone is ignoring the systemic concerns here... It's far from over at DB...

 

 

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-05-11/italian-banks-are-crashing-again-after-bad-loan-writedowns-soar



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