Banking Sector Gloablly
Banking Sector Gloablly
Banking Sector Gloablly
The nancial services sector is emerging from the worst nancial crisis for 80 years. Tighter regulation, an overhang of debt in the west and the immense growth in the power of banks in emerging economies will transform the landscape of banking. What opportunities and threats will this create? And what are the main lessons that banks will learn from the crisis?
Key messages
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There is growing optimism that both the world economy and the banking industry are recovering from the impact of the nancial crisis. But the nancial world has changed permanently, both in terms of the balance of power within the industry and how banks will be allowed to operate in future. Banks in emerging markets are now well capitalised and well funded and big enough to compete directly against their western counterparts in the global marketplace. They have greater potential for growth because of the relatively immature development of their domestic nancial markets and their rapidly growing economies. But regulation will become an issue in the emerging markets just as it is in the more established western markets and may result in a return to more traditional business models. However, the regulatory environment will differ greatly from one country to the next. The stronger role of national governments within banking means the future model for banking and corporate governance is likely to be a hybrid of a regulated free market approach and so-called state capitalism. A key challenge lies in the dichotomy that nancial markets are increasingly global while regulators are predominantly national. Greater international co-operation will therefore be needed to improve the stability of the global nancial system. The dominant role of the US dollar and of the US banks is set to give way to a world where other countries, their currencies, their capital markets and banks, all play a greatly enhanced role. This structural shift will offer both opportunities and threats. Perhaps the biggest lesson from the crisis is that banks all around the world have learnt that they must co-operate more.
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10. The nancial crisis has demonstrated the need for banks to understand their business
models together with the associated risks and to have condence that performance indicators and executive incentives reinforce desired behaviours. Through their skills in providing high quality business information, management accountants should be at the forefront of meeting this need and thus contributing to the long-term sustainable success of their organisations.
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Introduction
The global nancial system suffered a profound and traumatic shock in September 2008 when US investment bank Lehman Brothers collapsed. As market players withdrew from the nancial system, credit dried up and world trade collapsed, there was a real and immediate fear that the world was heading for a repeat of the Great Depression of the 1930s. Two years on and there is growing optimism that both the world economy and the banking industry are recovering from the impact of the nancial crisis. But it is equally clear that the nancial world has changed permanently, both in terms of who holds the balance of power within global industry and how banks will be allowed to operate in future.
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Global Financial Review, International Monetary Fund, April 2010 A special report on banking in emerging markets, The Economist, 15 May 2010 The nancial crisis and the shift from West to East, FT/DIFC World Financial Centres Summit, 20 October 2008
Furthermore, emerging market banks are well placed to exploit the marked revival in growth. According to the World Bank, developing countries will enjoy annual economic growth of 6% over the next three years, compared with 2.22.6% in the OECD area.6 As businesses nd new market opportunities they will need access to corporate nance, which will open up markets for bond and share issues. Giles Keating, Head of Global Research at Credit Suisse, says some Asian banks, which are already strong and very large but domestic focused, are likely to play a much larger role in intermediating capital ows at the global level. If we look ahead ve years or so, the total number of major banks operating at scale on a truly global basis may be similar to that of before the crisis, but these banks are likely to be more
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Counting the worlds unbanked, McKinsey Quarterly, March 2010 See 2, previous page Global Economic Prospects, World Bank, June 2010
evenly spread around the world, with the US and Europe no longer so dominant, he says. He believes they are likely to be accompanied by rapid growth in a number of second tier banks in emerging markets around the world, active in intermediating ows into their fast growing home markets. Given their strong liquidity and high capital adequacy ratios, some analysts say these emerging market banks are now in a stronger position than their western counterparts. Chinese banks are starting to lend money to European companies for business transactions taking place solely in Europe. Banks in Asia have taken the opportunity to diversify and expand their business in an environment where they have enjoyed a competitive advantage, says Lockhart.
Regulation
But as banks in emerging markets expand and enjoy the growth rates that western banks did after World War Two, regulation will become an issue in these markets just as it is in the more established western markets. Banks in the US and Europe suffered immense losses during the crisis, partly as a result of excessive risk taking and investment in complex products that they did not fully understand. Many had to be rescued by national governments, which have amassed historically high scal decits as a result. Nouriel Roubini, the US economist who forecasted the crash, estimates that the US government alone has committed $11trn in the form of recapitalisations, guarantees and insurance, of which $3trn has been drawn on.7
Governments in the west have made it clear that they want tighter global banking regulation to ensure that such a crisis cannot happen again. Finance ministers of the group of 20 developed and emerging economies have called for: stronger capital and liquidity standards; a fair and substantial commitment by banks to pay back the cost of government intervention; and tighter regulation to ensure greater supervision and transparency.8 According to Deutsche Bank, this new and additional regulation will result in a return to more traditional business models. Banks will be less able to achieve growth and will, hence, on average also be less protable than previously, it said in a research note.9 The Institute of International Finance (IIF) has calculated that the implementation of full regulatory reform will reduce GDP in the core area of the US, eurozone and Japan by 3% by 2015, while some 9.7 million fewer jobs will be created.10
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G20 nance ministers communiqu, Busan, South Korea, 5 June 2010 Global banking trends after the crisis, Deutsche Bank Research, 15 June 2009
10 Interim report on the cumulative impact on the global economy of proposed changes in the banking regulatory framework, IIF, 10 June 2010 11 United States Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York In re Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc et al, Debtors, Chapter 11 Case No.08-13555 (JMP) (Jointly Administered) Report of Anton R Valukas, Examiner (www.lehmanreport.jenner.com)
However, it is not clear that the new regulatory regime will affect all parts of the world equally. Regulators in Asia are still very much looking to the west to see how individual banks and governments rewrite the rules of corporate and banking governance in the light of the events of 2007-8. Keating at Credit Suisse says the rules will not be adopted uniformly. As a consequence, the regulatory environment will differ greatly from one country to the next, he says.12 Governments in emerging markets in Asia, Africa and Latin America are in a much stronger position as banks in their countries escaped the worst of the crisis. The stronger role of national governments within banking means the future model for banking and corporate governance is likely to be a hybrid of a regulated free market approach and so-called state capitalism. As Andrew Lockhart of Baker & McKenzie says, in China what we are seeing is pretty active control of the banks, particularly their liquidity ratios, which is being done on a micro-management basis for reasons related to the overall control of the economy as opposed to pure prudential regulations of the nancial institutions themselves. Banking executives in emerging markets can feel fortunate that their governments did not open up the market too widely before the nancial crisis. But given their still very traditional asset portfolio, the desire to understand how to respond to more complicated and complex nancial products the real money makers is still very strong, and in many instances, government led. The China Banking Regulatory Commission is actively encouraging the development of a stronger China derivatives market. Some may argue that it was these complex nancial products that got banks into trouble in the rst place, and the development of more complicated and diverse nancial products clearly is not without some inherent danger. This will mean that emerging market banks and policymakers will be determined to impose strict rules on banks as their appetite for risk grows to ensure they avoid the wests mistakes. Edwina Li, Financial Services Partner at KPMG China, says: Chinas regulators are always looking to see how they can do it better. In many ways, were going to see more regulation. Stephen Green of HSBC pointed out in 2008 that as economies became larger and more sophisticated, they would need fully functioning capital markets to ensure the efcient allocation of capital. The main challenge lies in the dichotomy that nancial markets as this crisis has demonstrated are increasingly global, while the policymakers and regulation that governs them remain predominantly national, he said in Dubai. Greater international co-operation will be required to place the nancial system on a more stable footing. More recently William Rhodes, a vice chairman of the IIF and a senior adviser to Citi, said that the introduction of reforms needed to be determined with great care. He said this was the case not just in the mature industrial countries where it could slow economic recovery, but also in emerging markets where banks are the most important engines of development and growth. 13 According to the IIFs own analysis, emerging markets are likely to be less affected by the regulatory reform than their western counterparts, perhaps adding to the shift in the balance of power. It found that most emerging market banking systems were relatively well capitalised and maintained ratios of regulatory capital to risk weighted assets above the current 8% minimum under the Basel II requirements. But the focus of attention in the immediate future will be on western banks because, says Josef Ackerman, Chairman of the boards of both the IIF and Deutsche Bank, they bear the responsibility for contributing to the crisis.14 He says the onus is on these banks to strengthen their operations and avoid the deterioration of business practices that characterised the period preceding the crisis. While regulation will make banks more cautious, proposals announced both by the US and UK to split up universal banks with both investment and retail functions mean they may become smaller.
12 Financial industry after the crisis, G Keating, Credit Suisse, 6 November 2009 13 Opening press statement, IIF Spring Membership Meeting, Vienna, 10 June 2010 14 See 12, above.
Conclusion
Perhaps then, the biggest lesson from the crisis is that banks all around the world have learnt that they must co-operate more. As Xiao Gang, Chairman of the Bank of China, says: It is not about who should learn from whom. Instead, it is about learning from each other, strengthening co-operation and seeking development together.15 It is this trend north and south, east and west, rather than north versus south and east versus west that is likely to shape the future of global banking in the post nancial crisis world.
ISBN 978-1-85971-668-7 (PDF) Chartered Institute of Management Accountants 26 Chapter Street London SW1P 4NP United Kingdom T. +44 (0)20 7663 5441 E. cimaknowledgeunit@cimaglobal.com www.cimaglobal.com September 2010, Chartered Institute of Management Accountants PR014V0810