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European banks as vulnerable now as before crash

Date:
May 11, 2015
Source:
University of Portsmouth
Summary:
European banks are as vulnerable to failing today as they were in the run-up to the 2008 global economic crash and subsequent recession, new research has found. In the first study to compare sources of systemic risk in European banks, economists found banks in southern countries, including France, Spain and Italy, are highly vulnerable to failure. Banks in northern countries appear to be more resilient.
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European banks are as vulnerable to failing today as they were in the run-up to the 2008 global economic crash and subsequent recession, new research published today has found.

In the first study to compare sources of systemic risk in European banks, economists found banks in southern countries, including France, Spain and Italy, are highly vulnerable to failure. Banks in northern countries appear to be more resilient. Dr Nikos Paltalidis, of the University of Portsmouth Business School, lead the research, which is published in the Journal of Banking and Finance.

He said: "The results give a vivid picture of financial contagion and the domino effect in the banking sector. The risks are still substantial and a repeat of the last financial crisis is feasible.

"The banking industry has been grappling with ways of measuring and reducing systemic risk since the collapse of the Lehman Brothers bank in 2008. That collapse and subsequent worldwide recession was the canary in the mine, it showed how fragile the financial system was, and how quickly economic shocks reverberated.

"Our findings indicate that despite all the efforts to improve the resilience of banking, some banks are as vulnerable today as they were before the last banking crisis, they are just as likely to fail.

"In case of a financial or economic shock, we found that banks would experience losses big enough to reduce their capital below the required regulatory minimum, because the quality of equity on the biggest European lenders is not sufficient enough to mitigate systemic crisis."

The researchers modelled a range of inter-connected, dynamic economic shocks on 170 Eurozone banks in 16 countries, and the spread of that effect to other countries from 2005-2013.

The researchers used three independent channels of systemic risk -- the interbank loan market, the sovereign credit risk market and the asset-backed loan market -- to test which banks were resilient and to track how shocks spread between domestic and international banks.

Their models did not take into account any government or central bank interventions, such as bail-outs.

Dr Paltalidis said: "In theory, the new capital rules adopted by 'systemically important' banks should be able to endure a 10 per cent fall in the value of their assets before placing panicky calls to the central bank. Also, the euro area banking system seems to be fundamentally solvent, according to several stress tests. However, our study provides ample evidence that this hypothesis does not hold in practice, indicating that similar to the pre-2009 period systemic risk is enormously underestimated once again."

The findings include that although a shock in the interbank loan market triggers the highest expected losses, a shock in sovereign debt risk transmits fastest and causes a cascade of losses for other banks. The results reveal that a sharp rise in government borrowing costs would have a destructive ripple effect across the region's financial institutions.

The speed of contagion and the expected bank failures are markedly more prominent in the southern euro area banking systems.

In one of the models, France, Spain and Italy appear to be dramatically more exposed to failing compared to their neighbours, with France losing 73bn Euros compared to Belgium's 6bn Euros after the same economic shock from the same source.

Dr Paltalidis said: "The European banking system remains highly vulnerable and conducive to financial contagion, which implies that the policies designed to reduce systemic risk are not necessarily doing the job. The findings suggest we might need additional policies to better protect the Eurozone and increase the resilience of the financial system."


Story Source:

Materials provided by University of Portsmouth. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Nikos Paltalidis, Dimitrios Gounopoulos, Renatas Kizys, Yiannis Koutelidakis. Transmission Channels of Systemic Risk and Contagion in the European Financial Network. Journal of Banking & Finance, 2015; DOI: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2015.03.021

Cite This Page:

University of Portsmouth. "European banks as vulnerable now as before crash." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 11 May 2015. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150511211924.htm>.
University of Portsmouth. (2015, May 11). European banks as vulnerable now as before crash. ScienceDaily. Retrieved November 3, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150511211924.htm
University of Portsmouth. "European banks as vulnerable now as before crash." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/05/150511211924.htm (accessed November 3, 2024).

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