Source: Stratfor*
The recent stress tests by the European Central
Bank offered few surprises and did not cause any significant political or
financial reactions in the Continent.
However, these
tests were only the beginning of a complex process to build a banking union in
the European Union.
Unlike the
stress tests, the next steps in this project could create more divisions in
Europe because national parliaments will be involved at a time when
Euroskepticism is on the rise.
More important, the stress tests will not have a
particular impact on Europe's main problem: tight credit conditions for
households and businesses.
Without a substantial improvement in credit
conditions, there cannot be a substantial economic recovery, particularly in
the eurozone periphery.
The
European Central Bank had two basic short-term goals for this year's stress
tests. On one hand, it had to come up with a test that was tough enough to be
credible after tests held in 2010 and 2011 were widely seen as too soft and
lacking in credibility.
On the other hand, the tests could not produce results
dire enough to generate panic. The European Union is going through a phase of
relative calm in financial markets, and the European Central Bank was not
interested in creating a new wave of uncertainty over the future of Europe's
banks.
While the
tests did attract some criticism, the central bank achieved both goals. Of the
130 banks involved in the tests, 25 had capital shortfalls, a finding slightly
more severe than forecasts projected.
Of those 25 banks, 13 must raise fresh
capital and come up with 9.5 billion euros ($12.1 billion) in the next nine
months.
None of the failed tests came as a surprise, however. Italy's Monte dei
Paschi, the worst performing bank in the tests, has been in trouble for a long
time and had to receive assistance from the Italian government in 2012.
Other
failing banks are located in countries such as Slovenia and Greece, which have
been severely affected by the financial crisis.
And while the price of several
banks' shares dropped during the Oct. 27 trading session, no collapses
occurred.The tests
were not perfect -- they used data from December 2013 and were mostly done by
each participating state.
The methodology and scenarios were also criticized.
For example, the most extreme "adverse scenario" included in the
tests considered a drop in inflation to 1 percent this year, although the rate
has already fallen to around 0.3 percent.
The decision to include only 130
"systemic" banks while turning a blind eye on smaller -- and probably
weaker -- institutions also drew criticism.
But overall, markets considered the
tests legitimate, especially in comparison with the weak tests that have taken
place since the beginning of the European crisis.
The stress
tests, however, are only the starting point in the much deeper and complex
process of creating a banking union in Europe.
The issue has traditionally been
very controversial in the Continent. As Europe became more integrated, several
policymakers proposed the creation of a banking union to complement the
Continent's internal market and common currency.
Nationalism and diverging
political interests, however, made this quite difficult, and the idea was
abandoned during the Maastricht Treaty negotiations in 1991 and again after it
was reconsidered during deliberations for the Treaty of Nice in 2000.
But the
eurozone crisis -- and the fear of financial instability spreading among the countries
that share the euro -- has reignited the debate about a banking union.
Simultaneous crises in countries such as Spain and Ireland, where national
governments were forced to request international aid to rescue failing banks,
made Europe consider the need to break the vicious circle between banks and
sovereigns.
The Upcoming Political DebateIn 2012,
the European Union announced that the banking union would be implemented in two
stages.
During the first stage, the European Central Bank would centralize the
supervision of participating banks' financial stability.
At a later stage,
Brussels would introduce a "Single Resolution Mechanism" and a
"Single Resolution Fund" to be responsible for the restructuring and
potential closing of significant banks.
The first
stage of the banking union was controversial because some member states refused
to give the central bank full power to supervise every single bank in the
European Union.
A compromise was eventually found, and the bank was given
supervisor powers over banks with holdings greater than 30 billion euros or 20
percent of their host nation's gross domestic product.
This was not a minor
compromise. National regulators remained in charge of supervising smaller banks
such as Spain's cajas and Germany's Landesbanken, institutions generally having
strong ties with local political powers -- and troubled balance sheets.
The
stress tests were a precondition for this stage of the banking union
implementation process.As the
November implementation of the banking union's first stage draws nearer, the
Europeans will have to make difficult political decisions regarding the second
phase of the project.
Twenty-six members of the European Union (Britain and
Sweden decided not to participate) signed an intergovernmental agreement in May
to create a special fund and a central decision-making board to rescue failing
banks.
According to the agreement, the fund will be built up over eight years
until it reaches its target level of at least 1 percent of the amount of
deposits of all credit institutions in all the participating member states,
projected to be some 55 billion euros.
The fund will initially consist of
national compartments that will gradually merge into a single fund. The
agreement also made official the "bail-in" procedure for future
rescue plans.
Members of
the European Parliament have said the fund should be larger because it may not
be enough to deal with a new banking crisis.
There is also the question of how
the Single Resolution Fund will be financed. On Oct. 21, the European
Commission proposed that the largest banks, representing some 85 percent of
total assets, contribute around 90 percent of the funds.
Opponents have
criticized that instead of designating the contributions in proportion to the
risks each bank presents, the proposal assigns contributions using a bank's
total assets.
The European Council, which represents member states, will have
to ratify this proposal.More
important, the transfers of banks' contribution to the Single Resolution Fund
are scheduled to start in January 2016.
Before that happens, however, the
parliaments of member states will have to ratify the intergovernmental treaty
that was signed in May, a difficult proposition in the wake of rising
Euroskeptical parties.
In addition, a group of German professors have said they
would challenge the banking union before the German Constitutional Court.
According to this group, the banking union represents a huge risk for German
taxpayers while leaving Berlin without any oversight authority.
This is the
same group that is currently challenging the European Central Bank's Outright
Money Transactions bond-buying program.
The Real Problem: A Lack of Easily Accessible
CreditWhile the
stress tests and asset quality review offer a clearer view of banks in Europe,
most European households and businesses are facing more immediate problems.
On
Oct. 27, the central bank revealed that loans to the private sector fell by 1.2
percent year-on-year in September after a contraction of 1.5 percent in August.
The data shows a slower rate of contraction in credit lending but does not
signal a strong recovery of credit in the eurozone.
The data also confirmed
that credit conditions remain particularly tight in the eurozone periphery.Since
banking credit is crucial to households and companies, credit conditions are
intimately linked to Europe's economic recovery.
The European Central Bank has
recently approved a battery of measures, including negative interest rates and
cheap loans for banks. However, as banks are still trying to clean up their
balance sheets, lending remains timid. Even in those cases where banks are
willing to lend, they tend to impose strict conditions that are hard for
customers to meet.
There is also a demand problem. With weak economic activity and
high unemployment in the European periphery, many households and companies are
simply not asking for credit.Finally,
the central bank's latest policies have created significant disagreement within
the institution.
Some members of the governing council -- most notably
Germany's Bundesbank -- are wary of measures that could finance governments and
weaken the pace of economic reforms.
The Germans are also concerned about the
legality of measures such as quantitative easing and its potential impact on inflation. The current
frictions within the central bank are representative of the wider debate that
is taking place in Europe between countries led by Germany that believe reforms
should come before stimulus packages, and those led by France that think crises
are not the best time to apply deep spending cuts.
In the coming weeks and
months, this debate will be key in deciding the future of the European Union.
*“Europe: Building a Banking Union” is
republished with permission of Stratfor (www.startfor.com)




By: N. Peter Kramer
