Is My Money Safe? On The Soundness Of Our Banks
But
what is behind all this? How can we judge the soundness of our banks?
In other words, how can we tell if our money is safely tucked away in a
safe haven?
The reflex is to go to the bank's balance sheets.
Banks and balance sheets have been both invented in their modern form in
the 15th century. A balance sheet, coupled with other financial
statements is supposed to provide us with a true and full picture of the
health of the bank, its past and its long-term prospects. The
surprising thing is that - despite common opinion - it does. The less
surprising element is that it is rather useless unless you know how to
read it.
Financial Statements (Income - aka Profit and Loss -
Statement, Cash Flow Statement and Balance Sheet) come in many forms.
Sometimes they conform to Western accounting standards (the Generally
Accepted Accounting Principles, GAAP, or the less rigorous and more
fuzzily worded International Accounting Standards, IAS). Otherwise, they
conform to local accounting standards, which often leave a lot to be
desired. Still, you should look for banks, which make their updated
financial reports available to you. The best choice would be a bank that
is audited by one of the Big Six Western accounting firms and makes its
audit reports publicly available. Such audited financial statements
should consolidate the financial results of the bank with the financial
results of its subsidiaries or associated companies. A lot often hides
in those corners of corporate ownership.
Banks are rated by
independent agencies. The most famous and most reliable of the lot is
Fitch-IBCA. Another one is Thomson BankWatch-BREE. These agencies assign
letter and number combinations to the banks, that reflect their
stability. Most agencies differentiate the short term from the long term
prospects of the banking institution rated. Some of them even study
(and rate) issues, such as the legality of the operations of the bank
(legal rating). Ostensibly, all a concerned person has to do, therefore,
is to step up to the bank manager, muster courage and ask for the
bank's rating. Unfortunately, life is more complicated than rating
agencies would like us to believe. They base themselves mostly on the
financial results of the bank rated, as a reliable gauge of its
financial strength or financial profile. Nothing is further from the
truth.
Admittedly, the financial results do contain a few
important facts. But one has to look beyond the naked figures to get the
real - often much less encouraging - picture.
Consider the thorny
issue of exchange rates. Financial statements are calculated (sometimes
stated in USD in addition to the local currency) using the exchange
rate prevailing on the 31st of December of the fiscal year (to which the
statements refer). In a country with a volatile domestic currency this
would tend to completely distort the true picture. This is especially
true if a big chunk of the activity preceded this arbitrary date. The
same applies to financial statements, which were not inflation-adjusted
in high inflation countries. The statements will look inflated and even
reflect profits where heavy losses were incurred. "Average amounts"
accounting (which makes use of average exchange rates throughout the
year) is even more misleading. The only way to truly reflect reality is
if the bank were to keep two sets of accounts: one in the local currency
and one in USD (or in some other currency of reference). Otherwise,
fictitious growth in the asset base (due to inflation or currency
fluctuations) could result.
Another example: in many countries,
changes in regulations can greatly effect the financial statements of a
bank. In 1996, in Russia, to take an example, the Bank of Russia changed
the algorithm for calculating an important banking ratio (the capital
to risk weighted assets ratio). Unless a Russian bank restated its
previous financial statements accordingly, a sharp change in
profitability appeared from nowhere.
The net assets themselves are
always misstated: the figure refers to the situation on 31/12. A
48-hour loan given to a collaborating firm can inflate the asset base on
the crucial date. This misrepresentation is only mildly ameliorated by
the introduction of an "average assets" calculur. Moreover, some of the
assets can be interest earning and performing - others, non-performing.
The maturity distribution of the assets is also of prime importance. If
most of the bank's assets can be withdrawn by its clients on a very
short notice (on demand) - it can swiftly find itself in trouble with a
run on its assets leading to insolvency.
Another oft-used figure
is the net income of the bank. It is important to distinguish interest
income from non-interest income. In an open, sophisticated credit
market, the income from interest differentials should be minimal and
reflect the risk plus a reasonable component of income to the bank. But
in many countries (Japan, Russia) the government subsidizes banks by
lending to them money cheaply (through the Central Bank or through
bonds). The banks then proceed to lend the cheap funds at exorbitant
rates to their customers, thus reaping enormous interest income. In many
countries the income from government securities is tax free, which
represents another form of subsidy. A high income from interest is a
sign of weakness, not of health, here today, there tomorrow. The
preferred indicator should be income from operations (fees, commissions
and other charges).
There are a few key ratios to observe. A
relevant question is whether the bank is accredited with international
banking agencies. The latter issue regulatory capital requirements and
other defined ratios. Compliance with these demands is a minimum in the
absence of which, the bank should be regarded as positively dangerous.
The
return on the bank's equity (ROE) is the net income divided by its
average equity. The return on the bank's assets (ROA) is its net income
divided by its average assets. The (tier 1 or total) capital divided by
the bank's risk weighted assets - a measure of the bank's capital
adequacy. Most banks follow the provisions of the Basel Accord as set by
the Basel Committee of Bank Supervision (also known as the G10). This
could be misleading because the Accord is ill equipped to deal with
risks associated with emerging markets, where default rates of 33% and
more are the norm. Finally, there is the common stock to total assets
ratio. But ratios are not cure-alls. Inasmuch as the quantities that
comprise them can be toyed with - they can be subject to manipulation
and distortion. It is true that it is better to have high ratios than
low ones. High ratios are indicative of a bank's underlying strength of
reserves and provisions and, thereby, of its ability to expand its
business. A strong bank can also participate in various programs,
offerings and auctions of the Central Bank or of the Ministry of
Finance. The more of the bank's earnings are retained in the bank and
not distributed as profits to its shareholders - the better these ratios
and the bank's resilience to credit risks. Still, these ratios should
be taken with more than a grain of salt. Not even the bank's profit
margin (the ratio of net income to total income) or its asset
utilization coefficient (the ratio of income to average assets) should
be relied upon. They could be the result of hidden subsidies by the
government and management misjudgement or understatement of credit
risks.
To elaborate on the last two points: a bank can borrow
cheap money from the Central Bank (or pay low interest to its depositors
and savers) and invest it in secure government bonds, earning a much
higher interest income from the bonds' coupon payments. The end result: a
rise in the bank's income and profitability due to a non-productive,
non-lasting arbitrage operation. Otherwise, the bank's management can
understate the amounts of bad loans carried on the bank's books, thus
decreasing the necessary set-asides and increasing profitability. The
financial statements of banks largely reflect the management's appraisal
of the business. This is a poor guide to go by.
In the main
financial results' page of a bank's books, special attention should be
paid to provisions for the devaluation of securities and to the
unrealized difference in the currency position. This is especially true
if the bank is holding a major part of the assets (in the form of
financial investments or of loans) and the equity is invested in
securities or in foreign exchange denominated instruments. Separately, a
bank can be trading for its own position (the Nostro), either as a
market maker or as a trader. The profit (or loss) on securities trading
has to be discounted because it is conjectural and incidental to the
bank's main activities: deposit taking and loan making.
Most banks
deposit some of their assets with other banks. This is normally
considered to be a way of spreading the risk. But in highly volatile
economies with sickly, underdeveloped financial sectors, all the
institutions in the sector are likely to move in tandem (a highly
correlated market). Cross deposits among banks only serve to increase
the risk of the depositing bank (as the recent affair with Toko Bank in
Russia and the banking crisis in South Korea have demonstrated).
Further
closer to the bottom line are the bank's operating expenses: salaries,
depreciation, fixed or capital assets (real estate and equipment) and
administrative expenses. The rule of thumb is: the higher these
expenses, the worse. The great historian Toynbee once said that great
civilizations collapse immediately after they bequeath to us the most
impressive buildings. This is doubly true with banks. If you see a bank
fervently engaged in the construction of palatial branches - stay away
from it.
All considered, banks are risk traders. They live off the
mismatch between assets and liabilities. To the best of their ability,
they try to second guess the markets and reduce such a mismatch by
assuming part of the risks and by engaging in proper portfolio
management. For this they charge fees and commissions, interest and
profits - which constitute their sources of income. If any expertise is
attributed to the banking system, it is risk management. Banks are
supposed to adequately assess, control and minimize credit risks. They
are required to implement credit rating mechanisms (credit analysis),
efficient and exclusive information-gathering systems, and to put in
place the right lending policies and procedures. Just in case they
misread the market risks and these turned into credit risks (which
happens only too often), banks are supposed to put aside amounts of
money which could realistically offset loans gone sour or non-performing
in the future. These are the loan loss reserves and provisions. Loans
are supposed to be constantly monitored, reclassified and charges must
be made against them as applicable. If you see a bank with zero
reclassifications, charge off and recoveries - either the bank is lying
through its teeth, or it is not taking the business of banking too
seriously, or its management is no less than divine in its prescience.
What is important to look at is the rate of provision for loan losses as
a percentage of the loans outstanding. Then it should be compared to
the percentage of non-performing loans out of the loans outstanding. If
the two figures are out of kilter, either someone is pulling your leg -
or the management is incompetent or lying to you. The first thing new
owners of a bank do is, usually, improve the placed asset quality (a
polite way of saying that they get rid of bad, non-performing loans,
whether declared as such or not). They do this by classifying the loans.
Most central banks in the world have in place regulations for loan
classification and if acted upon, these yield rather more reliable
results than any management's "appraisal", no matter how well
intentioned. In some countries in the world, the Central Bank (or the
Supervision of the Banks) forces banks to set aside provisions against
loans of the highest risk categories, even if they are performing. This,
by far, should be the preferable method.
Of the two sides of the
balance sheet, the assets side should earn the most attention. Within
it, the interest earning assets deserve the greatest dedication of time.
What percentage of the loans is commercial and what percentage given to
individuals? How many lenders are there (risk diversification is
inversely proportional to exposure to single borrowers)? How many of the
transactions are with "related parties"? How much is in local currency
and how much in foreign currencies (and in which)? A large exposure to
foreign currency lending is not necessarily healthy. A sharp, unexpected
devaluation could move a lot of the borrowers into non-performance and
default and, thus, adversely affect the quality of the asset base. In
which financial vehicles and instruments is the bank invested? How risky
are they? And so on.

But the bank's macroeconomic environment is as
important to the determination of its financial health and of its
creditworthiness as any ratio or micro-analysis. The state of the
financial markets sometimes has a larger bearing on the bank's soundness
than other factors. A fine example is the effect that interest rates or
a devaluation have on a bank's profitability and capitalization. The
implied (not to mention the explicit) support of the authorities, of
other banks and of investors (domestic as well as international) sets
the psychological background to any future developments. This is only
too logical. In an unstable financial environment, knock-on effects are
more likely. Banks deposit money with other banks on a security basis.
Still, the value of securities and collaterals is as good as their
liquidity and as the market itself. The very ability to do business (for
instance, in the syndicated loan market) is influenced by the larger
picture. Falling equity markets herald trading losses and loss of income
from trading operations and so on.

In the past, the thinking was that some of the
risk could be ameliorated by hedging in forward markets (=by selling it
to willing risk buyers). But a hedge is only as good as the counterparty
that provides it and in a market besieged by knock-on insolvencies, the
comfort is dubious. In most emerging markets, for instance, there are
no natural sellers of foreign exchange (companies prefer to hoard the
stuff). So forwards are considered to be a variety of gambling with a
default in case of substantial losses a very plausible way out.
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