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For Those Who Failed To Heed My Warnings On Portugal, Visualize The Contagion That Causes European Bank Failure!!!

Reggie Middleton's picture




 

For anybody who didn't catch the hint, another banking crisis the continuation of the banking crisis is inevitable. I've said it before, Is Another Banking Crisis Inevitable? This is the current landscape, undoubtedly fudged over by optimistic marks.

Banks NPAs to total loans


Source: IMF, Boombust research and analytics

Euro banks remain weak as compared to their US counterparts

Health of European banks is weaker when compared to US banks. European banks are highly leveraged compared to their US counterparts (11.1x versus 4.1x) and are undercapitalized with core capital ratio of 6.5x vs. 8.5x. Also, the profitability of European banks is lower with net interest margin of 1.2% compared with 3.3%. However, non-performing loans-to-total loans for European banks are slightly better off when compared to US with NPL/loans at 4.9% vs. 5.6%. Nonetheless, considering the backdrop of high exposure to sovereign debt in Euro peripheral countries, we could see substantial write-downs for Euro banks AFS and HTM portfolio, which would more than offsets the relative strength of loan portfolio.

I really do mean substantial!

Impact of bank’s banking books on haircuts

EU banking book sovereign exposures are about five times larger than trading book. The table below gives sovereign exposure of major European countries for both trading and banking book. The EU trading book has €335bn of exposure while banking book has €1.7t exposure towards sovereign defaults. EU stress test estimated total write-down’s of €26bn as it only considered banks trading portfolio. This equated to implied haircut of 7.9% on trading portfolio with losses equating to 2.4% of Tier 1 capital. However, if the same haircuts (7.9% weighted average haircut) are applied to banking book then the loss would amount to €153bn equating to 13.8% of Tier 1 capital.


We have also presented an alternative scenario since we believe that EU stress test had failed not only to include banks HTM books but also the loss estimates were highly optimistic, as has much of the economic and financial forecasting that has come from the EU. It is highly recommended that readers review Lies, Damn Lies, and Sovereign Truths: Why the Euro is Destined to Collapse! for a detailed view of a long pattern of unrealistically optimistic forecasting. Here's and example...

 


image031.png

Revisions-R-US!

 

Now, enter the sovereign entity of default to be known as Portugal!

Portugal has just illustrated the worst of the potential path to contagion - runaway free market rates. Thier latest debt auction results reveal... The yields on their 6 Month bill literally spiked from 2.984% three weeks ago to 5.117%. People, that is nearly double their funding cost from just THREE WEEKS ago. This is the definition of unsustainable. The 12 Month jumped from 4.311% to 5.902%.

Putting this into perspective, Portugal will pay 20.2 basis points more to issue 1 year debt in its own name than it would pay to borrow 5 year debt from the EFSF (European bail out credit facility). You don't need me to tell you that this is a bailout or default waiting to happen – and very, very soon. Here's the post where I laid it out on the line: Portugal Is On The Verge Of Tapping Out, UFC Style – You Knew It Was Coming, Here’s The Analysis! Remember, I included a full

Attention subscribers: A new subscription document is ready for download File Icon The Inevitability of Another Bank Crisis

Portugal bond haircut analysis for all to peruse. This is the time that it's most useful, and if anything it is on the optimistic side. There’s actually a chance a credit event may occur by the time I give my Gloom and Doom speech in Amsterdam (www.seminar.ingref.com). Many people have asked me if there is chance CRE will pull through since many pockets are showing improvements. It's as simple as your belief in whether CRE can thrive in a stagflationary environ with sharply spiking interest rates amid shaky and collapsing banks. I've made my viewpoints clear:

Greece and Ireland are in very similar boats, despite being post bailout. And as all know, I have warned thoroughly about both of these nations through ample analysis. Instead of going through each and every one of my posts that fill the bill, look at the early work (with subscription material) or my latest European opinion and analysis. Of course, by now I'm not the only one to sound the alarm that an interest rate storm is about to erupt and it will travel the world.

From CNBC: Euro Zone Considers Greek Restructuring: Report

Some euro zone governments are concerned highly indebted Greece will not be able to refinance itself and may have to restructure its debt, the Financial Times Deutschland reported on Wednesday. The newspaper said representatives of several euro zone governments told the paper that a restructuring could no longer be ruled out. ..."An extention and top-up of the aid package would not be politically possible. Then, consequences would have to be drawn," the paper quoted a source in the finance ministry of a large euro zone country as saying.

It also quoted an advisor to the leader of an EU state as saying: "We must have a plan B ready" for the possibility Greece requires more financial assistance. Greek and European officials have long insisted that Greece can recover without restructuring its debt, and that even discussing a restructuring now would be counter-productive by damaging banks across Europe and causing panic in markets. On Saturday, the International Monetary Fund denied a report in German magazine Der Spiegel that it was privately pressing Greece to restructure its debt.

From JP Morgan, via the FT.com:

Irish banks have recently issued €18bn of notes backed by government guarantees with the aim of replacing expensive ELA funding from the Irish Central Bank (at the ECB’s marginal lending facility of 1.75% plus a penalty) with ECB funding at 1%. This replacement is likely to be reflected in the end- February financial statement of the Irish central bank. As of the end of January, Irish banks borrowed €126bn from the ECB (down €6bn from December) and €51bn from the national central bank’s ELA (unchanged from December).

The issuance of state guaranteed notes not only allows Irish banks to unwind their ELA dependence and reduces the cost of borrowing from central banks, but it also protects them against rating downgrades. Rating downgrades of non-guaranteed bonds raises the haircut applied by the ECB or in extreme cases can make these non-guaranteed bonds ineligible with the ECB.

This has been a problem for Greek banks, which, at the end of last year rushed to issue €25bn of government guaranteed bonds to meet new, more punitive collateral requirements by the ECB. The Greek government has just extended state-guarantees to Greek banks by another €30bn, on top of €55bn of outstanding state-guaranteed bank bonds. It appears that one Greek bank has already made use of the new €30bn liquidity package, issuing €1bn of government- guaranteed paper this week.

To the extent that this extra €30bn is being used by Greek banks, it will mean that from the €140-150bn of collateral that Greek banks have posted with the ECB so far, almost all of it will be government-related collateral (€85bn of stateguaranteed bank paper, €45bn of Greek government bonds owned by Greek banks and €8bn of zero-coupon bonds which the Greek government had lent to Greek banks in 2008). The huge exposure to government-related collateral puts the ECB at a huge disadvantage in the event of government restructurings/defaults.

If you remember, I warned of this months ago! This literally getting uglier by the second. Reference:

Additional prescient posts and related research on the Greek and Irish topic, all from last year!

The UK is showing signs of very real stagflation. For those who haven't already, browse through my recent posts on how many are confusing inflation with the more damaging stagflation:Inflation Misconceptions Hide A Downright U-G-L-Y Real Estate Landscape! – Part 1 andInflation Is When The Price of The Most Valuable Things (Such As Your House or Small Business) Drop Precipitously During High Unemployment, Right???!!! And back to the UK...Industrial production and economic activity is dropping, via AP (h/t ZeroHedge): UK industrial production in surprise drop in Feb

LONDON (AP) — British industrial production fell 1.2 percent in February from January, an official report said Wednesday, marking the largest monthly fall since August 2009 and far worse than analyst expectations for an increase of 0.2 percent. The Office for National Statistics said a 7.8 percent drop in oil and gas extraction was the main reason for the fall, while the manufacturing sector was flat. For the December-February period, overall industrial production was up 0.8 percent

But, inflation is rising...

Mar 25, 2011 ... There is a significant risk that the U.K. inflation rate could soon exceed 5%, according to the minutes of the Bank of England's Monetary ...
Mar 19, 2011 ... U.K. inflation probably accelerated to the fastest pace since October 2008 in February, which may sharpen the divide among Bank of England ...
Mar 22, 2011 ... Inflation is rapidly coming to the UK. Consumer prices in February jumped 4.4%, vs 4.2% expectations. The number was 4% in January. ...

The US Is Losing The Race To Insolvency, But Not For Lack Of Trying!

Of course, the US is close to insolvent (not there yet though, but we’re working on it). Our housing problem is worse than it ever was in the market crash of 2008 - see In Case You Didn’t Get The Memo, The US Is In a Real Estate Depression That Is About To Get Much Worse

and Further Proof Of The Worsening Of The Real Estate Depression. As a matter of fact, it's what caused the global crash to begin with. Despite that, the banks that hold the loans to these underwater loans have increased 300% in price, doled out record bonuses, and are reinstating dividends while the country that bailed them out and transferred private debt onto the tax paying public needs to raise the debt ceiling yet again.

Japan may be approaching 250 - 300% debt to GDP, the highest of any developed nation.

See Can Contagion Be Avoided Considering The Magnitude Of Japan’s Woes? Most already know Japan’s issues, which started when they were at a 200% debt to GDP ratio. Some say it will take $350 billion to dig them out of the hole which will make them the most indebted developed country in the world with a good portion of their infrastructure damaged.

How Did We Get Into Such A Global Mess??? Thank our central bankers, who won't prick a blowing bubble, but will pull their ass hairs out to try to reinflate a popped one!!!

And this is the cause of all of this mess...

Do Black Swans Really Matter? Not As Much as the Circle of Life, The Circle Purposely Disrupted By Multiple Central Banks Worldwide!!! or put a little more poetically, Did Bernanke Permanently Cripple the Butterfly That Is US Housing? Interested readers can follow me on twitter and review our latest European opinion and analysis. I will be lecturing on this "realistic" style of analysis as the special guest speaker and keynote at the ING Real Estate Valuation seminar in Amsterdam. I will also introduce the structured products that we have been working as a solution to this mess that we see ourselves in. See www.seminar.ingref.com. The event is sold out with a waiting list, but I hear there were a few last minute cancellations.

 

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Wed, 04/06/2011 - 20:55 | 1143571 bugs_
bugs_'s picture

Thanks.  What to wear during Reggie's Interest Rate Storm?

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:58 | 1141857 ebworthen
ebworthen's picture

 

Do they really have to sell bonds?

Who is keeping track of central banks?

If Wall Street and the Banksters & Politicians of the world can allow trillion upon trillion of credit default swaps and mortgage backed securities to be floated about unbacked by a deed, precious metals, or any other tangible asset or connection to reality - why then can they not simply claim the "money" is there?

What is solvency anymore anyways?

 

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:43 | 1141815 TeMpTeK
TeMpTeK's picture

Well done Reggie...

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:27 | 1141728 DNB-sore
DNB-sore's picture

Hi Portugal, a lot of fiat money was invested in Portugal to bring them to level with the EU (it can easily be higher than te GDP of Portugal). What you are looking at is not only a single percent in the EU bucket of GDP but a problem of a collapsing country having to fix all (the losses) these investments and the EU trying to save face. It's becoming a sad story between two large world-powers of economy; The EU and the US

The EU consists of still "independant" countries while the US wants to keep face and act as one and have the rating agencies so the US can keep their bonds low and bully other countries in the EU. EU has to take action to keep uniformity as a band of brothers and swollow the terror of the rating agencies. As the EU countries get picked one by one, every country is getting in larger debt by financing the bailout fund, making them weaker and more vunerable to the next downgrade of a country because the debt level is raising by the minute

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:10 | 1141614 DNB-sore
DNB-sore's picture

we're going down! Help!

Time to get our own rating agencies and cut the interests in half to prove we're not doing so badly after all

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:05 | 1141584 Portugal
Portugal's picture

I don't agree with some parts of Reggie work. When someone reads:

“…

·          The ECB Loads Up On Increasingly Devalued Portuguese Bonds, Ensuring That They Will Get Hit Hard When Portugal Defaults

·         ECB Swallows Massive Portuguese Bond Losses As It Is Clear That The Third State Will Soon Join The Bailout Brigade – Haircuts, Here We Come!!!

…”

I ask myself what is the size of the Portuguese Debt for an institution like “The ECB” when Portugal only represents 1% of UE GDP….

In addition, its known that all European banks have other capital constraints due to the fact that, historically, European countries and companies are financed on Banks Balance Sheets unlike their American Counterparts. Ok, So what is happening is perfectly observable and measurable at European banks level.

But then I also ask myself where can I find data about the holes that the US Banks have provoked on the US investors and, eventually, on their own economy.

Regards to all from Portugal

 

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:58 | 1141544 crzyhun
crzyhun's picture

+9

China will not collpase as the state will not allow that. And as the currency is not floating fully, they don't face our hole.

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:09 | 1141620 Rogerwilco
Rogerwilco's picture

So, China will buy all the Portuguese bonds, Irish as well? Oh, and Mr. Geithner has about $3T for sale, will Beijing buy those too?

If the answer is no, then China will have fewer customers for exports. Bye bye Chinese miracle.

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:51 | 1141507 Gold 36000
Gold 36000's picture

yeah I have noticed the America haters have sort of disappeared.  Seems like they are having troubles in their own countries now that dwarf ours.

Or all those loud mouthed america haters are trying to sneak across the border so they can still have a shot at the good life.

Come back America haters!  I miss you!  I want to have someone listen to my gloating as eurosocialism has an epic fail and China deflates and collapses.

This is another american century!

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:24 | 1141388 Bonesetter Brown
Bonesetter Brown's picture

Imminent ECB rate hike?

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:23 | 1141395 Bonesetter Brown
Bonesetter Brown's picture

Bad post -- should have been a reply to Fred above

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:42 | 1141473 bingaling
bingaling's picture

I don't think so - Euro went from 1.20 to 1.40 very quickly even before the rate hike . The bet is that the problems are resolved or a very close to being resolved . Reggie digs deep and this is privileged knowledge before the shit hits the fan . But timing is everything , the Euro could sink after the dollar or before the answer to that question is where the money is . Euro is rallying to go against the trend is suicide even though the fundamentals of the dollar and the Euro are probably par .

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:23 | 1141385 ZakuKommander
ZakuKommander's picture

Nicely done, Reggie.

Will be interesting to see whether there's a "buy on the rumor, sell on the news" reaction tomorrow when the ECB raises.

 

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:14 | 1141347 apberusdisvet
apberusdisvet's picture

So the Irish really were holding all the cards and should have told the Germans to phuckoff?

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:12 | 1141328 DeadFred
DeadFred's picture

And yet the Euro rises.  What gives???

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 13:17 | 1141675 hardcleareye
hardcleareye's picture

Was suggested earlier on ZH that it might have something to do with recycled petrodollars...  I am still researching/investigating the suggestion. 

Can anybody provide some clarity on that?

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:17 | 1141359 bingaling
bingaling's picture

Good question .

Wed, 04/06/2011 - 12:09 | 1141319 nah
nah's picture

maybe we can get some mercenaries on the cheap

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