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European Bank Bail-ins? Banks 'As Vulnerable Today' As Before 2008 Crisis

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European Bank Bail-ins? Banks 'As Vulnerable Today' As Before 2008 Crisis

- Euro banks no more stable now than in run-up to 2008 crash
- Banks in France, Spain and Italy are “highly vulnerable to failure”
- Low quality bank equity not sufficient to withstand shock
- Risk to system “enormously underestimated”
- Investor deposits at risk of “bail-ins”

goldcore_chart1_18-05-15
New research shows that European banks are as likely to fail today as they were preceding the global economic crash seven years ago.

Leading economists say that the European banking system is still highly vulnerable to financial and economic shocks despite the various policies which have been put in place to protect against such events since the collapse in 2008.

According to research by the University of Portsmouth Business School which was published in the Journal of Banking and Finance European banks are as vulnerable today as they were in the run up to the crisis of 2008.

The research suggests that southern European banks - particularly those of France, Italy and Spain - are “highly vulnerable to failure.”

goldcore_chart2_18-05-15

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

The research focussed on threats emerging from three independent sources of risk - the interbank loan market, the sovereign credit risk market and the asset-backed loan market.

The models sought to determine the resilience of various systemically important European banks and “to track how shocks spread between domestic and international banks.”

Researchers found that “the European banking system remains highly vulnerable and conducive to financial contagion” and that speed of contagion and bank failures in southern Europe were “markedly more prominent”.

France, Spain and Italy appear to be dramatically more exposed to failing compared to their neighbours in one of the models. This showed France losing 73 billion euro compared to Belgium's 6 billion euro after the same economic shock from the same source.

Dr Nikos Paltalidis, who led the research, is skeptical of the conclusions of stress tests which claim that banks could withstand a 10% drop in the value of their equity or that the banking system in the euro area is solvent.

He believes that the quality of the assets held by some key banks is of poor quality and in the event of a shock to the system they would cause the value of bank capital to below the required regulatory minimum.

"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."

Dr. Paltalidis states the following:

"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.”

Frequent readers of our blog will be well aware of the risks posed to bank deposits by a bank failure.

While governments have sought to assure the public that their savings are safe due to bank deposit guarantee schemes they have been working behind the scenes to extricate themselves from that responsibility.

We reported last month on how the Austrian government was pushing through an EU law earlier than scheduled which removes all responsibility of the government for the bank deposits of its citizens. This legislation is due to be rolled out across Europe this year.

Long time readers will be aware that Irish Finance Minister Michael Noonan is on record as saying “bail-ins” are now the rule.

goldcore_chart3_18-05-15
Bank deposits are increasingly vulnerable given the risks to the banking system and the likelihood of government reneging of deposit guarantees and of bank bail-ins in the event of a crisis.

Allocated and segregated gold bullion coins and bars held out-side of the banking system in stable jurisdictions like SwitzerlandHong Kong and Singapore will again protect in the likely event of another financial or economic crisis.

Must-read guide and research on bail-ins here:
Protecting Your Savings In The Coming Bail-In Era

 

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Tue, 05/19/2015 - 08:53 | 6109250 Dumgoy
Dumgoy's picture

There is absolutely no risk of a bail in or any other form of theft, goverments are good and they care for you more than their own families, thus gold is for suckers.

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 08:04 | 6109069 fremannx
fremannx's picture

More proof that governments want a War on Cash...

http://www.globaldeflationnews.com/governments-are-secretly-preparing-to...

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 07:16 | 6108928 Marco
Marco's picture

Meh, I don't have more than a 100K ... a bail in won't hurt me as much as a bail out.

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 11:38 | 6109831 Zpigs
Zpigs's picture

Ha, joke's on them. Can't take what we don't have.

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 04:17 | 6108780 SpanishGoop
SpanishGoop's picture

4. Own physical gold in allocated accounts with legal outright ownership.

 

No, not going to work.

 

4. Own physical gold buried deep in your backyard.

 

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 07:41 | 6108988 theliberalliberal
theliberalliberal's picture

If it's more than 300mm deep it's open to mining claims!

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 22:15 | 6108244 RaceToTheBottom
RaceToTheBottom's picture

Luckily we have deposit insurance in the US...  We are all safe.....

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 19:09 | 6107611 TheGreatRecovery
TheGreatRecovery's picture

Sounds bullish for the Mafia banks.  Will over-confident CBers put themselves out of business?

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 17:56 | 6107301 Dragon HAwk
Dragon HAwk's picture

Remember to take  ( cash ) when you are on your Bank Holiday.... Excursion Tour.

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 16:48 | 6107069 KnuckleDragger-X
KnuckleDragger-X's picture

Hell, they are even more likely to fail now. Everything that the CB's have done weakens the underpinnings of the world economy while bragging how great it all is. The Greek tragedy is just the opening act and the EU is one bank run from disaster.....

Mon, 05/18/2015 - 17:48 | 6107270 Captain Debtcrash
Captain Debtcrash's picture

Hence the push to ban cash.  People just don’t understand the freedom that cash provides, namely the ability to remove yourself from the banking system.  Paper money is horribly flawed but not nearly as bad a money that you have no choice but to keep in their casino. 

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 00:36 | 6108601 tarabel
tarabel's picture

 

 

I think you highlight an important point.

If cash is trapped inside the system and can only be moved from one account to another, there is no way to touch off an old-fashioned bank run.

I hadn't really thought about this in this way until just now, and the implications are really staggering.

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 08:09 | 6109087 fremannx
fremannx's picture

Not only is it trapped, but like Greece is doing, they will penalize you for trying to withdraw it...

http://www.globaldeflationnews.com/more-proof-that-central-banks-have-de...

Tue, 05/19/2015 - 10:22 | 6109524 messymerry
messymerry's picture

I called a 2150 top last year, but it's taking longer than anticipated for the software developers to get everything working.  All the stops will be pulled out until the mechanisms for bail ins are in place and tested, then when the exits can all be locked at the flip of a switch, the markets will be allowed to crash and in the turmoil, all the debt documentation will magically disappear.  Due I'm sure to various and sundry server crashes and massive bungling by certain organizations and TLAs which I needent name here... 

I love being part of the lunatic fringe,,,

;-D

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