Saturday 8 October 2011

Dexia déjà vu: parallels with Bear Stearns

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Last updated: October 4, 2011 8:16 pm

Dexia déjà vu: parallels with Bear Stearns

News that Franco-Belgian bank Dexia is being supported by the state should prompt déjà vu. We have indeed seen it before: Dexia was one of the first banks rescued after Lehman’s collapse. Perhaps, though, Dexia – this time getting loan guarantees and state support for a “bad bank” – matters more than it seems. Like Bear Stearns in 2008, it is a warning of bigger troubles ahead.
Consider some parallels with the collapse of Bear.

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Bear, reliant on wholesale funding, ran into trouble after losing access to funding. Money market measures of willingness to lend to eurozone banks have in the past three months risen exactly as much as their US equivalents in early 2008.
Bear’s failure ushered in the first bear market in the S&P 500, with the index of US equities down 20 per cent for the first time during the credit crunch. It eventually lost a further 47 per cent.
On Tuesday the S&P 500 briefly entered a new bear market, down 20 per cent from its peak in May.
Surely Dexia, mainly a municipal lender, is not that important? After all, as a French official told Reuters on Tuesday, it has a liquidity problem, not a solvency problem. Exactly the same was said about Bear.
Whether or not the problem is solvency is not really relevant. Bear became an ex-canary on the dirty coalface of Wall Street because of investor (and client) fear. The fear that destroyed Bear, based on its unsellable toxic subprime loans and structured credits, was the same fear that later took down Lehman.
In the case of Dexia, fear is based on unsellable toxic subprime sovereign debt, particularly from Greece. Forget whether the fear is justified; investors are rightly wondering who plays Lehman this time. French banks are in the frame, as is Greece itself.
There is a more important question. Are any governments strong enough, financially and politically, to bail out the banking system again?
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  1. Report Chescat5 | October 5 12:28pm | Permalink
    Dexia appears to be much more important than Bear Stearns. Bear was just an over-leveraged large trading and investment banking house. Although its stockholders and employees suffered, there was little broader fallout from its demise (in part because it was not allowed to fail completely). Dexia demonstrates the circularity of European finance. To mix the metaphors, Dexia shows how the European house of cards can collapse if the insolvency of one or two of its large players is admitted.
  2. Report JoannaSw. | October 5 10:05am | Permalink
    The gov'ts are strong enough to provide the banking system with the necessary liquidity. The existing stock of debt can be restructured and its terms rewritten.

    Whether the govt;s of the deficit countries are strong enough to provide themselves with *solvency* is a different question. I don't see how they can under the current EZ <strike> structure </strike> straightjacket .

    @ A Greek

    Good post. However, hard as it might be to realise from your standpoint, the EZ elite were (are?) in denial over the failure of their "great project". The entire euro crisis was manufactured in Brussels. Rather than blame their shoddily-constructed currency union it was/is a lot easier to blame Greece.
  3. Report carlo.panzeri | October 5 8:51am | Permalink
    To User3435690 - The Bear entities gone bust in 2007 were two hedge funds, the Broker / Investment Bank got forced into a shotgun wedding with JPMorgan in March 08 (or it would have gone under).
  4. Report kamal.gupta | October 5 8:43am | Permalink
    Gangrene requires amputation of the affected limb. If you delay that, the disease spreads and will eventually lead to an extremely painful death.
  5. Report ush2 | October 5 3:44am | Permalink
    The answer is a resounding "no". One of the problems with the financial markets in general is too much fluff. Witness the last miniute rebound of the S&P 500 last night. It was south over two per cent and suddenly turned north and closed over four per cent higher. One suspects it has something to do with the way a bear market is defined - down 20 percent from the previous peak. Once it's perceived as a bear market, it's hard to get out of it. The last-minute turn around looks contrived, probably not the anticipation of good news from across the Atlantic.
  6. Report christopher mahoney | October 5 12:49am | Permalink
    Bank runs are the responsibility of the central bank. The simplest solution for the Dexias of the world is a government guarantee (to protect the central bank from loss) and unlimited liquidity until the solvency situation is corrected and the bank can return to market.
  7. Report Valp | October 4 11:24pm | Permalink
    Why is 2008 the measure here. I remember Bear Stearns triggering The Big One rather dramatically in the spring of 2007! Or did it continue to exist until early 2008? I'm puzzled here.
  8. Report Do What You Wanna Do | October 4 10:09pm | Permalink
    a greek,

    Great post, really enjoyed that.
  9. Report Do What You Wanna Do | October 4 10:01pm | Permalink
    James,

    What's happened to your beard?

    How about a moustache?

    Just to say, I really enjoy your analysis, it's first class.

    :-)
  10. Report User384181 | October 4 9:32pm | Permalink
    It is not surprising that Dexia mirrors Bear's decline into chaos: Bear's model was also followed by AIG and Lehman, as well as nearly claiming Goldman and Morgan Stanley. Going further, what happened (a system dependent on short term funding, when that funding abruptly drys up) is now the seemingly standard model for collapsing financial services companies. LTCM, before that Drexel Burnham and so forth all came to a life-threatening crisis this way, of which some survived - if rescued by interested third parties with deep pockets. In fact, due to the heroin-like addiction to short term funding by financial institutions, this is clearly the weak point in the whole system.
  11. Report asset backed nirvana | October 4 9:22pm | Permalink
    Hate to correct you but Von Blucher had been soundly trounced at Quatre Bras 2 days earlier and Napoloeon split hsi force intwo; one to meet wellington, the other led by the French General Grouchy to find Blucher and finish him off. 25,000 French troops were wandering thru thick forest wasting time while Blucher lucked his way onto the Waterloo battlefield. Grouchy hearing the guns decided it was a ploy and went a different direction.
    How battles are won and lost on seemingly small decisions.
    today of course the paralleles are stunning....no one can see the trees for teh forest either!
  12. Report Dividend Hunter | October 4 9:15pm | Permalink
    Marshall von Blucher's arrival at the Waterloo field of battle was in no way errant. He moved in that direction as soon as he defeated the French forces under Marshall Ney. Von Blucher, Ney, Wellington, and Bonaparte all understood the nature of their liabilities. That is more than can be said for many CEOs at major bank.
  13. Report asset backed nirvana | October 4 8:13pm | Permalink
    Historically Belgium was part of France until one Lord Wellington by pure fluke defeated Napoleon at Waterloo. Not only was he gifted the victory by the errant arrival of the Prussian Von Blucher, but he was very clearly offside the whole fight.

    You Euro sceptics are getting your knickers in a twist. Europe will not fail. The Euro will not fail. All your Anglo Saxon fears that the Dollar will be replaced as the worlds reserve currency can rest assured that there is room for two reserve currencies.

    So please relax. Dexia is not Bear stearns. far from it. BS was an important part of the US clearing banking cartel. Dexia is not even close. It would have to eb much bigger than Dexia to compete with the systemic failure taht BS's demise caused.

    Honestly, grow up FT. This is rubbish reporting.
  14. Report User3784071 | October 4 8:02pm | Permalink
    It is not the Belgians stupid ! It is the french !
  15. Report SunsetMoment | October 4 7:46pm | Permalink
    Dexia - it ain't your father's type of bank. Why do journalists keep reporting like it is?

    It is said, "Surely Dexia, mainly a municipal lender, is not that important? " Maybe the question should be just what kind of insurance, derivatives and other kinds of hidden leverage are in the process of unwinding. After all, that is what the public has learned - banks are not our father's type of bank anymore - they are loaded with all kinds of hedge book paper of unknown risk until an unwind is necessitated. Then we learn.

    Why must it be assumed that Dexia's problem is lending to risky sovereign borrowers? After all, 2007/8 showed us that Dexia does just this. WHY IS IT THAT JOURNALISTS CAN'T DIG DEEPER - find out what is really on and off the balance sheet before telling us Dexia is mainly a muni lender or subprime sovereign lender. ASK THE HARD QUESTIONS - before delivering opinions as facts.

    It is loaded with derivative and insurance exposure. And opaque exposure it is. French bankers, like all bankers, love opaque coziness in the good times. In bad times, well - its not their problem.

    In the last 2 weeks, the US Federal Reserve increased swaps with Europe. Anyone want to guess if Dexia is availing itself of American largesse once again?

    From Bloomberg: Jan 2009, Dexia borrowed $37B at the US Fed discount window. That was the most any bank borrowed - and it was a European bank at that!

    Oh... and Dexia's: "...total borrowings from the [U.S. Fed's] Commercial Paper Funding Facility ranked third among users of the emergency program created to support the market for short-term debt issued by banks and corporations. Dexia used the program 42 times for a total of $53.5 billion, according to data the Fed released in December. "

    And...

    "Dexia also tapped the Term Auction Facility, the lending mechanism the Fed established in December 2007 to augment the discount window. Dexia received 24 TAF loans totaling $105.2 billion, the largest of which was $16.7 billion on Jan. 17, 2008, Fed data show. "

    It looks to me that Dexia is a key component in blowing hot air into the ill conceived, unstable, international banking system that at its root needs funding from the US. We don't know if this is a liquidity problem or a solvency one. But it is wrong for journalists to ignore the full picture at a bank and just jump to a conclusion that it is "Greece". It's too convenient, too wrong to do so without considerable homework first.
  16. Report JJJ | October 4 7:26pm | Permalink
    The answer, China. Ha Ha
  17. Report Michael McPhillips | October 4 7:17pm | Permalink
    They all can repay their debts but "politically" is the problem. If the new EU Budget rules were retrospective then the Commission could start paying them from Structural Funds and other transfers due the problem economies, unwilling to grasp that nettle.
  18. Report User1507608 | October 4 7:16pm | Permalink
    First Fortis, now Dexia ... who's next. These Belgians are broken bankers and are tearing down Europe with them.
  19. Report User4260528 | October 4 7:04pm | Permalink
    And to think the FTSE was 1000 points higher as late as July. Did all of this catch everyone off-guard? or where we all collectively picking up pennies in front of the steam roller? The current weekly up/down story of the stock markets is just a joke... did more pennies suddenly appear or did the bulldozer run out of gas?
  20. Report Blankfiend2 | October 4 6:33pm | Permalink
    @Biil Kruse,
    "The sovereign debt used to just be the banks' debt. It should have stayed that way."

    Bravo!

    Belgium, join the PIIGS!
  21. Report a greek | October 4 6:13pm | Permalink
    Forget Greece. Greeks are soon to concentrate on a diet of tree bark, whatever the outcome of this horror movie.

    What about the rest of Europe? For two years now every crackpot in the neighborhood is storming windmills, airing his/her anal depressive psychosis on moralistic preaching about the need to punish Greece, to flagellate every Greek on sight, to send the Greek Nation to the fire of hell.
    They spent valuable time and considerable political capital whipping up the basest racist instincts of their mobs. Greeks are all lying drunk on the beaches, they keep dancing the syrtaki all day long ( How Greeks manage all this at the same time, baffles me, but what the hell !!) .

    They played a very dirty game on the peoples of Europe. At the time when the zenith of solidarity was needed they fanned the flames of nationalism, racism and hatred. They did it on solid purpose. They set up their propaganda machines like Marshal Koniev set up his artillery regiments on the East bank of the Vistula ready to jump on to the heart of Europe. And they got what they wanted.
    They raised a Mud Curtain between South and North in Europe. At the time when everybody had to circle the wagons, they made sure that no electorate would accept any decision, desperately needed, to prop up Europe.

    Now the loaded gun is expertly primed. The only question is if someone will pull the trigger, or some minor uncontrollable event will start the mountain sliding.

    Today it is DEXIA, tomorrow who is next? And on the other side of the Atlantic Morgan Stanley's stock takes a dive also, soon to be joined bu other bright and shiny!

    The most vulgar obscenity committed in cold blood for the last 24 months is the concerted effort to lull the people's of Europe with the spin that this is a Greek Problem, which would go away if Greeks were not the scum of the Earth they are. It is surprising that the European masses have not started rolling down the Alpes ready to wipe out the 'pollutant', the one threatening the snow whites of Europe with 'contagion'. As if being broke is some catching disease which you can avoid if you steer clear of the bad areas of the city.

    The European economy is being strangled by a credit crunch that just started, gingerly. Wait until it develops into a severe convulsion.

    European leaders knew what is coming. Either that, or they are total idiots and their famous state machines are manned by total idiots. Yet for two years now, they play with fire, misleading their people, hiding the real problem and pointing to tiny Greece as if Greece is the only villain.

    Greece is finished. At least for a generation. But that will be very small consolation to the European electorates when they realize what is in store for them. The only perverse satisfaction Greece can have now is to watch those who assaulted the land with not a shred of solidarity and common decency join the country to the bottom of the pit.

    Greeks never took their bubble bonanza for granted. That is why the people do not react violently so far. In the back of their collective subconscious they knew that the spree was too good to be real. They knew that this was not going to last. And having just come out of abject poverty, they have the memories, even the social structure to survive some-how. Let's now see how the well oiled societies of the North and the West, where the tiniest speck of dust on the endless gears of 'developed' societies creates severe upheavals, how they are going to adjust to their bleak future when the spanners starting flying uncontrollably into the delicate machinery!
  22. Report AHodge** | October 4 6:04pm | Permalink
    so its clear to me you are dealing with a eurobank bad assets prob maybe 2-3 times any reasonable sovereign writedown. Latest a good deal for dexia management and shareholders.
    one more total bailout of all bad assets?
    whether a good bailout w haircuts and restructure
    or total bailout,
    lets name the worst biggest banks and get on w it
    frozen banks and mkt slip sliding being the other choice
    have we found the deep pockets for france and Belgium anyway?
  23. Report Athanase | October 4 5:31pm | Permalink
    Looking across the Atlantic is looking in the wrong the wrong direction. The parallel to Bear Stearns might well be there in what brought Dexia's situatuation about, but the continuation will have a distinctly European note. The parallel is to be found with the municipal savings banks and their roof organisations. The German Landesbanken have seen numerous bail outs over the past half-century (most notably WestLB). The question of their survival is intensely political because of the size of the retail customer base and the political nature of their board appointments. Dexia has arisen from the merger of Belgium's municipal savings banks, its chief is a former Belgian Prime Minister.

    However much political hand-wringing there will be, the resolve to save Dexia is much greater than it could have been for Bear. Bear was a for-profit organisation from the word go. Dexia is a public service hidden under a for-profit cloak.
  24. Report CasualObserver | October 4 5:08pm | Permalink
    More than Bear Sterns this reminds me of that other Belgian pride. No not Jean-Claude Van Damme, but Fortis. They didn't have a solvency problem either, only a liquidity one. And there it was a BeNeLux affair.
  25. Report Jeremy Baker | October 4 5:03pm | Permalink
    Come Eileen! Dexia Midnight Runners.
  26. Report James Mackintosh, FT | October 4 4:57pm | Permalink
    @User7736117 The later Maiden Lane profits of course came after the bear market ended... I didn't want to get bogged down in the question of whether Bear had "genuine" solvency issues, rather than liquidity... one for academic study!
  27. Report GoGoGermany | October 4 4:51pm | Permalink
    the problem is not who will the next but who will be the last one to stand after the crisis if the incompetent European politicians don't take a quick action to restore market confidence. The problem of Greece could have been fixed 18 months ago when it was first bought into their attentions, but they turned a blind eye and wrongly believed thing could go away without pain. Certainly we will pay a much higher price for fixing the problem. In the end these bunch of politicians will not suffer at all, but the people. Opportunity will never knock your door but once. Please take a swift and decisive action for God sake.
  28. Report John Hawkins | October 4 4:23pm | Permalink
    No mention of how much the Federal Reserve Bank of New York made back in the year after they lost the $3B in hte economic crash? Seems like a relevant piece of data...
  29. Report milas | October 4 4:04pm | Permalink
    Indeed....the more things change, the more they remain the same....Ah, for a Greenspan put!

    Sovereign debt needs to be bundled into a huge CLO, with Germany and China taking the equity tranche; and sold off as senior tranches. The hair of the dog, thats the answer.
  30. Report Realism Wins the Day | October 4 4:03pm | Permalink
    There's one seemingly big difference: Dexia's biggest problem isn't the 5bn in Greek debt it holds, that's only about 1% of its balance sheet.

    The thing with which is struggles is the 50bn in Italian debt. The big difference is that the assets that were difficult to sell where accumulating big - real - losses (which continued as you say when those assets where sold to the NYFed as Maiden Lane I and II).

    Those Italian bonds carry some - though not massive - paper losses (yields are at 5,5% while they were about 4,5% before the crisis), but Italy is nowhere near defaulting. It has had much higher debt/gdp with much higher interest rates than it is currently paying - without defaulting.
  31. Report MARK NEWLANDS | October 4 3:57pm | Permalink
    Apologies - missed out the word 'issue' after 'liquidity
  32. Report MARK NEWLANDS | October 4 3:54pm | Permalink
    Yet again with Dexia we are seeing that when confidence in a particular institution evaporates, the difference between a solvency and a liquidity (funding) becomes an academic one. The result is the same.
  33. Report Bill Kruse | October 4 3:52pm | Permalink
    The sovereign debt used to just be the banks' debt. It should have stayed that way.
  34. Report Harry Lieuw | October 4 3:50pm | Permalink
    Another Bxstxrd Case!
  35. Report User7338312 | October 4 3:31pm | Permalink
    Ouch!
  36. Report Jean-Pierre DUMAS | October 4 3:30pm | Permalink
    The second question: "Which governments are strong enough, financially and politically, to bail out the financial system again?"

    None, the ECB seems to me the only institution able to guarantee sovereign debt at face value and thus to put a floor on sovereign debt.
  37. Report praxis22 | October 4 3:29pm | Permalink
    Ex-canary or a dead parrot? :)

    I seem to remember the thing that really killed Bear was that Jimmy Cayne had "annoyed" enough people, especially during LTCM's wobble, that he had no friends left, and thus had to turn the Fed. Of course that could just revisionist history, and faulty memory on my part :)
  38. Report WL - Minneapolis | October 4 3:23pm | Permalink
    It is no surprise that European banks are in the hot seat this time around. Exposure to European sovereigns, and a greater reliance on borrowing to fund their operations, are both likely to spell more trouble in the days and weeks ahead.
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