(people
were having trouble opening this article on Facebook by Neil Macdonald of CBC
so am resending).
By Neil Macdonald
Buried deep in last month's federal
budget is an ambiguously worded section that has roiled parts of the financial
world but has so far been largely ignored by the mainstream media.
It boils down to this: Ottawa is
contemplating the possibility of a Canadian bank failure — and the same sort of
pitiless prescription that was just imposed in Cyprus.
Meaning no bailout by taxpayers, but
rather a "bail-in" that would force the bank's creditors to absorb
the staggering losses that such an event would inevitably entail.
If that sounds sobering, it should.
While officials in Ottawa are playing down the possibility of a raid on the
bank accounts of ordinary Canadians, they chose not to include that guarantee
in the budget language.
Canadians tend to believe their
banks are safer and more backstopped than elsewhere in the world. The federal
government enthusiastically promotes the notion, and loves to take credit for
it.
It may well be true, even if
Canada's six-bank oligopoly isn't terribly competitive, at least in comparison
to the far more diverse American banking universe.
But in the ever-more insecure world
that has unfolded since the financial meltdown of 2008, it is also increasingly
clear that nothing is safe anymore, not even blue-chip bank stocks and bonds or
even, in the case of the Cyprus bail-in, private bank accounts.
And now, Canada is making a bail-in
official government policy, too.
"The government proposes to
implement a bail-in regime … designed to ensure that, in the unlikely event
that a systemically important bank depletes its capital, the bank can be
recapitalized and returned to viability," says Finance Minister Jim
Flaherty's March 21 budget, on page 144.
That would be done, the document
says, through the rapid conversion of "certain bank liabilities."
Ottawa's budget document leaves the
definition of "certain liabilities" to the reader's imagination.
Bank
deposits?
There has been very little public
debate about the plan to date, but Finance Department officials and the banks
protest it should never be taken to mean small personal deposits would be
seized.
Depositors wait to enter a branch of
the Laiki Bank in Nicosia on March 28. Cyprus's banks had been closed for
almost two weeks as the country's financial crisis mounted, and were only
opened with tight controls on transactions to prevent a further run. (Bogdan
Cristel / Reuters)
Deposits are insured by the Canadian
Deposit Insurance Corporation, up to $100,000, and the inviolability of that
insurance is key to maintaining the crucial public trust.
"The risk of the Canadian
government not honouring its insurance on deposits is as close to zero as you
can get," says Craig Alexander, chief economist at TD Canada Trust.
Perhaps.
As the Cyprus meltdown proceeded, it
became clear that Europe's finance ministers and central banks, encouraged by
the International Monetary Fund, were not only willing to freeze and seize
uninsured deposits over 100,000 euros, they were also initially willing to
cancel deposit insurance and go after small depositors, too.
In the end, the plan was rewritten,
and insured deposits were protected. But the signal had been sent: The
Europeans and the IMF had been prepared to do the unthinkable.
Holland's finance minister then
declared that bail-ins would be the template for all future bank rescues in
Europe, and that he could not rule out seizure of deposits elsewhere.
"It was a monumentally stupid
thing to do," says TD Canada Trust's Alexander. "I do not believe we
would ever see that in Canada.
"I think the international
community will have learned from their mistake. And it was a huge
mistake."
High-risk
bonds
So what does Canada have in mind
with its proposed bail-in scheme?
The aim is virtuous: Canada wants to
erase the enormous moral hazard created by the concept of "too big to
fail."
Americans still burn with anger at
the decision to reward irresponsible, even fraudulent bankers with trillions in
public bailout money, while the rest of the country sank into recession.
Canadian tax money was also used to prop up banks and the automotive industry.
In ruling out future bailouts, Ottawa's
logic is simple: Make it clear there is no tax-funded safety net, and you
discourage reckless behaviour, protecting taxpayers in the process.
That leaves the question, though, of
how to save a sinking bank, something that would devastate the economy.
(Although one has to assume that by the time a Canadian bank started sinking,
the economy would already be in a nightmare.)
As things currently stand, if a
big-six bank began to fail its shares would tank, and investors would lose
everything. A run would begin, and the bank would flounder, desperate for
capital. Credit markets would also likely freeze.
Without government intervention, the
bank would be placed in receivership, and its bondholders would carve up what
would be left of the bank's assets.
What Ottawa intends to propose — the
concept has been discussed for a few years now in the rarefied circles of
monetary experts — is the creation of a new type of higher-risk bank bond known
as "contingent capital."
The bondholder would enjoy a
higher-than-normal return, maybe even a much higher-than-normal return.
But it would be understood that in
the event of a threatened failure, the bond would be converted to shares,
meaning potentially a total loss for the bondholder, and a source of capital
for the bank.
Think of it as a kind of
pre-approved loan for the bank itself.
Trust
in government
In a speech, Mark Carney, Canada's
departing central banker, has called publicly for just such a system.
At TD Canada Trust, Alexander says
this kind of system would make the banks stronger.
But he also notes that many
Canadians believe, mistakenly, that their RRSPs and other holdings are safe and
insured, too, up to the $100,000 threshold.
They don't often realize that
government bonds as well as stocks and mutual funds are among the investments
that don't qualify for CDIC insurance.
As to whether small, insured
deposits are safe in the event of a failure, that boils down to a question of
trust in government.
Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF,
was prepared to seize a portion of all deposits in Cyprus. So was the European
Central Bank, and so were Europe's finance ministers.
Holland's finance minister, who led
the euro-group effort, later "clarified," his statement about seizing
deposits elsewhere, saying that Cyprus was clearly a "one-off" event.
But then so, supposedly, was the
massive haircut imposed on the unfortunate holders of Greek sovereign bonds
last year.
The fact is, if Ottawa is seriously
contemplating the failure of a Canadian bank, ordinary Canadians might want to
do the same, and govern themselves accordingly.
Neil Macdonald is the senior
Washington correspondent for CBC News, which he joined in 1988 following 12
years in newspapers. Before taking up this post in 2003, Macdonald reported
from the Middle East for five years. He speaks English and French fluently, and
some Arabic.
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