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The definition of default under banking rules

Defaulting on your obligations is a clear event. You did not pay when you should, you did not show up when you promised you would, you did not deliver the assets for which you were paid. In financial contracts the list of clear-cut defaults is often expanded by contractually defined additional ‘events of default’. Such events of default could include many things that normal people would not call a default, such as reorganizing the group of which the obligor is part, or if the obligor suffers a credit rating decrease. Normally, these ‘events’ serve to enable the creditor to have a say in restructurings and such. This allows them to avoid their rights being eviscerated by e.g. removing cash out of the legal entity they have a future claim on.

Default reinvented

Banking legislators have also engaged in such reinvention of the term default as applicable to any credit obligation. The starting position is that there are consequences for the amount of financial buffers that a bank needs to hold for each claim on the obligor after it has not been paid for a certain number of days after they became due. Like the drafters of contractual ‘events of default’, legislators have tried to make the calculation of the required amount of financial buffers more forward looking, and include events when there are ‘just’ signs of possible future non-payment. For IRB banks this already happened in the old CRD after the introduction of the Basel II version of the capital accord. Under the new CRR, the forward-looking element also applies to banks that use the standardised models to calculate credit risk capital requirements.

The CRR requires supervisors and banks to treat obligors credit as ‘defaulted’ when there are early warning signs that indicate that the obligor is unlikely to pay in full. If such default as defined in the CRR and its predecessors happens, banks on the standardised approach need to hold more capital against some or even all the claims they have on the obligor (risk weighting them at a headline rate of 150% instead of at the risk weights that would apply on non-defaulted claims of e.g. 0% for sovereign bonds, 20% for unrated banks short term debt, 20% for highly rated banks long term debt, or 100% on unrated corporates; and equivalent changes in the calculation of the probability to default – PD – factor in IRB calculations). Such a default – as in a failure to pay a due claim by an obligor – does not yet trigger obligatory losses. Once losses are certain, they would have to be written down from the bank’s capital. Instead, a default only means that more capital needs to be held against the claim to buffer against unexpected losses. Only if events subsequently or simultaneously progress negatively and losses are relatively certain, such ‘expected loss’ needs to be fully deducted from the CRR-financial buffers. As can be expected, writing down losses is unpopular, but even having to increase financial buffers for a loan after a loan has already been granted can be costly, and thus unpopular with the banks. If the bank is important and thinly capitalised, it may even be unpopular with supervisors.

CRR examples

Luckily for less diligent banks, most of the situations that the CRR subsequently references as examples of ‘unlikeliness’ to pay in full are drafted to be dependent on their own action. If they for example act in a way that acknowledges that the debtor is in problems (for instance by applying for the bankruptcy of the obligor), they also need to increase their financial buffers. As long as the bank itself does not actually take action or draw conclusions, they can avoid triggering the obligation to acknowledge CRR-default until well after an actual default has occurred, namely until 90 days after the obligor has actually failed to pay. For IRB banks it can even be postponed until 180 days have passed without payment after a claim for interest or principal became due in the few member states that use a supervisory discretion to deal with apparently slow payment systems or for instance badly behaved debtors in the public sector. This national discretion expired for the smaller banks that use the standardised approach already in 2011, but the large IRB banks in countries with apparently slow payment traditions such as France and Great Britain can continue to treat slow payers – e.g. municipalities – as if they are solid obligors. Even if the stricter 90 days is applied, this still means that less diligent banks can escape increasing their financial buffers for at least 3 months after a claim became due. This is not very forward looking, unless the bank is proactive in managing its risky exposures and wants to pay attention – as is the CRR obligation – to indications of non-payment.

The indicators for unlikeliness to pay – as copied unchanged from the old IRB provisions in the CRD – include that the bank recognises a significant perceived decline in credit quality, sells (part of) the exposure at a relevant loss, agrees to a distressed restructuring with negative financial adjustments, asks for the bankruptcy (!) of the client, or if the client actually is bankrupt. This fine example of legislative prose means that according to legislators even a court proclaiming the bankruptcy of the debtor is only an indicator of unlikeliness to pay, and still only means that the exposure to the bankrupt client needs to be weighed at 150%, unless the bank itself determines that loss is certain and the exposure written down accordingly (after which they can risk weight the reduced value of the exposure at a lower risk weight again).

No consistency in application

Remarkably, as part of their monitoring EBA and the SSM supervisors have found that not all banks apply the rules in the same manner, and that the national interpretations (and application of the 180 days of non-payment of past due payments before being forced to acknowledge that the debtor may be troubled) lead to different capital levels for debt portfolios with the same risk profile. Some banks delay finding an event of default, and thus delay applying a higher risk weight or PD to the calculation for the minimum amount of capital they need to hold. Some government bodies are allowed some extra time by the local supervisors to pay their debts, even though the risk is the same or higher than in a similar debt just across the border in another member state. Some less principled banks could even opt to sell almost due bonds owed by a troubled debtor at (fire sale) market prices without formally acknowledging this as an indicator of default, to avoid having to consider whether the rest of the debt of that obligor in default when the debtor fails to fork over the repayment of the short dated bonds. CRR legislators were aware of the issue, but failed to reach a compromise on a solution. Instead, they have added to the existing definition an order to EBA the order to monitor the application of this definition, to come up by 2017 with a report on the 90 or 180 days past due issue, and (without a deadline) to provide non-binding guidelines on how default should be understood and applied by banks in the EU. The SSM has identified the 90/180 days issue as a major impediment to its working practices, and is aiming to pre-empt the 2017 EBA review for the Eurozone member states (of the couple of member state competent authorities that apply this leniency, only the UK supervisors would be able to continue to apply the supervisory discretion, as they will not be bound by the ECB choice on behalf of the Eurozone competent authorities).

As acknowledging the potential for default is core to preparing for recessions and asset based crisis at banks, it is good that EBA has already spent some of its scarce resources to find indicators on how a well set up bank that diligently monitors the credit quality of its debtors should be able to avoid its own future default by taking timely action should do this. Their consultation paper is not a perfect paper yet, but nonetheless it raises the standard for less diligent banks. It for instance implies more clearly that banks cannot limit themselves to the CRR examples of indicators, but actually should look for indicators that the obligor may perhaps not pay to determine whether it is unlikely to pay. Self evident as that sounds, it may be good to reinforce the main rule of heightening financial buffers when it becomes more likely that those are needed, not looking only at the badly written subsequent examples in the CRR provisions, that might lead to fatal delays to shore up buffers when e.g. your sovereign is failing, or when one of the major banks of your country is failing.

(Un)intended consequences?

The consultation paper also raises question, however. Was the spirit of these rules – to prepare for future write-downs by all types of obligors – applied in full in this manner by banks (and their supervisors) when the possibility of default was high in the last few years? For instance when the US government shut down, or when several Eurozone countries were (not yet sure that they would be) bailed out? It is unlikely that this was the case. A part explanation may be that for member states it may have been equally welcome to have optimistic banks that do not apply the indicators of unlikeliness to pay too diligently, and preferably not at all to the government itself, to large banks and to protected sectors. The consultation paper appears to ignore that the same rules should also be applied to these more sensitive types of obligors. The indicators mentioned appear most relevant if thinking of debt of households and loans to smaller companies. They lack clearly defined indicators derived from financial markets that would be much more relevant to larger obligors. The current references to market movements are vague, and thus fail to achieve harmonisation. It would be helpful to e.g. define a certain percentage of losses in share value over a relatively short period of time as a good indicator of potential default (which according to the draft guidelines now need only be considered when fair value in the profit or loss account needs to be reassessed under accounting rules). Rising CDS values would be another good and clear indicator, or high implicit interest rates of bonds traded in the secondary markets, as seen for instance when Fortis or RBS or AIG or Lehman failed, or when Greece defaulted on its original bonds by restructuring those bonds held by private sector banks, insurers, pension funds and consumers.

The macroprudential repercussions of banks being forced to start increase their financial buffers for larger numbers of small obligors or for the potential default of one or more systemically relevant obligors also do not appear to have been considered. Even though the lack of macroprudential awareness is a design flaw of the CRR-article, the guidelines could have helpfully added text on what to do when a systemically important private or public sector entity shows such signs, or if a specific industrial sector or the whole of the private sector in a member state starts to show signs of stress. In that case supervisors and central banks need to be informed of such signals, and in turn should be able to instruct banks to act both in line with their legal obligations to assess indicators of non-payment, but without doing systemic damage. For instance by orchestrating a joint response so that all banks prepare in the same manner (by acknowledging the potential for default of e.g. the USA under a political shutdown, Greece when the first bail-out appeared to be too optimistically structured, or any troubled bank about which rumours swirl in the financial markets). This same point applies to the proposed rules for keeping an obligor nominally in default – even it has started to pay again – to check that the default indicators have indeed permanently receded before allowing the bank to bring down the required level of capital again. As currently formulated, for instance the fact that the ECB accepts unsecured sovereign bonds of Greece again as collateral, or that a conditional new bail-out programme was politically agreed, would not have meant that the commercial banks of Greece could have brought down their increased capital levels for Greek sovereign debts. Such ECB actions are not mentioned as an indicator that all troubles are permanently over. That also applies to the question whether the USA can return to non-defaulted status quickly when a last minute deal on a budget or higher debt ceiling is agreed.

Perhaps a strict application of the law on systemically important obligors is not the intention of supervisors, and may not have been the intention of some members of the Council of the EU as co-legislator. The CRR definition of default nonetheless applies to all sorts of obligors, not only to those that are relatively irrelevant. A bank or supervisor that blatantly ignores indictors of default, and fails to increase the CRR-mandated minimum of capital in a timely manner sets itself up for liability. It thus may be good to give more clarity on the content of the legal obligation of banks and supervisors, instead of relying of regulatory forbearance and/or politically sensitive application of the CRR rules to avoid amongst others macroprudential consequences of a too strict or too late application of the definition of default.

 

Also see:

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Lessons from Volkswagen testing software for IRB banks

The VW manipulation of its emissions testing results provides lessons for banks, insurers and their supervisors. Testlab results bear no similarity to real life survival or failure is a simple one. Bad governance structures can lead to bad decisions (as highlighted by John Plender in the FT and supported by a wide range of examples such as the DSB Bank failure in the Netherlands). Another lesson is that the testlab/models that are the basis for calculating capital requirements are prone to pressure and manipulation.

There appear to have been two stages that shifted the results in response to high-level orders to pass environmental tests and improve sales. The first is the – as I understand – industry standard in the EU that emissions are only tested in laboratory conditions on vehicles that are specially selected and prepared for this testing by stripping off all inconvenient aspects (rear view mirrors, wipers, and anything that weighs anything in the car that is not needed to make it run, such as the standard airconditioning or audio equipment). For some this is the minor league of evasion or fraud as it ‘only’ changes the hardware, and anyone actually looking would notice. Even for this type of lab-adaptation there is little relation between the car in the lab and on the road, but some people would say it remains in the nudge and wink category of how smart it is to evade the vague requirements and the light touch oversight, and the general contours of the car tested remain the same. The second stage is now provoking more outrage, as the manipulation is not in the visible hardware, but in lines of code in the software. Any instrument that supposedly cleans up the emissions but was a drag on ease of handling on the road was automatically switched off by the design of the software, except when the exact conditions of the laboratory test were found.

Though it is unlikely that executives removed the hardware from the testlab-models or wrote the software that changed the car from fake circumstances to real life riding and back, it is likely that they created the incentives to do so by demanding relative growth as compared to competitors, in the cars case by simultaneously demanding low emissions during tests so that the cars could legally be sold, and high performance so that customers would actually want to buy them, and did not bother to sufficiently check whether the product sold fit the description on issues that customers did not bother to verify or sue on, and regulators did not bother to/were not able to check.

The calculation of capital requirements is open to similar pressures. It is abstract, only important if thousands of products fail to perform at the same time, only important in the long term, and customers do not like it while the bank or insurer is alive because it heightens their costs if the bank or insurer would take it seriously. The old standardised approach for capital requirements calculation was abandoned for complex institutions because the choices made in investments were optimized by these institutions to take the highest risk/reward road within each wide basket of types of assets, such as corporate bonds. This maximized returns while minimizing costly capital requirements. The newly invented ‘internal’ models that have been introduced for banks in the 2004 Basel II accord (in the EU implemented via the 2006 version of the CRD) and will be introduced for insurers in 2016 under Solvency II allow more leeway to reward the bank or insurer if they choose a less risky product to invest in, but does expect them to take better regard of the more risky products too. Some banks are indeed relatively conservative or are being forced to be relative conservative by their supervisors, and estimate the riskiness of the assets they hold higher than the models used by their competitors estimate the same or the same type of assets. Some banks, however, are removing the airconditioning and audio systems by abandoning newly capital-costly areas such as trade finance or investment banking, while plunging collectively into low capital-costly areas, or professing high confidence in their clients or risk management systems. The result is that banks’ internal models show wildly different results, which is an indicator that some may be too lightly capitalised for the risks they run in their entire business. An additional result is that worthy areas of services are no longer provided by banks, but are either not provided, or are now provided by less regulated service providers. It is likely that more conservatively calculating banks are under pressure to become more ‘capital efficient’ in order to retain profitability and competitiveness.

The temptation to adapt the outcomes of test-results is easy to understand. Lower capital requirements (emissions) lead to the potential for acquiring more assets (making more sales) that generate higher profits and higher status for the CEO. And a slight tweak in one area that makes the boss happy does not really impact a lot on the overall capital; except of course if this happens in all areas the bank or insurer is active in. These tweaks stimulate the financial company, their shareholders and the economy as long as the bank or insurer makes no losses yet. And the internal models used by complex banks do not show with a big blinking warning whether there is internal pressure to always lean in the same direction. Fundamental attitudes towards the need for buffers or the need for speed and profits are neither measured nor checked easily, especially if the number of experts is vastly larger on the bank’s side than on the supervisors’ side. But if the general attitude at a financial company is that it is acceptable to have slight manipulations, or just slightly reducing the riskiness of the asset just by removing the dragging mirrors from the test-lab model, this risks the continued survival of the firm once it comes out. Removing trade finance already does not make the bank safer. It just makes it less well capitalised, and diminishes the value of the bank to society similar to cars with high Nox emissions in real life. Especially harmful would be if it turns out that the models used by banks are deliberately built to optimise testlab results that bear no relation to known market and firm behaviour when risks materialise. Bankers/Insurers would, however, not be unique in such manipulation. The regulated bits of internal models and the standardised models are riddled with such deliberate misdesign by lawmakers, e.g. to underestimate the riskiness of SME-loans, or to hugely underestimate the riskiness of sovereign bonds. In the end, if banks add to this, and do not compensate for design-faults in the laws that rule the design of models to calculate capital by adding voluntary layers of safety themselves, it remains deceit towards clients, investors, and society as a whole.

Though supervisors are aware of the discrepancies, they have been kicking the can down the road for a while, and there are no signs yet of an official line. The amount of capital needed for the most derelict banks – and the financial stability consequences of exposing them – may pressure them into regulatory forbearance. Though this is both understandable and damnable at the same time, such regulatory forbearance does not impact on the own responsibility of bank and insurance boards on whose watch such collective leaning or manipulation takes place by underlings who aim to please their bosses by improved headline numbers.

Safety should not be tampered with, and will not be tampered with in the long run, as the sheltered executives of VW already found out.

 

Also see:

  • Plender, John, Poor governance at VW should have been a warning to investors, FT 30 September 2015
  • Noonan, Laura, ECB doubles the time needed to review banks’ risk models, FT 16 August 2015
  • EBA reports of 22 July 2015 on eba.europa.eu
  • BCBS, Regulatory Consistency Assessment Programme (RCAP) Analysis of Risk-Weighted Assets for Market Risk, January 2013 (rev February 2013)
  • BCBS, Regulatory Consistency Assessment Programme (RCAP) Analysis of Risk-Weighted Assets for Credit Risk in the Banking Book, July 2013
  • UK FSA, A Regulatory Response to the Global Banking Crisis; Discussion Paper 09/2, March 2009, page 71-73

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  • EU Banking Supervision, chapter 6.3
  • Are EU Banks Safe?, chapter 4.5