Back   OpEd News
Font
PageWidth
Original Content at
https://www.opednews.com/articles/Are-Banks-Too-Big-Don-t-C-by-David-Fiderer-090831-924.html
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).

August 31, 2009

Are Banks Too Big? Don't Count on Downsizing Anytime Soon

By David Fiderer

Are banks too big to fail? There are over 20 trillion-dollar banks around, and governments are disinclined to downsize them.

::::::::

A trillion dollars is not what it used to be, which is why any regulator concerned about moral hazard has his work cut out for him.

Twenty-one banks have trillion-plus balance sheets, according toBankersalmanac.com. Of those, only three are based in the U.S.* Forty banks hold assets in excess of $600 billion, the size of Lehman Brothers' balance sheet at the point when its Chapter 11 filing set off a globalfinancial panic. In other words, there are an awful lot of financial institutions that are that are too big to fail.

If a bank is too big to fail, is it too big?The Washington Postposed that question recently. If the answer is yes, then the solution is international.

Taking note of something was obvious a year ago, when the shot gun bank mergers were announced, thePostreported that JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, and Well Fargo have increased their market shares after acquiring Washington Mutual, Merrill Lynch, and Wachovia respectively.

Yes, these U.S. banks are huge. But thePost'sanalysis was somewhat provincial. A single bank in Edinburgh, Royal Bank of Scotland, is larger than JPMorgan and BofA combined, according to Bankersalmanac.


Copyrighted Image? DMCA

Foreign banks are not only big, they have much more of an international presence. Foreign banks control over 30% of the $15 trillion of the financial assets held by banks in the U.S., according to theIMF.European and U.K. bankshold about a third of their assets outside of their home country; for American banks, its only 13 percent. European banks have a much bigger presence in emerging markets.

What are the chances that Timothy Geithner, if he were so inclined, would get a favorable response if he approached his counterpart in France and asked, â??I'll break up Chase and BofA, into a bunch of $500 billion banks, if you'll do the same with BNP, Agricole and Societe Generale,â?? My hunch is that the French, or any other member of the G8, would preface their, â??No thank-you,â? with an icy stare.

In a certain respect, a bank's international presence reflects its host country's international influence. Financial ministers are very conscious of prestige. Despite all the handwringing about systemic risk from overly large and interrelated financial institutions, governments don't seem to be dissuaded from the longstanding notion that, for banks, bigger is better.

Of course, the U.S. government can act unilaterally if it wants to address the moral hazard issue by reducing the concentration of power among the largest U.S. financial institutions. But I wouldn't count on it.

________________

*The Bankersalmanac.com listing above is skewed in several respects. First, it did not combine Wells Fargo and Wachovia as a single bank, which would have put four U.S. banks in the trillion-plus category. The Federal Reserve, which ranks bank holding companies (as opposed to banks) according to their asset size, shows that the U.S. institutions are appreciably larger. However the larger point, that most of huge financial institutions are based outside the U.S., still holds.




Authors Bio:
For over 20 years, David has been a banker covering the energy industry for several global banks in New York. Currently, he is working on several journalism projects dealing with corporate and political corruption that, so far, have escaped serious scrutiny by mainstream media. He is trained as a lawyer.

Back