September 06, 2018

Three reasons to break the bank-sovereign doom loop: Safety, market signals and fighting crony statism

Sir, Thomas F Huertas, when commenting on Isabel Schnabel’s “How to break the bank-sovereign doom loop” of August 29 presents good reasons for why impose some capital requirements on banks when holding sovereign debt, in order to make the bank system safer. “Bank holdings of sovereign debt need scrutiny” September 6.

But making the bank system safer is not the only reason for why that should happen. 

The fact that banks need to hold less capital against sovereign debt translates into a subsidy that: a. impedes the market to send the right interest rate signals on these debts and b. favors the sovereign’s access to bank credit over that of the citizens… something that could only be of interest to redistribution profiteers or those wishing to engage in crony statism.

The horrible problem regulators now have is, after painting themselves into a corner with the 0% risk weight how do you get out without detonating that sovereign debt bomb?

PS. In November 2004, in a letter published by FT I asked: “how many Basel propositions it will take before they start realizing the damage they are doing by favoring so much bank lending to the public sector?” August 29,  I sent FT the following letter commenting on Isabel Schnabel’s article. As I am considered obsessed with the issue, it was of no interest to the editor.

@PerKurowski