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StanChart CEO says AT1 bond wipeout has profound impact

Tan KW
Publish date: Fri, 24 Mar 2023, 02:52 PM
Tan KW
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HONG KONG Standard Chartered chief executive Bill Winters said on Friday (March 24) Credit Suisse AG's US$17 billion Additional Tier 1 bonds wipeout had "profound" implications for global bank regulations.

Winters told a financial forum in Hong Kong the US Federal Reserve move to guarantee non-insured deposits was a "moral hazard".

As part of the deal for UBS Group AG to take over Credit Suisse, the Swiss regulator determined that Credit Suisse's AT1 bonds with a notional value of $17 billion would be wiped out, a decision that stunned global credit markets and angered many holders.

"I think it had very profound implications for the regulation of banks, and for the way that banks manage themselves," Winters said.

Apart from Credit Suisse takeover, two US banks collapsed in the past two weeks and America's biggest lenders agreed to deposit US$30 billion in beleaguered First Republic Bank.

Winters said there appeared to be "non-viable business models remaining, at least in the US", with other banks that had similar deposit concentrations.

The banking chief said the move to guarantee non Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-insured deposits was the "most wonderful example of moral hazard that we've come across in quite a while."

Following the banking crisis, Standard Chartered's liquidity coverage ratio (LCR), a measure of how much cash-like assets the bank has, is much higher now, Winters said.

The bank had 147% LCR before the bank failures and this was "substantially higher now", Winters said, without disclosing the current level.

"The issue isn't do the regulator's have confidence in our solvency. It's does the market have confidence in our liquidity?"

 


  - Reuters

 

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