Spanish
life is not always likeable but it is compellingly loveable.
-
Christopher Howse: A Pilgrim in Spain.
Life
in Spain:-
- It's isn't very surprising that Amnesty International has condemned Spain's infamous 'gagging law', under which you can be hung, drawn and quartered for poking mild fun at a policeperson. Or even for taking a foto of him/her.
- Talking of our right-wing government . . . Just after yet another hike in electricity prices, President Rajoy has promised they'll be brought down before the 12th of never. I didn't realise the government controlled these prices. So, no free market???
- Can it really be true that a vast percentage of Spanish high quality jamón sold abroad is done so fraudulently? See here for details. After our chat this week, my German Airbnb guest is probably more disposed to believe this than he was before I appraised him of Spain's corruption and 'low-ethics' blights.
- If you're following the advice of years and using a lot of olive oil, you might want to read this account of the risks you are (allegedly) running.
- I can't say I'm too worried about the impact of the strike among driving test examiners - see here - as this will surely mean I have far fewer learners to have to try to anticipate several times a day. On roundabouts particularly.
- Which reminds me . . . I recall that a reader expressed scepticism that there had been diagrams in the press giving advice contrary to what's in Spain's version of the Highway Code. Well, deleting fotos on my computer last night, I stumbled on this. Note the confirmation that you can go into the inner lane. Though you mustn't exit directly from it:-
I rest my case . . .
Here's Don Quijones yet again on the European banking system and the inconsistent approaches of the technocrats and the ECB. Well, inconsistent if you ignore the reality that their only strategy is to do whatever is necessary to save the euro, the EU and their jobs/pensions. Actually, I've now put the article at the end of this post as there's too much to quote here. But here's his final comment:- For investors, the message is surprisingly clear: If you hold shares or subordinated bonds in a struggling European bank, there’s absolutely no telling what could happen to them. The value of your holdings depends entirely on the whim of the ECB . . . . . But for now, investors in senior debt of banks can sleep well, knowing that next time, taxpayers will be once again shanghaied into bailing them out. I guess it makes sense to the technocrats and polticos, if not to the latter's taxpayers.
Since the Galician
Xunta made it compulsory in May to register a property you
want to rent out, more than 3,200 licence applications have been
received. Good for bureaucrats and the hoteliers who want to
complicate the process and minimise competition. I wonder if I summer
visitors will be given the same 'protection' as that afforded to
those who pay for a room. Specifically those who pay in kind via a
token of appreciation. If not, why not? Are they second class guests?
Or just not much of a threat to existing commercial interests?
It's claimed that 34%
of Galician secondary students want to work in the public sector
– usually after getting a degree in Law – against 32% who want to
work in a multinational company. These numbers contrast with 31 and
33%, respectively, for Spain as a whole. Many of those Galician young
folk who favour a multinational almost certainly envisage a career
outside Spain. So, it's ironic that Galicia comes 5th last in terms
of speaking English. Ahead of only Valencia, Extremadura, the
Balearic Islands[!] and, finally, Asturias. Madrid, Cataluña and
Cantabria head the list.
I'm an admirer and user
of Spain's chain of excellent Parador hotels and, indeed, I am
a Friend of the Paradors. But I've long wondered about some of
the staff - those who invest themselves with a degree of grandeur
because the hotels have celebrity guests. As well as me. This week
I've twice tried to take a coffee on the terrace of the Parador here
in Pontevedra. Apart from one waitress – not always there – the
staff seem to go out of their way to ignore me. I've thought of
giving the receptionist my Parador card cut in two but this might
well be against my reservation interests. Will check it out.
Finally . . .
The Olive Press no longer seems to subject readers to an
irritating pop-up for a betting company. A coincidence?? Well, no. Because I've just discovered this isn't true today. As you probably already have.
Today's cartoon:
Err . . . I don't have one. Not at home. Laugh at this instead . . . Better than crying.
ARTICLE
Many European Banks
Would Collapse Without Regulators’ Help: Fitch Don Quijones
Only two things keep
these banks alive: “a State willing to support them and a regulator
that does not declare them insolvent.”
Dozens of Greek,
Italian, Spanish and even German lenders have volumes of troubled
assets higher or similar to that of Spain’s fallen lender Banco
Popular. They, too, are at risk of insolvency. This stark
observation came from Bridget Gandy, director of financial
institutions for Fitch Ratings, who spoke at a conference in London
on Thursday.
The troubled banks
include:
- Greece’s HB, Piraeus, NBG, Eurobank and Alpha;
- Italy’s Monte dei Pachi di Siena (which is in the process of being rescued with state funds), Carige (9th largest bank, now under ECB orders to raise capital or else), CreVal, and the two collapsed banks, Veneto and Vicenza (whose senior bondholders were bailed out last weekend);
- Germany’s Bremer Landesbank (which just cancel interest payments on its CoCo bonds) and shipping lender HSH Nordbank.
- Spain’s Liberbank and majority state-owned BMN and Bankia, which are completing a merger after private-sector institutions refused to buy BMN. Now, the problems on BMN’s balance sheet belong to Bankia, which already has its own set of issues, Gandy said.
That many of Europe’s
banks are teetering on the brink of insolvency is not exactly new
news. Most of the problems that caused the financial crisis have not
been resolved. As the financial journalist and former investment
banker Nomi Prins said in a 2015 interview with Dutch media
group VPRO, “in Europe there still exist massive amounts of trades
(on banks’ balance sheets) that are underwater and going wrong
every day.”
According to a chart
presented by Gandy, most of the banks she cited (in particular the
Greek and Italian ones) have total unprovisioned non-performing
assets that clearly exceed their total level of capital. In other
words, if the losses on those assets crystallized, the banks would
run out of funds.
Banks tend to fail when
the Texas ratio, a measure of bad loans as a proportion of capital
reserves, surpasses 100%, meaning that they don’t have enough
capital to cover all the bad stuff on their books. As we reported
a few months ago, 114 out of the approximately 500 banks in Italy
have Texas ratios of over 100%. Of those, 24 have ratios of over
200%. Since then, one of them (Monte dei Pacshi) has been rescued
with public funds while another two (Veneto Banca and Banca Popolare
di Vicenza) have been liquidated, also with public funds. Three down,
111 (or 21) to go.
The remaining banks
remain walking zombies. According to Gandy, there are only two things
keeping banks like them walking: “a State willing to support them
and a regulator that does not declare them insolvent.”
In her talk Gandy
compared the situation of Popular prior to its resolution with that
of Italy’s Monte dei Paschi (MPS), which is still standing thanks
to the explicit support of the Italian government. Both entities had
a similar volume of total assets, she said. In fact, if anything,
Popular had a better problem loan ratio on its balance sheet than
MPS. While the Spanish entity was “resolved” through the
cancellation and redemption of its convertible and subordinated
shares and bonds, MPS was recapitalized with government money.
In the case of Veneto
Banca and Banca Popolare di Vicenza, vast sums of scarce public
funds were mobilized to make senior bondholders whole
though other investors were not so lucky. To make this deal more
palatable to the taxpayer, the Italian government now says that
it could actually recuperate all of the money with which it bailed
out the bondholders once the toxic assets are sold and all the dust
settles, and that in fact, the public coffers could end up
gaining €700 million in the end.
Of course, similar rosy
predictions were made by the Spanish government when it bailed out
Spain’s banking system in 2011-12. Last week Spain’s Bank of
Spain finally admitted that €60 billion of the funds
would never be seen again. Meanwhile, Spain’s bad bank, Sareb,
continues to register losses despite the fact it is able to
readjust the accounting models its uses pretty much at whim.
As for investors, the
message is surprisingly clear in the face of such legal ambiguity: If
you hold shares or subordinated bonds in a struggling European bank,
of which there are plenty to choose from, there’s absolutely no
telling what could happen to them. The value of your holdings depends
entirely on the whim of the ECB’s Single Resolution Board, whose
decision making appears to be heavily influenced by a whole host of
considerations, including potential political ramifications as well
as the fear that making investors take big losses in one insolvent
bank could end up toppling the entire rickety edifice. But for
now, investors in senior debt of banks can sleep well, knowing that
next time, taxpayers will be once again shanghaied into bailing them
out.
No comments:
Post a Comment