The “Cyprus deal” as it has been widely referred to
in the media may mark the next to last act in the the slow motion collapse of
fractional-reserve banking that began with the implosion of the
savings-and-loan industry in the U.S. in the late 1980s. This trend continued with the currency
crises in Russia, Mexico, East Asia and Argentina in the 1990s in which
fractional-reserve banking played a decisive role. The unraveling of
fractional-reserve banking became visible even to the average depositor during
the financial meltdown of 2008 that ignited bank runs on some of the largest
and most venerable financial institutions in the world. The final collapse was
only averted by the multi-trillion dollar bailout of U.S. and foreign banks by the
Federal Reserve.
Even
more than the unprecedented financial crisis of 2008, however, recent events in
Cyprus may have struck the mortal blow to fractional-reserve banking. For fractional reserve
banking can only exist for as long as the depositors have complete confidence
that regardless of the financial woes that befall the bank entrusted with their
“deposits,” they will always be able to withdraw them on demand at par
in currency, the ultimate cash of any banking system. Ever
since World War Two governmental deposit insurance, backed up by the
money-creating powers of the central bank, was seen as the unshakable guarantee
that warranted such confidence. In effect, fractional-reserve banking was
perceived as 100-percent banking by depositors, who acted as if their money was
always “in the bank” thanks to the ability of central banks to conjure up money
out of thin air (or in cyberspace). Perversely the various crises involving
fractional-reserve banking that struck time and again since the late 1980s only
reinforced this belief among depositors, because troubled banks and thrift
institutions were always bailed out with alacrity–especially the largest and
least stable.
Thus arose the “too-big-to-fail doctrine.” Under this doctrine, uninsured bank
depositors and bondholders were generally made whole when large banks failed,
because it was widely understood that the confidence in the entire banking
system was a frail and evanescent thing that would break and completely
dissipate as a result of the failure of even a single large institution.
Getting
back to the Cyprus deal, admittedly it is hardly ideal from a free-market point
of view. The solution in accord with free markets would not involve restricting
deposit withdrawals, imposing fascistic capital controls on domestic residents
and foreign investors, and dragooning taxpayers in the rest of the Eurozone
into contributing to the bailout to the tune of 10 billion euros.Nonetheless, the deal
does convey a salutary message to bank depositors and creditors the world over. It
does so by forcing previously untouchable senior bondholders and uninsured
depositors in the Cypriot banks to bear part of the cost of the bailout. The
bondholders of the two largest banks will be wiped out and it is reported that large depositors (i.e. those holding
uninsured accounts exceeding 100,000 euros) at the Laiki Bank may also be
completely wiped out, losing up to 4.2 billion euros, while large depositors at
the Bank of Cyprus will lose between 30 and 60 percent of their deposits. Small
depositors in both banks, who hold insured accounts of up to 100,000 euros,
would retain the full value of their deposits.
The happy result will be that depositors, both
insured and uninsured, in Europe and throughout the world will become much more
cautious or even suspicious in dealing with fractional-reserve banks. They will be poised to grab their
money and run at the slightest sign or rumor of instability. This will induce
banks to radically alter the sources of the funds they raise to finance loans
and investments, moving away from deposit and toward equity and bond
financing. As was reported yesterday, this is already expected by many
analysts:
One
potential spillover from yesterday’s agreement is the knock-on effects for bank
funding, analysts said. Banks typically fund themselves with some combination
of deposits, equity, senior and subordinate notes and covered bonds, which are
backed by a pool of high-quality assets that stay on the lender’s balance sheet.
The
consequences of the Cyprus bailout could be that banks will be more likely to
use contingent convertible bonds — known as CoCos — to raise money as their
ability to encumber assets by issuing covered bonds reaches regulatory limits,
said Chris Bowie at Ignis Asset Management Ltd. in London.
“We’d
expect to see some deposit flight and a shift in funding towards a combination
of covered bonds, real equity and quasi-equity,” said Bowie, who is head of
credit portfolio management at Ignis, which oversees about $110 billion.
If this
indeed occurs it will be a significant move toward a free-market financial system in
which the radical mismatching of the maturities of assets and liabilities in
the case of demand deposits is eliminated once and for all. A
few more banking crises in the Eurozone– especially one in which insured
depositors are made to participate in the so-called “bail-in”–will likely cause
the faith in government deposit insurance to completely evaporate and with it
confidence in fractional-reserve banking system.
There
may then naturally arise on the market a system in which equity, bonds, and
genuine time deposits that cannot be redeemed before maturity become the
exclusive sources of finance for bank loans and investments. Demand deposits,
whether checkable or not, would be segregated in actual deposit banks which
maintain 100 percent reserves and provide a range of payments systems from ATMs
to debit cards. While this conjecture may we overly optimistic, we are
certainly a good deal closer to such an outcome today than we were before the
“Cyprus deal” was struck.
Of
course we would be closer still if there were no bailout and the full brunt of the
bank failures were borne solely by the creditors and depositors of the failed
banks rather than partly by taxpayers.The latter solution would have completely and definitively
exposed the true nature of fractional-reserve banking for all to see.
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