The Economist - USA (2020-08-08)

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The EconomistAugust 8th 2020 Finance & economics 57

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tition, not stifled it. As recently as a decade
ago banking in China was a tortuous busi-
ness, requiring heaps of paperwork and
long queues. The digital duo dragged banks
into the online era. They also offered users
easy access to money-market products that
allowed them to get better returns than
available from banks.
More narrowly, they have improved the
landscape for payments. Their underlying
technology is simple, requiring just a
smartphone. Even the humblest of fruit
vendors can now accept non-cash pay-
ments. They have also lowered costs. They
charge merchants fees of about 0.6% on
transactions, down from the previous
norm of roughly 1% on debit-card swipes.
Regulators have already put roadblocks
in front of Alipay and Tenpay. The central
bank limited the size of payments they can
handle. It required that they hold customer
funds in a zero-interest reserve account,
denting their profitability. And it created a
centralised clearing platform, NetsUnion,
which Alipay and Tenpay must use, depriv-
ing them of exclusive transaction data.
Some in the payments industry see an-
other possible explanation for an antitrust
investigation. UnionPay, a state-owned
firm, used to be the only show in town for
handling card payments in China. As the
market has evolved it has struggled to keep
up with Alipay and Tenpay, and remains a
bit player in mobile. Many in UnionPay’s
upper ranks, including its departing chief
executive, are former central-bank offi-
cials. This raises questions about the cen-
tral bank’s impartiality when regulating
UnionPay’s competitors.
The timing of the mooted investigation
is also curious. The report came less than
two weeks after Ant Group, which controls
Alipay, announced plans for a long-await-
ed initial public offering, which could raise
as much as $30bn, making it the world’s
biggest-ever share sale. Perhaps someone
wanted to spoil the party. If nothing else, a
probe would serve as a reminder that Chi-
na’s government keeps its tech champions
on a short leash. 7

Power couple
China, non-cash retail payments, yuan trn

Sources:Analysys;People’sBankofChina;TheEconomist

350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
1918171615142013

Debitcard

Credit card

Other
mobile

Tenpay

Alipay

Mobile

A


nalysts had expected a blistering
earnings season for European banks,
which reported their second-quarter re-
sults in late July and early August. And
painfully hot it was, with profits melting
away as lenders made provisions for future
loan losses. On August 3rd hsbc, Europe’s
largest bank by assets, said that its post-tax
profits had fallen by 88% on the year, to
$617m. Loss-making lenders included
Deutsche Bank in Germany, Santander in
Spain and Société Générale in France.
Much like Wall Street titans, albeit on a
smaller scale, European lenders with in-
vestment-banking arms saw losses tem-
pered by a boost in trading revenue. As the
coronavirus spread and markets turned vo-
latile, investors rushed to reposition their
portfolios. Many governments and compa-
nies took advantage of central-bank sup-
port and ultra-low interest rates to issue
debt, allowing banks to pocket fat fees. bnp
Paribas, France’s largest bank, saw trading
revenue jump by 154%.
Such frenetic activity seems unsustain-
able. Indeed, says Stuart Graham of Auton-
omous, a research firm, debt issuance ap-
pears to have slowed in July. So the fate of
banks will primarily be decided by the ex-
tent to which they are prepared for loan
losses. Lenders on either side of the Atlan-
tic have taken different approaches to the
matter, with European banks booking
smaller provisions, as a share of total
loans. American banks have generally been
more cautious in the past, only for Euro-
pean rivals to play catch-up (see chart). So
who is right this time?
There is reason to think America’s
banks may suffer more. Unemployment

there has surged; Coface, a credit insurer,
expects bankruptcies over the next year or
so to rise by more than in Europe. A larger
portion of American bank lending, includ-
ing consumer and high-yield credit, is risk-
ier and unsecured. European banks prefer
to lend against collateral, for example
through mortgages. That implies fewer and
slower defaults, as well as higher recovery
rates, when the cycle turns.
But the economic outlook is not the full
explanation. America’s accounting rules
require its lenders to make provisions
against losses they expect on all loans over
their lifetime. European rivals are required
to account for lifetime losses only on loans
that are closest to default (for performing
assets they need to care only about the next
12 months). That makes them mechanical-
ly more myopic. In March the European
Central Bank (ecb) encouraged more opti-
mism by telling them to “avoid excessively
pro-cyclical assumptions” when making
provisions—in other words, to ensure that
lending does not seize up in bad times.
Cultural differences compound pru-
dential ones. American businesses, fans of
transparency, tend to shoulder more pain
upfront. European ones prefer to wait and
see. Disclosure is not helped by the fact that
fewer banks are listed. Only half of the 84
euro-zone lenders deemed “significant” by
the ecbare publicly traded, says Nicolas
Véron of Bruegel, a think-tank. By contrast,
all America’s big banks are listed.
European banks’ smaller provisions
could also be an admission of weakness.
Most entered the crisis with a pre-existing
condition: low profitability. Patrick Hunt
of Oliver Wyman, a consultancy, says their

European banks expect fewer bad loans than American peers. Who is right?

Banks’ earnings

Dud light


Riseandfall

Sources: Datastream from Refinitiv; Autonomous Research *Forecast

FTSE 350

STOXXEurope 600

S&P 500

100-10-20-30-40-50

Aggregate Banks

Stockmarket index, % change Jan 1st-Aug 3rd 2020
4

3

2

1

0
20*1510052000951990

Provisions for losses, % of loans

European banks

US banks
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