A Greek bank tragedy

Greek Policy Forum — The recent attempt to cover the needs of Greek banks in fresh capital via a mix of a private and public infusion of funds amounts to nothing else than a fire sale.

The recent rights issues of Greek banks were fully covered because Greek bank shares were sold for a few pennies with offer prices ranging from 0.02 to 0.04 cent per share. At the same time, the Greek taxpayers’ stake in Greek banks, held via the so-called financial stability fund, is sharply diluted, e.g. in Alpha Bank the state’s stake is reduced to 11% from 66,4% today, in the Eurobank from 35% to 2,4%, in Piraeus Bank, which sold its new shares for 0.03 cent per share, from 67% today to 22%, although the bank will still receive 2.6bn Euros state aid, 2bn in the form of CoCos purchased exclusively by the Greek state, and 0.6bn in shares. Then, for the greatest Greek bank, the National Bank of Greece that didn’t manage to cover even 1/3 of the total amount sought while its shares were offered at 0.03 pence per share, the reduction of the Greek state’s stake will be 24% to 33% from 57% today. This while the state will still inject 2.75bn Euros in fresh funds, 2.06bn of this in CoCos and the rest in shares. At the same time, the state waives its rights on 1.45bn Euros preference shares, which will now be converted to common shares. In addition, the National Bank will have to sell its most valuable asset, its Turkish subsidiary at 2bn Euros while its acquisition in 2006 cost the Greek bank 5bn EUR.

These are horrendous figures and show both the scale of the fire sale that takes place and that very little is left from the injection of borrowed state money of nearly 45bn in cash in the previous recapitalisation rounds.

Given that this gigantic fire sale is done with the blessings of European creditors, it is very hard to brand it asset looting as would be the case if the exercise had been solely conducted by the Greek vested interests, but still the amount of end loss for the Greek taxpayer stands at dizzying heights.

Some of it is due to SYRIZA’s catastrophic negotiation strategy between January and July and the ensuing flight of deposits, liquidity crunch and imposition of capital controls, and some due to the recessionary dynamic of the Greek economy and the very optimistic provisioning forecasts incorporated in previous recapitalisations that plainly proved inadequate.

At the same time, as Greek banks remain loaded with non-performing loans (NPLs), which by the most conservative estimates exceed 55% of their balance sheet and the 120bn of deposits that fled Greek banks between 2010 and 2015 show no sign of returning, the various guarantees extended by the state to Greek banks, standing at around 130bn, will not be withdrawn, on present evidence, giving the very clear signal that this is not the last time Greek banks are recapitalised.

Clearly the effective solution to the Greek bank drama was to play the patience game and move bad assets to a state backed bad bank as was the case with the Swedish banks in 1992, the US TARP, and what will really happen with the state owned German HSH Nordbank, following an agreement in October 2015 between the German states of Hamburg and Schleswig Holstein that hold the majority equity stakes and the EU Commission. It is very unclear why this has not happened in Greece and one explanation is the rush involved in this round of recapitalisation of Greek banks in order to avoid conducting a bail-in of deposits later or due to the traditional dearth of any kind of negotiating skill and expertise by the SYRIZA government who have proven to be as weak guardians of the public interest as any in the turbulent history of modern Greece.

Emilios Avgouleas, Chair in International Banking Law and Finance, University of Edinburgh Law School