Financial Services

How the regulatory wave in banking will hit treasurers

November 22, 2016

Global

November 22, 2016

Global
Tony Glasby

Vice president and group treasurer

Tony Glasby has been vice president and group treasurer at PayPal since July 2016. He had the same role at eBay from 2010 before PayPal and eBay split into two separate companies. He is responsible for capital markets, financial strategy, foreign exchange, investments, cash management, insurance and capital planning. Prior to his role at eBay, he worked at HP Enterprise Services as the head of business operations for the Americas BU and vice president and CFO for Asia Pacific and Japan BU based in Singapore. From 1987 to 2008 Tony held several controller and treasury positions at EDS Corporation both in EMEA and the US. Tony is a fellow of the Association of Corporate Treasurers and is a Chartered Management Accountant. Tony earned a BA Hons in Business from University of Westminster, London.

Bank regulation has come a long way. The perceived lesson of the financial crisis, namely that banks’ insufficient capital buffers were one catalyst, has spawned a wave of rules, ratcheting up the amount of equity banks must hold against their loans. While these new rules have undoubtedly shored up global financial stability, recent developments have also demonstrated that they raise a host of challenges for corporate treasurers.

Banks become more selective

For one, the increased cost of capital brought about by higher equity ratios is likely to make banks more selective. There are clear signs that they are beginning to take a close look at who their customers are and where they operate. Smaller firms and challenging geographies are particularly likely to feel the impact.

Our banking partners are also having more discussions with us about the products we use since the new regulatory requirements shape how banks have to account for them on their balance sheets. A simple example is what balances are deemed operating cash and what is wholesale funding because the latter carries extra capital weight. This may incentivise banks to promote products that are best for their capital structures rather than the ones that are best for ours.

Low interest-rate environment causes strains

Subdued economic growth in many parts of the world and low bank profitability, partly brought on by extremely low and sometimes even negative central bank interest rates, compound the conundrum faced by banks. There is no doubt that the global banking system, already weakened by years of deleveraging, will continue to adapt as a result.

Even though global financial markets are flush with liquidity thanks to ultra-loose monetary policies around the world, which is creating benign funding conditions for corporate treasurers, the downsides seem to outweigh the benefits.

Growing regulatory burden

We as corporate treasurers must stay alert to these developments. The regulatory wave in the wake of the financial crisis has led to higher compliance burdens for treasurers already as new rules ranging from derivatives reporting to Know Your Customer (KYC) requirements have been added. But growing bank regulation may have an even bigger effect on us in the long term, forcing us to stay abreast of them as well. This has turned monitoring regulatory developments almost into a full-time treasury job.

The regulatory wave also reinforces some of the risks corporate treasurers need to monitor constantly. Given the implications for banks, interest-rate risk is certainly a development to keep an eye on, especially since there is a distinct possibility of increasing monetary-policy divergence through more rate hikes in the US compared with no change or even further rates cuts in the euro zone.

In addition, the challenges posed by regulation to banks potentially heighten counterparty and funding risks for treasurers. Banks that decide to withdraw can leave holes that some corporate treasures may struggle to plug. Seen this way, it is almost moot to ask if the regulatory wave has run its course. Whether or not there is more to come, it has decidedly changed the environment through which corporate treasurers must navigate their businesses.

 


This blog is part of , a new research programme by The Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Deutsche Bank. A  and an , based on a survey of 150 corporate treasurers and 150 CFOs, were launched at the EuroFinance conference on  in Vienna, Austria, and on EIU Perspectives on October 12th 2016. The programme also includes a .

 

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.

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