Italian banks face 2019 funding crunch without ECB help

Reuters  |  MILAN 

By and Giulio Piovaccari

Even after removing the threat of major collapses by bailing out some of its lenders, Italy's financial system is ill-equipped to support an at risk of slipping back into recession.

Italy's banks are still dealing with the bad debt left by the last downturn and another would risk new loans turning sour.

Political uncertainty has meant a spike in borrowing costs for Italian banks since an anti-austerity government took power last year, with only heavyweights and able to raise unsecured debt.

Bailed-out Monte dei Paschi said last week the ECB had warned it about the challenge of raising money this year, highlighting a pinch that was evident in the third quarter of 2018 when the of said 200 million euros more in senior debt expired than was issued.

"Net issuance levels are truly worrying," Banor Capital's of Fixed Income said.

Italian banks rely on some 240 billion euros of ultra-cheap, longer-term funds borrowed from the ECB in 2016 and 2017, but that source of funding is now shut and without replacing so-called funds Italian banks will see a drop in their (NSFR), a long-term liquidity measure monitored by regulators.

ECB policymakers have said they are considering a new type of multi-year loans to avoid a potential liquidity shock.

"We think there will be something akin to a new offer that could help mitigate the increase in banks' cost of funding," Luca Manzoni, of corporate at Banco BPM, Italy's third-largest bank, told a recent event.

A at another Italian said 2019 looked difficult and he too expects the ECB to step in.

The ECB declined to comment on whether it would offer new long-term financing for Italian banks, whose shares plunged on Tuesday after a source said it would make them tackle their existing problem loans in full by a set date.

MARKET WINDOWS

From June 2019 Italian banks will be forced to gradually exclude from NSFR calculations some 140 billion euros in funds which are due to be repaid in June 2020.

The of funding at a large Italian bank highlighted the NSFR as one of the big hurdles of 2019, along with requirements to issue debt that can be wiped out to cover future losses.

He expects more Italian banks to follow and UBI, the only two lenders to have issued so-called 'senior non preferred' (SNP) bonds, riskier, more costly paper which can be used to meet loss-absorbing debt targets.

"We're working with several Italian banks which have already amended or are in the process of amending the terms of their debt programmes to be able to ... sell bonds," Partner said.

UniCredit, which is subject to tighter rules due to its size, last week paid 360 basis points over the swap rate to place a three-year bond in the U.S.

Although less than the 420 basis point premium it paid in December on a similar five-year bond, it is a far cry from the 70 bps paid a year ago on its first bond and bankers say the market respite is temporary.

"We're advising our clients to be ready to seize any potential market window to issue because it's not going to be smooth sailing," Marco Spano, Mediobanca's for financial institutions, said.

($1 = 0.8750 euros)

(Reporting by Valentina Za; Editing by Alexander Smith)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, January 15 2019. 23:14 IST