ECB Gets Serious About Non-performing Loans

 | Oct 05, 2017 01:18AM ET

US businesses traditional relied on bond and equity markets to raise capital. When the crisis struck, the US acted early and quickly to re-open market functions before the banks were prepared to expand their lending.

The European and Japanese models of capital distribution are less market-oriented than the US and traditionally rely more on bank loans. A bank's decision is binary. One gets the loan or not. The markets have capital for anyone, even enterprises that are well below investment grade. The markets dicker about the price of the capital not usually the availability.

As is well appreciated, the bank-centric distribution of capital lends itself to the souring of loans. A bond of a company whose fortunes has deteriorated will see the bond price fal,l and the credit quality will become more suspect. Loans are stickier. And therein lies the problem. European countries had different definitions of non-performing loans and different rules to address it. Part of the effort in Europe toward a banking union has seen significant strides toward harmonization.

The ECB announced earlier today that as of the start of the New Year, EMU banks would have two years to cover 100% of the newly classified non-performing unsecured debt. Bank will have seven years to cover all their secured non-performing debt. Also, by the end of Q1 18, the ECB's Banking Supervision will offer additional measures to address the existing stock of NPLs, including transitional arrangements.

Non-performing loans in Europe are estimated to be near one trillion euros. Of course, there is great variance within Europe. A study by Italian academics drawing on World Bank data produced the following chart that shows the non-performing loans as a percentage of all loans.