Eurozone Banking In The Spotlight

 | Jul 11, 2014 06:12AM ET

Eurozone banking system in the spotlight again Once again, the health of the European banking system is in the spotlight, and what it reveals isn’t very pretty. Shares in Portugal’s second-largest bank, Banco Espirito Santo (LISBON:BES) SA, were suspended in trading Thursday on concern about its financial health after one of its parent companies, Espirito Santo International (ESI), missed some payments on its commercial paper. ESI owns 49% of Espirito Santo Financial Group (ESFG), which in turn owns 25% of the bank. The Portuguese central bank says that Banco Espirito has been “adequately isolated” from the parent company’s problems, but the market clearly does not believe this. There are apparently concerns that some holders of the ESI commercial paper may try to make a claim against the bank.

The news has brought to the fore again the problems facing European banks, particularly those of the European periphery (Ireland, Portugal, Spain, Italy and Greece), which have not yet fully recovered from the financial crisis. Moreover, the EU has not yet finalized its rules for how to deal with struggling banks. Ultimately, the market may be expressing its doubts about whether the ECB’s planned targeted long-term refinancing operation (TLTRO) will be able to get European banks lending again and revive the flagging Eurozone economy. Thursday’s news also showed sharp falls in industrial production in France and Italy in May, in line with earlier reports of declines in output in Germany and Spain during the month. As a result of these questions, a Spanish bank had to abort a bond sale and trading was halted in several Italian banks.

The renewed risk in the European banking sector is negative for the euro and positive for the dollar, yen and gold.

The graphs below show the close correlation between the relative performance of European and US stocks and EUR/USD. The graph on the left suggests that the correlation broke down from 2013, but the graph on the right shows that this is largely a matter of scale – in fact the correlation remained fairly close until this year. Generally when European bank stocks (MSCI European Banks index) outperform US bank stocks (MSCI US Banks index), EUR/USD tends to move up, and visa-versa. With the health of the European banking industry now coming into focus again, this could push EUR/USD down further.