More Eurodollar Anecdotes On Shriveling

 | Mar 02, 2016 03:22AM ET

Barclays (LON:BARC) has received all the media attention in the past few days after announcing its exit from Africa. Specifically, the bank intends to divest enough of its 62% stake in the Africa unit so as to skirt tougher UK regulations intended to “ringfence” domestic operations; to keep the global bank from potential global financial horrors recurring and devastating once more the British end. It was that eurodollar activity that put the bank into nationalization from which it has not yet, seven years on, escaped. In this one, specific instance, regulations are playing a large role (requiring all of Barclays Africa (OTC:AGRPY) liabilities to be placed in ratio calculations with only the pro forma part of the assets) in the bank’s shrinking, but elsewhere we see the same contraction tendencies.

Back in January, Barclays announced it was getting out of Asia, too, selling its wealth management business while cutting 1,200 employees (and as-yet unknown resources) in the investment bank .

Barclays’ retreat from Asia is set to gather pace after it hired Lazard to advise on the planned sale of its wealth management operation in the region that is likely to be valued at more than $500m, according to people familiar with the matter.

The move comes only days after Barclays told staff that it plans to cut up to 1,200 jobs in its investment bank, many of them in Asia, and to close seven offices in the Asia-Pacific region, including in South Korea, Taiwan and Australia.

While that is significant, selling what is still viable, it is more and more common that the “investment bank” is not; those operations apparently hold no value anyone else would want to purchase (or that there isn’t anyone else available to make the purchase of FICC capacity and risk). Other banks are taking the same process with varying degrees of urgency. RBS (LON:RBS) is one such peer, more aggressively shrinking with less to do with Basel III and UK regulations as the lack of revenue across the formerly bustling investment bank. In recent years, the bank has been pummeled into a shell of its former self .

The bank cut risk-weighted assets by 113 billion pounds to 243 billion pounds, driven by the disposal of its U.S. consumer bank Citizens Financial Group Inc (NYSE:CFG) along with shedding assets at its securities unit and completing the run-down of its bad bank a year ahead of schedule. Operating costs other than litigation and restructuring fell by more than 1 billion pounds and the bank said it aims to shave off another 800 million pounds of expenses in 2016.

RBS is “becoming the bank we said we wanted to be,” generating about 90 percent of revenue in the U.K. and Ireland as it exits operations around the world, McEwan said. The consumer unit sold more mortgages than at any time since 2009, with net new lending totaling 9.3 billion pounds. At the commercial and private banking division, one of the core businesses of the reshaped RBS, total revenue dropped 2.7 percent to 4.27 billion pounds.
The investment bank, becoming a smaller part of the core business as McEwan exits 25 countries around the world and cuts risk-weighted assets, had a “difficult start to the year” and may see some “modest further income erosion” amid difficult trading conditions. The unit reported an operating loss of 245 million pounds in the fourth quarter compared with a loss of 536 million pounds in the same period a year ago as it booked smaller litigation costs. [emphasis added]
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RBS’s transition is entirely welcome on its own merits no matter the outcome, but in systemic terms of the eurodollar format it leaves an empty space that is only getting more empty as other banks similarly shrink. If this was 2006 and RBS had run into its own problems leading to investment bank disfavor, there would have been a line at its door to buy up the capacity. Instead, like Barclays, it will sell everything else it can while shutting down the former eurodollar functions and getting smaller overall. At its Q4 2008 report, RBS totaled just over £2.4 trillion in all assets on its balance sheet; the latest annual report for 2015 shows just £815 billion, leaving a bank a third its former size.