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Nicholas Grove: Investors may have recently heard about covered bond issues by ANZ and Westpac. After the Australian Government passed a law allowing the banks to sell them. Here to help us get a bit of a better understanding about these instruments I am joined by Morningstar Senior Equities Analyst David Walker.
David thanks very much for joining us.
David Walker: Hello again Nick, it's good to be back.
Grove: First of all David what is a covered bond and how does it differ from other types of bonds.
Walker: A covered bond is a new kind of debt security used to fund banks where the collateral is particular assets. A particular group of discrete indentified assets on the bank's balance sheet. This contrasts with the traditional kind of bank wholesale debt funding which is unsecured. Where in the event of the wind out banks would rank behind other more secured creditors.
Grove: David, why do banks issue covered bonds and who do they sell them to?
Walker: Banks wanting to be able to issue covered bonds to broaden their funding options. Their funding base. At this time the volatility, instability in global wholesale funding markets. To give them another kind of market in which to fund themselves away from traditional unsecured wholesale debt markets, gives them more options.
However regulators and the Parliament restricted the issuance of covered bonds to maximum of 8% of Australian assets on the balance sheet. So far the amount of covered bond issuance has been very small, just 1.25 billion in the case of ANZ and 1 billion in the case of Westpac. These figures compare with total loan books worth hundreds of billions of dollars. So if these banks get to the 8% limit at all, it will take years. A couple of banks has had to pull back from issuing its first tranche of covered bonds. Because it's found that global debt capital markets are too unstable at this time.
Grove: David what sort of risks do these instruments pose for shareholders in Australian banks and for deposit holders.
Walker: Well, it's good for shareholders, because it broadens the funding base of the bank in which they own equity. It creates a small risk for depositors which is why it's taken so long to introduce covered bonds in Australia. The argument by the regulator always was that in the event of the worst possible case, one of a liquidation of the bank. There might not be enough loans left on the balance sheet to fund a full payout of depositors.
However the amounts of covered bonds issues are so small compared to total size of the loan book. This is very unlikely additionally the ratio of loans to deposits is already very high, in the worst case there'd be more than enough loans to depositors which are in any event implicitly guaranteed by the Federal Government up to certain limits.
Grove: As in a side David with all that’s happening around the world at the moment in Europe et cetera. How well positioned are our banks to weather the worst of all possible outcomes?
Walker: The worst possible outcome is that global wholesale debt funding market close completely for several months. Now if this happens, Australian banks have sufficient liquid assets to meet, maturing wholesale debt funding requirements over the months ahead in this emergency situation. However they can't keep doing that forever.
Most likely if this were to happen the Australian Government would reintroduce its AAA rating guarantee of bank wholesale term debt funding as it did in global financial crisis. This will come on top of Australian bank's existing superior credit ratings compared to other global banks. So it will put Australian banks in a very strong position. Additionally Australian banks recently have been lengthening maturity of the wholesale funding from say around two years before the credit crisis to more like 4 to 5 years.
So in contrast to European banks which have a problem with a lot of their wholesale funding rolling over time. Not much Australian wholesale bank funding at this time doesn’t mature for several more years.
Grove: David thanks very much for joining us.
Walker: My pleasure.
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