by
GoldCore
Today’s AM fix was USD 1,228.50, EUR 895.60
and GBP 749.95 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,230.75, EUR 900.59 and GBP 752.38 per ounce.
Friday’s AM fix was USD 1,230.75, EUR 900.59 and GBP 752.38 per ounce.
Gold rose $4.56 or 0.4% Friday, closing at
$1,229.06/oz. Silver climbed $0.11 or 0.6% closing at $19.44/oz.
Platinum fell $3.25, or 0.2%, to $1,354.74/oz and palladium dropped
$0.64 or 0.1%, to $731.50/oz. Gold and silver were down 1.7% and 2.6%
for the week respectively.
Gold was flat on Monday after volatile trading
last week led to slight losses. Very tentative signs of improving
U.S. economic growth kept prices in the red as technical and momentum
traders remain negative on gold.
On Friday, gold closed with a decline of nearly
2% for the week, as traders had to wade through a week of mostly
upbeat economic numbers, including a stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs
report for November on Friday. Short-covering by traders and physical
demand offered some support.
More speculative market participants and
traders continue to fret over whether the United States will begin
tapering its $20 billion a week debt monetisation programme.
Also, stronger equities is attracting hot money flows from those
seeking to make quick capital gains. This tends to end on tears as
late comers to the party buy at record highs.
Chinese gold
bullion demand remains voracious and will likely pick
up after the recent price falls and ahead of Chinese New Year.
October saw China’s second highest month for gold imports ever,
according to Hong Kong customs data.
China imported 148 tons in October, the second
highest recorded level. The record was in March 2013 when China
imported 224 tons. October marked China’s 26th consecutive month of
being a substantial net gold importer.
These numbers are solely demand that is going
through Hong Kong. There are also sizeable shipments directly to
China from Australia, the UK, the U.S. and South Africa. There may
also be exports from elsewhere in Africa that is not showing up in
the data.
Meanwhile, the SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s
largest gold exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 3 tonnes to
835.71 tonnes on Friday as gold continues to flow from west to east.
Another
bullish contrarian indicator is the fact that hedge funds raised
their bearish bets in U.S. gold futures and options close to a 7 and
a 1/2 year high in the week to December 3, data from the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) showed Friday. Speculators turned
silver into a net short position for the first time since late
June.
Managed Money Long Golf Bets At Lowest Since July 2012 – Bloomberg Industries
Managed Money Long Golf Bets At Lowest Since July 2012 – Bloomberg Industries
What
Are Bail-Ins?A
bail-in is when regulators or governments have statutory powers to
restructure the liabilities of a distressed financial institution and
impose losses on both bondholders & depositors.
Simply
stated, a bank bail-in is
an attempt to resolve and restructure a bank as a going concern, by
creating additional bank capital (recapitalisation) via forced
conversion of the bank’s creditors’ claims (potentially bonds and
deposits) into newly created share capital (common shares of the
bank).
The
bail-in is undertaken by a regulatory authority that is vested with
powers to execute a previously agreed bailin plan
in a very short space of time, possibly over a weekend, so as to keep
the bank functioning, and to preserve financial stability as far as
possible.
To understand what the bail-in concept of a
troubled bank is, it is important to understand what a bank balance
sheet is, and what the balance sheet consists of. Simply put, a
bank’s balance sheet consists of sources of financing and uses of
this financing. At a high level, the sources are shareholders’
equity (shares) and the bank’s liabilities, which consist of
lending to the bank by bondholders (bonds) and lending to the bank by
depositors (deposits).
The shareholders are the bank’s owners, while
the bondholders and depositors are the bank’s creditors. These
components constitute the bank’s capital, and in total are known as
its capital structure. The bank then lends out and invests its
liabilities and refers to them as assets.
Previously, during bank bail-outs, when a bank
was failing and the government stepped in, the losses were absorbed
by the sovereign states and the risk was transferred to the taxpayer.
In a bail-in, during the resolution of the problematic bank, the risk
is pushed back to the bank’s shareholders and creditors.
In a bank’s capital structure, the various
sources of financing exist in a hierarchy of claims. This is both a
hierarchy for repayment when the bank is a going concern, and also in
liquidation. Debt resides at the top of the hierarchy for repayment,
since bondholders get repaid ahead of equity holders. In a
liquidation, the company’s assets are sold and proceeds are paid to
senior creditors, subordinated creditors, and then shareholders, in
that specific order. If senior creditors take a hit, subordinated
creditors get nothing, nor do shareholders, who get wiped out. If
subordinated creditors take a hit, shareholders are wiped out.
There is normally a stratum of seniority within
debt holders, for example, from top to bottom, running from super
senior debt, to senior debt, to subordinated debt, then to junior
debt. Senior debt can include secured and unsecured bonds,
depositors, and in some cases wholesale money market borrowing.
Secured bonds are ‘backed’ by specific assets or collateral and
rank higher in the repayment hierarchy than unsecured bonds. Below
debt in the hierarchy sits equity, such as preferred equity, and at
the bottom, common equity (shares).
In a direct bail-in regime, as proposed by the
Financial Stability Board and associated monetary authorities, there
is also a hierarchy of first to be bailed-in (converted to bank
shares), but it differs from the liquidation creditor hierarchy since
in a bail-in, shareholders do not get wiped out, they get diluted.
The more the bank’s assets are impaired, the more categories of
bank liabilities get converted to shares.
This impacts the shareholders since their
shareholdings become diluted as entities who were previously
creditors become shareholders. So a bail-in differs from a
liquidation in that although creditors take a loss, existing
shareholders survive but own less of the overall share capital.
In Cyprus, bondholders (including senior bond
holders) and depositors over €100,000 were bailed-in. Their money
was seized, and in return they were given shares in the problematic
banks, thereby becoming shareholders of these struggling banks.
Usually, only bonds with a conversion option,
called convertible bonds, ever have the potential for getting
converted into equity. However, there is another class of convertible
bonds called contingent convertible bonds that can be converted into
equity depending on particular outcomes or scenarios.
Given that the bail-in regime can force
bondholders and depositors to be converted into shareholders, a new
thinking is evolving in which unsecured bonds and bank deposits
should now be viewed as contingent capital.
This is really the crux of the Cyprus template
as proposed by international monetary authorities , i.e. that
depositors internationally now have to think of their uninsured
deposits as liable to potentially being confiscated and transformed
into bank shares.
Bank depositors have traditionally viewed their
bank deposits as 100% secure, with an inalienable right to have their
deposits returned in full. However, this has never been the case in
legal terms. A bank depositor is just an unsecured creditor of the
bank.
In
other words, the depositor is a lender who has loaned their deposit
to the bank. If the bank became insolvent, depositors would have to
line up with the other creditors in the hierarchy of claims and wait
to see if their money was returned.
In light of the above hierarchy and the
essential unsecured creditor nature of bank deposits, it’s useful
to look at some formal definitions of bail-ins as applied to
Systematically Important Financial Institutions (SIFIs).
A 2012 IMF Staff Paper defined a bail-in as:
A
statutory power to restructure the liabilities of a distressed SIFI
by converting and/or writing down unsecured debt on a “going
concern basis.” In bail-in, the concerned SIFI remains open and its
existence as an on-going legal entity is maintained. The idea is to
eliminate insolvency risk by restoring a distressed financial
institution to viability through the restructuring of its liabilities
and without having to inject public funds….The aim is to have a
private-sector solution as an alternative to government-funded
rescues of SIFIs.
The Systematically Important Financial
Institution concept is similar to the Too Big To Fail (TBTF) doctrine
which was used to bail-out a number of large international banks
during the financial crisis in 2008. The ‘TBTF’ concept maintains
that when a financial institution is so big and interconnected into
an economy that if it failed it would be disastrous to that economy,
then it has to be supported by the relevant government or authority.
In October 2012, in a speech to the
International Association of Depositor Insurers (IADI) annual
conference, Paul Tucker, a deputy governor of the Bank of England,
explained the central bank view on bail-ins:
“The
central principle running through this whole endeavour is that after
equity is exhausted, losses should fall next on uninsured debt
holders, in the order they would take losses in a standard bankruptcy
or liquidation process. Although all resolution strategies have that
effect, it is the particular focus of what has come to be called
‘bail-in’. I should perhaps say that bail-in isn’t about
identifying a special type of bond that can be written down or
converted. ‘Bail-in’ is a verb not a noun. It’s about giving
the authorities the tools, the powers, to affect a restructuring of
the capital and liabilities of a bank that isn’t toxic all the way
through.”
For large institutions, there are two main
approaches to a bail-in, the first being ‘single point of entry
resolution’ where the bail-in occurs in the holding company at the
top of the group, and the second being ‘multiple point of entry
resolution’ where, given that a banking group may be operating
across lots of regions
Who
Is Driving The Bail-In Regime?It
is revealing to examine the genesis and evolution of the centrally
planned bail-in regime as discussed by central banks and
international policymakers, since it highlights that the planning and
preparation for a global bank “Bail-In Regime” has been on-going
internationally at a high level for a number of years now, primarily
under the auspices of the Financial Stability Board (FSB).
The Financial Stability Board emerged from the
Financial Stability Forum (FSF), which was a group of finance
ministries, central bankers and international financial bodies,
founded in 1999 after discussions among Finance Ministers and Central
Bank Governors of the G7 countries. The FSF facilitated discussion
and co-operation on supervision and surveillance of financial
institutions, transactions and events. The FSF was managed by a small
secretariat housed at the Bank for International Settlements in
Basel, Switzerland.
The FSB was officially founded at a Group of
Twenty Finance Ministers and Central Bankers (G20) meeting in London
in April 2009. The FSB coordinates national and supra-national
regulatory and supervisory bodies on financial sector stability.
The FSB’s first chairman was Mario Draghi,
current President of the European Central Bank, while its current
chairman is Mark Carney, Governor of the Bank of England.
FSB members now include monetary authorities
and security market regulators from the US, the UK, Canada,
Australia, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Germany, Switzerland,
Japan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South
Africa, as well as the European Commission, IMF, OECD, World Bank,
and the Bank for International Settlements (BIS).
The
Key Attributes Of A Bail-In RegimeIn
October 2011, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) published a seminal
report on the bail-in regime titled “Key Attributes of Effective
Resolution Regimes for Financial Institutions”. 8
This report set out a high-level framework for
responding to and resolving failures at banks and other financial
institutions, and was officially endorsed by the G20 at a summit in
Cannes in November 2011 “as the international standard for
resolution regime”.
The intent is to “allow authorities to
resolve financial institutions in an orderly manner without taxpayer
exposure to loss from solvency support, while maintaining continuity
of their vital economic functions”. Essentially this means
addressing the funding of firms in resolution, as well as recovery
and resolution planning.
The Key Attributes include a number of
noteworthy pronouncements on an effective resolution regime such
as:
• Allocating losses to firm owners (shareholders) and unsecured and uninsured creditors in a manner that respects the hierarchy of claims.
• Not relying on public solvency support and not creating an expectation that such support will be available.
• Where covered by schemes and arrangements, protecting depositors that are covered by such schemes and arrangements, and ensuring the rapid return of segregated client assets.
• Allocating losses to firm owners (shareholders) and unsecured and uninsured creditors in a manner that respects the hierarchy of claims.
• Not relying on public solvency support and not creating an expectation that such support will be available.
• Where covered by schemes and arrangements, protecting depositors that are covered by such schemes and arrangements, and ensuring the rapid return of segregated client assets.
The
inclusion of Financial Market Infrastructures means that large parts
of the global financial system is susceptible to bail-in and could
potentially be bailed-in.
The scope of this planned bail-in regime for
participating countries is not just limited to large domestic banks.
In addition to these “systemically significant or critical”
financial institutions, the scope also applies to two further
categories of institutions, a) Global SIFIs, in other words,
cross-border banks which happen to be incorporated domestically in a
country that is implementing the bail-in regime, and b) ”Financial
Market Infrastructures (FMIs)”, such as clearing houses.
The inclusion of Financial Market
Infrastructures in potential bail-ins is in itself a major departure.
The FSB defines these market infrastructures to
include multilateral securities and derivatives clearing and
settlement systems, and a whole host of exchange and transaction
systems, such as payment systems, central securities depositories,
and trade depositories. This would mean that an unsecured creditor
claim to, for example, a clearing house institution, or to a stock
exchange, could in theory be affected if such an institution needed
to be bailed-in.
As Paul Tucker phrased it at the IADI
conference: “resolution isn’t just about banks, and so we are
planning to elaborate on how the Key Attributes should be applied to,
for example, central counterparties, insurers, and the client assets
held by prime brokers, custodians and others.”
The inclusion of Financial Market
Infrastructures means that large parts of the global financial system
is susceptible to bail-in and could potentially be bailed-in
According to the FSB report, the implementation
of the bail-ins should be undertaken by a resolution authority in
each country with statutory resolution powers to enforce bail-ins.
These powers would include powers to:
• Override rights of shareholders of the firm
in resolution.
• Transfer or sell assets and liabilities, legal rights and obligations, including deposit liabilities and ownership in shares to a solvent third party.
• Carry out bail-in within resolution.
• Impose a moratorium with a suspension of payments to unsecured creditors.
• Effect the closure and orderly wind down (liquidation) of the whole or part of a failing firm with timely payout or transfer of insured deposits.
• Transfer or sell assets and liabilities, legal rights and obligations, including deposit liabilities and ownership in shares to a solvent third party.
• Carry out bail-in within resolution.
• Impose a moratorium with a suspension of payments to unsecured creditors.
• Effect the closure and orderly wind down (liquidation) of the whole or part of a failing firm with timely payout or transfer of insured deposits.
Following on from the release of the FSB Key
Attributes report in 2011, it became apparent that national monetary
authorities and regulators had been actively working for some time on
national bail-in preparedness and their own versions of the Key
Attributes.
Download
our Bail-In
Guide: Protecting your Savings In The Coming Bail-In Era(11
pages)
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