ESPIRITO
MAY BE WILLING, BUT ITS FLESH IS WEAK.
|
2 AUG 1,
2014 9:05 AM EDT
By Mark
Gilbert / http://www.bloombergview.com/articles/2014-08-01/portugal-should-let-espirito-santo-fail
Back in August 2008, as the credit crunch was really starting to bite,
Tim Price, director of investments at PFP Wealth Management in London , had this to say:
A banking
specialist Ph.D. who has spent 20 years at Bank College studying nothing but
banks, and whose every waking second is committed to understanding banks, would
struggle to conduct due diligence upon banks consistent with making an informed
assessment of the risks they hold and the risk they represent.
Let's be
thankful that six years later, the world has learned its lesson about bank
complexity, and regulators are now ensuring that the balance sheets, ownership
structures and risk exposures of the finance industry are transparent,
intelligible and suitably constrained.
Except, of
course, nothing in the above sentence is true, as illustrated by yesterday's
record 42 percent collapse in the share price of Portugal's Banco Espirito
Santo SA after it posted a first-half loss of 3.6 billion euros ($4.8 billion):
The
Espirito Santo Group is a sprawling, byzantine web of interconnected entities
run by a banking dynasty. Three of its holding companies have sought protection
from creditors. Here's how Bloomberg reporters Henrique Almeida and Anabela
Reis describe its structure:
Banco Espirito
Santo is 20 percent owned by Espirito Santo Financial Group. ESFG is in turn 49
percent held by Espirito Santo Irmaos SGPS SA, which is wholly owned by
Rioforte, a group that holds the family’s non-financial investments.
Luxembourg-based Rioforte is 100 percent owned by Espirito Santo International,
a holding company controlled by the family.
It makes
the head spin and the eyes glaze over. Now, the bank needs more capital, and in
time-honored fashion, the hat may pass to taxpayers. Portuguese newspaper
Jornal de Negocios reports today that while the nation's central bank would
prefer investors to put up additional capital, it is working on a
"mixed" solution including public funds.
That would
be a mistake. Again and again, banks have been rescued from their own
misadventures. Financial Darwinism hasn't been allowed to cleanse the DNA. If
Banco Espirito Santo can't raise sufficient private funding to remain a going
concern, Portugal
should oversee an orderly dismantling of the group. Until governments show the
banking industry that the world of finance suffers the consequences of its
failures, banks will continue to do somersaults on the money trapeze, secure in
the knowledge that the safety net of a taxpayer bailout is there to rescue
them. Enough is enough.
To contact
the author of this article: Mark Gilbert at magilbert@bloomberg.net.
To contact
the editor responsible for this article: James Greiff at jgreiff@bloomberg.net
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