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Canada's 'Too Big To Fail' Bank Problem Is Worse Than U.S.: IMF

Canada's ‘Too-Big-To-Fail' Problem Worse Than U.S.
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Even as other countries are working to reduce the problem of “too big to fail” banks, Canada’s financial industry is becoming more concentrated in the hands of a few large players, says a new study from the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

Such a high level of banking concentration “carries with it a high degree of potential systemic risk,” the IMF report states.

The study also found that too-big-to-fail banks enjoy an unofficial “subsidy” in the form of lower borrowing costs than those enjoyed by smaller banks.

The Global Financial Stability Report found that Canada is one of a handful of countries where the three largest banks -- RBC, TD and Scotiabank -- control more than 60 per cent of all banking assets.

In the U.S., where too-big-to-fail banks brought the economy to the brink of ruin in 2008, banks are far less concentrated; the three largest control about 45 per cent of all bank assets.

And while the U.S., U.K. and other countries have seen concentration lessen since the financial crisis, in Canada the concentration keeps growing.

“The distress or failure of one of the top three banks in a country, for example, could destabilize that country’s entire financial system,” the report says.

If a bank is too large, other banks wouldn’t be able to replace its activities in case it fails, the report says. Too-big-to-fail banks are so integrated into the banking system that other banks would be hit, and confidence in the entire economy would suffer.

The IMF also took a look at an issue that has been concerning some economists -- the unofficial “subsidy” that too-big-to-fail banks enjoy, thanks to lower borrowing costs than other banks.

Because creditors assume that a large bank will be bailed out in case of trouble, they are willing to lend to those banks at lower rates than for smaller banks. And that, in turn, strengthens the large banks and makes them even more important to the economy.

The study didn’t break out how much of a subsidy Canadian banks enjoy from being “too big to fail,” but it did break out the numbers for some larger economies.

In the U.S., the subsidy amounts to $15 to $70 billion per year for the big banks; in Japan it’s in the $15 billion-$70 billion range, and in the euro zone, it works out to $90 billion to $300 billion per year (all figures in U.S. dollars).

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The U.S. Federal Reserve’s economists recently came to similar conclusions, arguing in a series of reports that too-big-to-fail institutions enjoy lower operating and funding costs than other banks.

Canada’s banks were not bailed out directly by taxpayer money like U.S. banks during the financial crisis, as they weren’t facing the same insolvency problems. But they faced a global credit crunch and relied on emergency funding from the Bank of Canada and the U.S. Fed, to the tune of $114 billion at the peak of the crisis, something many argue amounted to a stealth bailout.

Since then, Canada has been implementing new international banking regulations meant to prevent future crises. Canada’s bank regulator last year identified six banks as being “systemically important” (another way of saying “too big to fail”) -- RBC, TD, Scotiabank, CIBC, BMO and National Bank.

Under new international regulations, those six banks will be subject to closer scrutiny than smaller banks, and will have to maintain larger cash reserves, making them (hopefully) more resistant to credit shocks.

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