|  | 
| AA: As Usual on Top of the Story. It Looks a Lot Scarier Up Here. | 
| 
In an earlier post I outlined why the Hong Kong Monetary Authority's appeals to its banks to "manage correspondent risks" rather than "de-risk" were likely to fall on deaf ears.  
Today I’d like to continue exploration of that topic by looking
  at September 2016 Arab Monetary Fund/IMF/IBRD study “Withdrawal  of Correspondent Banking Relationships (CBRs) in the Arab Region”. 
Context – Survey Coverage 
The report is based on a survey of 216 banks in Algeria,
  Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Mauritania, Morocco, Oman,
  Palestine, Qatar, KSA, Sudan, Tunisia, UAE, and Yemen.  One country was excluded from “some
  analysis” as it is “perceived as a high risk area”. AA is guessing Yemen,
  though it is not the only “high risk” name in the list.    
Details 
Apparent Modest Impact  
 
On
  this basis, it doesn’t seem that de-risking in MENA is a major problem at
  least at the macro level.  
Two caveats. 
   
First, “limitations” in the survey (see below) preclude making a
  definitive assessment on impact as well as on the motive(s) for de-risking.   
Second, the number of accounts closed
  increased over the survey period 2012-2015 (Figure 5), indicating that
  affected banks are increasingly being disconnected from international finance.
         
Primary De-Risking Banks  
As expected US banks were the main de-riskers followed by the UK
  and Germany. Interestingly of the ten countries’ banks named as de-riskers,
  banks in Saudi were in 4th place and the UAE in 8th
  place.  AED and SAR accounts were closed. It’s not clear from the survey
  if the UAE and Saudi banks are solely responsible for the closures.   
It doesn't seem unreasonable to assume that they were at least partially responsible. If so, an intriguing but unanswered
  question.  Were their actions motivated
  by these banks’ own concerns or local regulations? Or are they defensive measures to
  prevent their foreign correspondents from “de-risking” them?  
Survey “Limitations” 
As outlined below, these limitations lessen the survey’s utility. Presumably some
  of this reflects a conscious decision to avoid creating a knock-on effect and
  potentially worsening the situation by providing too much public information.  
Now to the limitations. 
The size and location of the affected banks is not
  disclosed.  If major banks are being
  de-risked, the impact is likely to be greater than if smaller banks are.  If the de-risking is focused on one or two
  countries, then what appears to be manageable problem is not –at least for the
  affected countries. 
It’s highly likely that correspondents did not provide a
  concrete reason for terminating a CBR. But rather used such words as “strategic
  review of our business”, “change in focus”. If you ever have had to let
  people go or were on the receiving end yourself, you know that these events
  are couched in euphemisms like “downsizing”. One doesn’t fire an employee.  Rather his or her position is
  “eliminated”.  Nothing personal there
  at all.  We’d love to have you but we
  don’t have a “position” for you.  The
  same with closure of accounts.   
If the
  reason for the firing or closure of an account is not directly “personal” or concrete, it’s
  hard for the affected party to mount an objection.  How do you argue your case?  Do you really expect the institution to
  change its board-approved strategy so you get to retain your job or account?     
To get around this likely scenario, survey respondents were
  asked to ascribe motives to the termination of CBRs.  The survey provides 16 possible “drivers”
  of the decision to terminate CBRs. 
  Respondents were free to select more than one and were asked to rank
  them from 1 to 16--which AA takes as an invitation to rank all of them.  Thankfully not every respondent did.  There were some 234 votes from the 84
  banks.  Only 17% of the maximum
  possible number of responses. 
There are two problems though.    
First,
  respondents are not only being asked to read their correspondents’ minds, but
  also to do so with a high degree of precision.  
Second, many of the drivers
  are similar.  One might well need an
  electron microscope to parse these in any practical sense.  This compounds the dubious first assumption
  of mind reading skills. 
Some examples of similar/duplicative motives.  Note the numbering below follows the
  rankings on pages 11-12 in the report. 
 
Third, it also seems (note that caveat) that in ranking drivers no
  adjustment was made for this overlap.   The summary puts AML/CFT in fifth place.  This seems based Driver 5 being in fifth
  place by number of “votes” while ignoring the votes for all the other AML/CFT
  related drivers.   
I think it would have been better to have a few very broad
  primary motives, e.g., credit, profitability, regulatory, refusal/failure to
  provide requested information.  Participants
  could have then been asked to ascribe a percentage to each.  This more limited menu probably would be not only easier but more appropriate given the inherent limitations of mind reading.   
Follow-up questions could have been used to attempt to parse
  sub-drivers with economy in options. 
  For example, was refusal/failure to provide requested information due
  to regulatory impediments (bank secrecy) or internal bank decision?  Were regulatory concerns focused on AML/CFT, sanctions, or other (e.g. FACTA)?  
Interestingly Driver 16 and part of Driver 8 consist of
  failures by the respondent bank to provide sufficient AML information, in
  which case one might argue that the correspondent was obliged by regulation
  to terminate the CBR or decided failure indicated not only bad faith but probable bad behavior.    The same with Driver 15 imposition of sanctions.  DPAs would be another example. This is an important point. If the correspondent is "forced" to withdraw services, this is not "de-risking" but compliance. Focusing a question on this issue would be most helpful. 
The survey noted that banks that found replacement CBRs or
  developed workarounds faced increased costs, but no data is provided on the
  relative increase in costs. All this being said there is useful information in the study. 
Hopefully, it will serve as a
  basis for further examination of this issue with perhaps answers to some of the above open items as well as a fine tuning of questions. 
 
One quibble.  There’s
  always at least one and usually more with AA. 
 
The AMF is right to indicate that the motives for “de-risking”
  don’t relate solely to AML/CFT. 
  Sanctions and other regulations are important as well.  
I’d argue that termination of unprofitable relationships is
  not “de-risking” nor is restructuring/eliminating lines of business
  to meet prudential regulations (increases in capital charges).  That’s simply common business sense.  If one can’t make a profit selling a good
  or providing a service, one stops doing so if there is no way to increase
  pricing or lower costs sufficiently.   
No doubt many of the small CBRs being tossed do not meet
  internal ROA targets and would require massive increases in pricing to do
  so.  At some point too banks like any
  business need to focus on key LOBs and customers.  “80% of the revenue comes from …”  If you've been around long enough, you know the last bit to that sentence and the business strategy it supports.  "Dabbling"
  or "hobbies" (my mentor’s descriptive terms) divert resources and attention
  from more profitable customers and LOBs. 
Also it’s not clear to me how anxiety is playing a role.  
Clearly any regulatory/prudential anxiety is already covered by
  those topics.   
If there are concerns about credit quality, then measures theoretically could
  be put in place to cover these.  Pay
  against receipt of funds only (no overdrafts), require cash collateral for
  residual risks (check deposits bouncing, for example), and increase pricing
  for the additional special handling required.   But, if a relationship is marginally profitable, what's the point of all of this when the time and effort might be spent on other customers or LOBs where real money could be made? And when 100% of the risks are unlikely to be covered despite all the elaborate risk management? 
But let's assume a correspondent exerts the effort. At this point, “risk management” might result in making an offer that can’t
  be accepted, equivalent to withdrawal of CBR. No doubt sparking the argument
  that “risk management” of this sort was really disguised “de-risking”.     | 

 
 
 
 Posts
Posts
 
