‘Smaller and simpler’ mantra rings through banking boardrooms

Published April 25, 2015
Deutsche Bank’s move to sell much of its retail banking business will see it join a list of banks choosing to shrink.  -AFP/File
Deutsche Bank’s move to sell much of its retail banking business will see it join a list of banks choosing to shrink. -AFP/File

LONDON: Deutsche Bank’s expected move to sell much of its retail banking business will see it join a growing list of banks choosing to shrink and simplify to survive.

The benefits of size and reach, for years considered the holy grail of global banking, are now seen as being outweighed by the cost and complexity of running businesses across dozens of countries.

Many bank bosses have given up on trying to offer everything to everyone. But as unwinding years of expansion proves difficult, pressure for action has intensified, from politicians who show little patience with institutions they consider too big and complex and investors wanting more return on equity (RoE).

“The underlying economics for banks ... means being all things to all people is too big a burden to sustain,” said Bill Michael, head of financial services in Europe at consultancy KPMG. He cited low RoEs, high operational risk and hefty potential costs from regulation.

After missing financial targets and racking up a raft of regulatory fines and problems, Deutsche Bank’s board is expected to agree on Friday to sell retail arm Postbank and take a knife to its investment bank.

On the same day, HSBC’s bosses responded to investor criticism over a string of misconduct scandals and weak profitability by stressing how far they have shrunk and streamlined the bank in the last four years. HSBC has already sold or shut 77 businesses and could yet dispose of big operations in Brazil or Turkey.

Credit Suisse’s incoming CEO Tidjane Thiam is expected to slash trading operations and pull back from other areas, while Barclays chairman John McFarlane signalled on his first day on Thursday that he will also wield the knife.

The message is clear: bold action is on the cards to create leaner and simpler models, even after big cuts in recent years at Barclays, Credit Suisse, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, UBS and Royal Bank of Scotland.

“NOT A SCRAP OF EVIDENCE BIGGER IS BETTER”: Pressure for banks to be cut down in size has built since the global financial crisis, which was preceded by a frenzy of mergers and acquisitions of the kind that briefly made RBS one of the world’s biggest banks.

Bank of England chief economist Andy Haldane said in 2009 “there is not a scrap of evidence of economies of scale or scope in banking — of bigger or broader being better”.

Politicians worry that large and complex banks can miss problems, struggle to instil a common culture and are just too hard to manage.

Efforts by some national regulators to limit capital outflows have also encouraged lenders to quit countries in which they lack scale.

Investors, too, are questioning the benefits of size as they lose patience with promises that returns will recover. And valuations reflect their preference for simpler firms.

Published in Dawn, April 25th, 2015

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