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<text id=90TT2004>
<link 93TG0071>
<title>
July 30, 1990: Bareknuckle Banking
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
July 30, 1990 Mr. Germany
The American Economy
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 48
Bareknuckle Banking
</hdr>
<body>
<p>As worries about American institutions grow, the free-for-all
of global finance is becoming more fierce
</p>
<p>By Michael S. Serrill--Reported by Barry Hillenbrand/Tokyo,
Thomas McCarroll/New York and Adam Zagorin/Brussels
</p>
<p> The 1980s were a time of feast and fear for the world's
international banking system: an era of globalization and
vigorous overseas expansion but also of sharp competitive
thrust. Asian banks and increasing numbers of European ones
hung OPEN FOR BUSINESS signs abroad, joining the U.S.
multinationals that had dominated global finance for decades.
Suddenly the Japanese, drawing on their huge national savings
pool and enormous trading surpluses, appeared to be the new
Masters of the Banking Universe, carving out richer slices of
international market share with startling rapidity. The global
banking business became an international free-for-all.
</p>
<p> The boom-and-bust '80s may be history, but the banking
rough-and-tumble is now more pronounced than ever. In the U.S.
the battered industry is selling assets to recapitalize itself
after the debacles of Third World debt, the decay in value of
high-risk junk bonds used for corporate buyouts and the
collapse of the real estate market in several sections of the
country. The mighty Japanese, now far and away the world's
biggest banking players, are also being squeezed. Japanese banks
face rising interest rates that boost their costs at home and
new international capital-reserve requirements that curb their
lending abroad. In Europe, considered the premier expansion
market in the 1990s, the European Community's July 1
deregulation of financial flows across most members' borders
is expected to accelerate the merger movement in the
Continent's highly protected banking industry. West German
banks are also preoccupied with the beckoning market of East
Germany.
</p>
<p> Predicts Mary Carryer, senior vice president of
international trade services at San Francisco's Wells Fargo
bank: "The world is going to shake out to a few large banks
with worldwide coverage. By the time the dust settles, those
of us who aren't one of those banks will have to form
alliances."
</p>
<p> If it is an anxious time to be a banker, nowhere is the
level of nervousness higher than in the U.S. Depressed earnings
at many of the country's largest lenders have raised questions
about the health of the entire industry. Citicorp, the biggest
U.S. banking company, announced last week that its profits for
the second quarter fell 37%, to $248 million, from the same
period a year ago. Citicorp attributed much of the decline to
increased losses on real estate lending, particularly to
developers in the troubled Northeast. Chase Manhattan, the No.
2 banking concern, reported second-quarter profits of $52
million, a 62% plunge from the same period a year ago.
</p>
<p> Such results come at a time when the American public is
reeling from a savings and loan crisis that the White House
predicts will cost taxpayers $500 billion over the next 40
years. While no one expects a run of major bank failures, some
experts fear that a U.S. economic downturn could push many
overextended lenders toward the brink of collapse.
</p>
<p> Overseas, says James McDermott of Keefe, Bruyette & Woods,
one of Wall Street's leading analysts of the industry, American
bankers "are retreating from the global marketplace with their
tails between their legs." Their foreign ventures proved so
traumatic, McDermott adds, that "they're going to be at home
licking their wounds for a long time."
</p>
<p> In the course of the U.S. retreat, dozens of foreign
branches have closed, and entire regions of the globe have been
abandoned. Chemical Bank, the sixth largest in the U.S., earned
50% of its revenues abroad 10 years ago. Now the proportion is
17%, and Chemical has cut the number of countries where it has
marketing offices from 30 to nine. Bankers Trust, First
Chicago, Manufacturers Hanover Trust and other U.S.
multinationals known as money-center banks have sliced their
foreign presence just as dramatically. Chase Manhattan, which
has been operating overseas for more than 100 years, has closed
or sold offices in 22 (of 55) countries. Among the U.S.
money-center banks, Citicorp is one of the few still trying to
expand its international network.
</p>
<p> The bottom line is that America is an ebbing power in the
banking world, with its mightiest institutions surpassed by
behemoths in Japan and Europe. U.S. banks have simply been out
muscled abroad by their bigger, better-capitalized foreign
competitors, like Sumitomo and Fuji of Japan, the Deutsche and
Dresdner banks of Germany and such other rivals as Credit
Lyonnais of France, Midland of Britain and Union Bank of
Switzerland. A glance at a list of the world's largest banks
gives a clear view of the winners and losers in the bruising
battle. Of the world's 20 top banks, 14 are Japanese, led by
giant Dai-Ichi Kangyo (assets: $413 billion). Five are European,
topped by France's Credit Agricole (assets: $243 billion).
Only one, Citicorp ($231 billion), is American. In fact, of the
50 largest banks in the world, only three are American:
Citicorp, Chase Manhattan and BankAmerica. "U.S. banks are
pygmies in a world of giants," says Lowell Bryan, a banking
analyst at the consulting firm of McKinsey & Co. in New York
City. "Although we have the largest financial economy, we have
the smallest banks."
</p>
<p> By most measurements--assets, capital, return on
shareholders' equity--major Japanese and European
institutions look healthier than their American counterparts.
Yet foreign lenders also have their worries. The combined
profits of Japan's 13 largest banks fell 11.6%, to $7.3
billion, in the fiscal year ended March 31, marking the first
such decline in 10 years. The drop reflected the higher
interest rates that banks must pay to woo deposits and hefty
write-offs of bad loans to Mexico, the Philippines and other
developing countries.
</p>
<p> But no analyst regards such setbacks as serious. The
Japanese will almost surely continue to be the dominant bankers
to the world. From 1980 to 1989 Japanese bank deposits,
measured in yen, more than doubled. When measured in dollars,
which fell in value against the yen during the decade, the
deposits more than tripled, skyrocketing from $1 billion to
$3.8 billion.
</p>
<p> Japanese money is invested everywhere, from Tokyo
skyscrapers to RJR Nabisco junk bonds to shares in Britain's
newly privatized water companies. The scope of the Japanese
surge abroad has been breathtaking. In 1984 Japanese banks held
a little more than 20% of international banking assets, meaning
the sum of all outstanding loans. Today the share is almost
40%. "There is hardly a major deal put together anywhere in the
world that does not include Japanese banks," says J. Brain
Waterhouse, a British securities analyst in Hong Kong. "It used
to be that 1 out of 4 banks involved in deals were Japanese.
Now it seems to be that 1 out of 2 are Japanese."
</p>
<p> In the U.S., Japanese banks have chewed up market share by
buying local banks, particularly on the West Coast. Mitsubishi
Bank bought the Bank of California in 1984, while the Bank of
Tokyo acquired the Union Bank of Los Angeles in 1988. The
Japanese own four of California's 10 largest banks. Starting
from near zero five years ago, Japanese banks account for at
least 10% of all commercial loans made in the U.S.
</p>
<p> Japanese banks are currently intensifying their focus on the
European Community. Some 60 Japanese banks have European bases
in London, and more will probably follow. Mini-headquarters are
also being established on the Continent. Dai-Ichi Kangyo and
Fuji Bank have offices in Munich; Sumitomo Bank, Sanwa Bank and
the Bank of Tokyo are in Lisbon; and others have set up shop
in Paris, Barcelona and Milan. The Japanese are likely to
concentrate their activities in merchant banking and the bond
markets.
</p>
<p> European banks are facing the rest of the world with some
caution. The unified 12-nation European Community market of
1992 is expected to mean the closing of many European banks
long coddled by national laws that kept out foreign
competition. "A huge number of institutions, perhaps as many
as half, will disappear or merge as the domestic market is
rationalized," says Christopher Toole, an analyst with Country
NatWest Bank in London. Adds Robert Poldermans of the accounting
firm Arthur D. Little: "Europe has too many midsize banks and
not enough giants, too many local customers and not enough
Europeans."
</p>
<p> The past 20 months have brought a flurry of more than 30
mergers and takeovers involving European banks and insurance
companies across the Continent. The aim has been to create
institutions that will be big enough to expand Europe-wide and
survive the competitive heat when larger institutions from
other countries arrive in force. In Denmark, for example, where
more than 150 banks serve just 5 million people, a series of
unions has taken place since 1988. The most significant: the
merging of Den Danske Bank, Copenhagen Handelsbank and
Provinsbanken to create Scandinavia's largest lender, with
assets of $36 billion.
</p>
<p> The biggest marriage on the Continent took place in April
with the joining of two longtime Dutch rivals, Algemene Bank
Nederland (ABN) and Amsterdam-Rotterdam Bank (Amro). The pair
forms Europe's sixth largest bank and the 19th biggest in the
world, with combined assets of $184 billion and 55,700
employees. "A merger is necessary to operate worldwide and in
the Netherlands," says Roelof Nelissen, Amro's chairman.
</p>
<p> France's Credit Agricole, the world's 10th largest bank, has
also declared its intention to expand Europe-wide but is taking
its time. The bank last year bought a 13% share in Nuovo Banco
Ambrosiano of Italy and is said to be scouting elsewhere. Other
French banks are more hesitant. Both Credit Commercial and
venerable Societe Generale have decided not to extend
retail-banking networks outside their home territory. "The
practice of offering universal banking services seems to us to
be limited to the national territory," says Societe Generale
chairman Marc Vienot. Abroad, "we plan to find niches." One
example: Societe Generale's recent purchase of the
investment-management firm Touche Remnat of Britain, which will
give the French bank a toehold in London, the Continent's
premier financial center.
</p>
<p> Italy, which has some of Europe's most inefficient but
potentially wealthy financial institutions, is likely to
undergo the greatest change. For now, the Italians are
thoroughly--very thoroughly--served by their bankers: the
country has some 1,200 separate banking companies with 13,500
branches--but it also has one of the Continent's highest
savings rates. The mostly government-controlled network employs
310,000 people, many of them holding down virtual sinecures.
</p>
<p> While most West European banks are thinking about bulking
up in their home markets, West Germany's powerful financial
institutions are bursting their old bounds. By far the most
aggressive institution is West Germany's Deutsche Bank, which
has swallowed financial institutions in Britain, Austria,
Spain, Portugal and Italy.
</p>
<p> But the hottest banking action in Europe is within Germany
itself, as West German banks vie to take over the deposits of
their East German neighbors. Deutsche Bank, the leader of the
drive, is opening 100 new branches in the East to cash in on
this month's currency union between East and West. Dresdner
Bank, which once had 162 branches in the East, is hard at work
re-establishing them. And Commerzbank has set up prefabricated
bank branches on East Berlin street corners. Elsewhere in
Eastern Europe, where countries like Hungary and Poland are
burdened with billions in foreign debt, bankers from abroad are
more cautious about stepping in. German and Austrian banks are
expected to increase lending once East bloc economies are
further along the path to free markets. But the amounts will
be relatively small--much smaller, ironically, than the
billions in loans offered by the West when the East bloc was
run by totalitarian regimes. Speaking in Zurich, A.W. Clausen,
the former World Bank president and recently retired chairman
of BankAmerica, warned against pouring money into the East:
"Too much capital too fast can cause far more harm than good."
</p>
<p> Global banking is inevitable. Says Thompson Swayne, who
oversees Chase Manhattan operations in Europe, Africa and the
Middle East: "As companies and markets go global, countries
become less important and companies become more important. As
they go global, their financing goes with them." But where the
financing comes from, and who reaps the rewards, are exactly
what the bareknuckle banking competition is all about.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>