Australia guarantees deposits, wholsale funding
Australian government guarantees deposits and banks' wholesale funding
The Australian government announced
on the weekend that, with immediate effect, the government
will guarantee all deposits with banks and other deposit
taking institutions. The Government also will guarantee
wholesale term funding by Australian financial institutions.
As such, the Government effectively is guaranteeing the
liabilities of Australian financial institutions. At the
same time, the Government announced that it plans to double
to A$8 billion the amount of public funds made available to
purchase newly-issued residential mortgage backed securities
(RMBS), a measure designed principally to underpin
competition in the banking sector by assisting non-bank
institutions to raise term funding.
Some details of
the measures remain a little sketchy, but should become
clearer in coming days. As they stand, though, the measures,
which are similar to those adopted in several other
countries, including New Zealand, should help to restore
confidence in the Australian banking system. The RBA's
recent Financial Stability Review indicated that Australia's
banks are secure and well-capitalized. The global credit
crisis, though, has significantly raised funding costs for
local financial institutions, caused the non-bank segment of
the residential mortgage market to all but disappear, and
has undermined confidence in Australian banks.
The
measures announced yesterday were:
• The Government's deposit guarantee applies to both retail and wholesale deposits with all Australian banks, building societies and credit unions, and to Australian subsidiaries of foreign-owned banks. The guarantee will be in place for three years, after which the measure will be reviewed. There is no cap on the size of the guarantee - previously, the Government had been talking about limiting the guarantee to A$20,000 per deposit. It applies to deposits in Australia in all currencies made by individuals, businesses, trusts, and government entities. Previously, depositors in Australian financial institutions had first call on the assets in the event of a "bank" failure, but no explicit guarantee.
• On wholesale term funding, the government will guarantee all eligible term funding for Australian-owned banks, other authorized deposit-taking institutions, Australian subsidiaries of foreign-owned banks, building societies and credit unions. According to the Prime Minister's press release, the facility is available by application for debt issuance up to five years, for new and existing term issuance. The Government will charge a fee in return for the service, which effectively will be in the form of an insurance premium. The facility will be withdrawn when market conditions normalise. The Government will release more details on these arrangements in coming days.
• Finally, the Government announced a doubling of public funds available to buy newly-issued RBMS from the A$4 billion announced on 26 September to A$8 billion. The purchases will be made from Australian non-deposit taking lenders (i.e. non-banks). As with the initial A$4 billion set aside last month, the purchases will be directed through the Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM).
In a related
move, the Government has made clear that it is in a position
to use accumulated Budget surpluses, which currently measure
more than A$20 billion, to provide fiscal stimulus to the
weakening economy (last week we downgraded our expected 2009
Aussie GDP growth to 1.8%, from 2.5%). The Government
already has committed to bringing forward arrangements to
accelerate spending on public infrastructure, but it now
looks likely that there could be a direct round of measures
announced to support households. Personal tax cuts and/or
tax rebates could be announced soon, along with additional
welfare payments and special bonuses, including to the
elderly.
Government_guarantees_131008.pdf