Monday, November 10, 2008

''The state does not save banks to save the banks and their shareholders, but to make sure that households are not affected,''

Bagehot's rules observed in Sweden. Via the NY Times:

"The Swedish state will take control of troubled investment bank Carnegie and sell it off after the country's financial regulator revoked its banking license due to what it said was illegal trading activities.

In an assessment of Carnegie published Monday, the Swedish Financial Supervisory Authority said the bank took ''exceptional risks'' by lending large amounts of money to a single customer and broke the law by acting as a guarantor for the same funds it also managed.

The regulator said Carnegie will be taken over and then sold off by the national debt office. This means it will be able to continue its banking operations and that clients won't be affected by its decision.

The regulator said an extraordinary general meeting will be held as soon as possible to elect a new board, which will be charged with developing the bank until its businesses are sold off.

The debt office said Peter Norman, chief executive of one of Sweden's national pension funds, will take over as chairman of Carnegie. ''It is obvious that a board that has been responsible for the work that has been conducted does not have the confidence to stay,'' the director general of the debt office, Bo Lundgren said at a press conference."

This is how to enforce moral hazard before a systemic quake can occur. Quick and onerous. If anything, maybe a tad too slow, but onerous.

"The regulator's legal adviser, Joakim Schaaf, noted a warning had been issued to the bank as recently as September last year after an investigation showed the company had manipulated its trading results.

The watchdog launched a new investigation into Carnegie on Oct. 27 after its third-quarter report revealed a 1 billion kronor ($126 million) writedown related to ''an individual credit commitment.''

The Swedish government said earlier on Monday it had arranged to lend Carnegie 5 billion kronor ($630 million) in case it should be stripped of its license. The loan will replace the liquidity support -- granted at the end of October by the Swedish central bank -- which will be withdrawn as a result of the revoked license."

I like the fact that the whole operation is being investigated.

"Financial Markets' Minister Mats Odell said the government regards Carnegie's health to be important for the wider financial system considering it is managing a capital of more than 120 billion kronor ($15 billion).

''The state does not save banks to save the banks and their shareholders, but to make sure that households are not affected,'' he said."

Absolutely right.

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