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Biggest UK banks seen struggling in tougher stress tests

London - The Bank of England (BoE) added a new, higher bar to its third round of public stress tests. Some of the UK’s biggest banks will scrape through; others may not clear it.

The seven major British lenders tested will probably beat the lowest measures of strength required to pass the annual BOE health check when it is released on Wednesday, Autonomous Research said in a note this month. Royal Bank of Scotland and Barclays risk a “soft fail” of tougher thresholds set for lenders deemed to be integral to the global banking system, they said.

HSBC and Standard Chartered’s results may be rattled by a Chinese recession scenario.

Each bank now must top its individual hurdle rate as well as a new threshold, called the systemic reference point, that takes into account the potential global repercussions if the lender collapses. Firms that fall short of either measure will have to boost their capital ratios, though the BOE will force them to take “less intensive” action if they only miss the SRP.

“With bank investing these days, you need to be more cognizant of the economy, the rate environment and crucially of the regulator,” especially if one bank does much worse than its peers in a stress test, said Barrington Pitt Miller, a research analyst at Janus Capital in Denver.

The BOE’s test will also include Lloyds Banking, Banco Santander’s British arm and Nationwide Building Society. The hurdle rate requires all the banks to retain capital equivalent to 4.5% of their assets weighted by risk, plus Pillar 2A - a requirement that varies depending on the specific risks for each bank - in the stressed scenario.

China crisis

Simon Adamson, an analyst at CreditSights in London, said he expects none of the lenders to fail the hurdle rate, moving investors’ attention to the systemic reference point. Globally significant lenders that fall short of that may be given more time to raise capital or be allowed to issue additional Tier 1 bonds rather than equity.

Regulators began stress tests to restore confidence in the financial system after the bailouts that resulted from the financial  crisis eight years ago. Authorities impose a “severe but plausible” scenario to ensure banks can withstand strain and keep credit flowing.

For 2016, the test features a sharp slide in Hong Kong and China, a 1.9% contraction in the global economy, and exchange-rate volatility as emerging-market currencies depreciate against the US dollar. It also assumes a 31% crash in British house prices during the five-year period, while UK commercial real estate dives 42%.

The adverse scenario was drawn up in March and doesn’t model the impact of the Brexit negotiations or of the actual exit from the European Union, expected for 2019.

The Chinese downturn scenario is the biggest threat to Asia-focused HSBC and Standard Chartered, which may be at risk of failing to meet their systemic reference point thresholds, according to RBC Capital Markets.

‘Soft fail’

“We see some risk of a soft fail at both banks despite high starting capital ratios,” Robert Noble, an analyst at RBC in London, wrote in a October 24 note to clients. “There is a risk for both of these banks that the BOE increases the losses on Chinese and Chinese-linked exposures.”

Shares of the five largest UK banks all fell more than 1% at 12:50, led by RBS’s 2.7% decline.

Politics, including a constitutional referendum in Italy and French and German elections, are likely to play a key role next year, said Edward Chan, banking partner at Linklaters in London. Britain has pledged to trigger its exit from the European Union in the first quarter of the year.

“We could be looking at high market volatility in 2017, with contagion to UK banks a very real risk,” he said. “Sound capital positions are therefore critical.”

The BOE test goes beyond economic forecasts, asking lenders to provide stressed projections of their fines and settlements. 

RBS risk

That means RBS may struggle, because the 73% taxpayer-owned lender hasn’t made much progress since it scraped through the BOE’s 2015 check-up: it has yet to settle US probes into the sale of mortgage-backed securities that could cost the bank billions, and is still trying to sell its Williams & Glyn unit.

The Edinburgh-based lender recorded the third-biggest slump in capital buffers among major lenders in stress tests by the European Banking Authority earlier this year, which show it could be susceptible to a weak grading by the BOE, according to analysts at Autonomous led by Christopher Cant.

While Barclays may fare badly in the test because its common equity Tier 1 ratio gives it the lowest starting point among lenders, it has a plan underway to boost capital reserves by selling its African business.

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