London - Investors
are holding more cash than at any time since the Lehman Brothers collapse to
protect themselves against volatile financial markets, presenting them with a
dilemma - where to hold that money when banks are looking shaky.
When the European Central Bank stepped up efforts to provide
liquidity to banks in late 2011, financial markets settled down and the chances
of a catastrophe scenario, in which banks fail and depositors lose their money,
became more remote.
But investors are still mindful that the unthinkable, while
highly unlikely, is not impossible, giving pause for thought to institutions
and wealthy individuals with sums too large to be covered by existing
compensation schemes.
A monthly survey of British investment managers showed in
December cash holdings were at their highest for more than two years, prompted
by worries over the euro crisis.
The panic about bank solvency has not yet reached the levels
seen in the wake of the collapse of Lehman Brothers four years ago, investors
said. One senior private banker said at the height of the post Lehman turmoil
in 2009, a “particularly eccentric” rich client had enquired about putting
large amounts of their wealth in gold and then burying it on their land.
But closer scrutiny of counterparty risks by investors is
currently leading to more use of alternatives to bank deposits like short-dated
debt issued by AAA-rated governments or cash-like instruments such as money
market funds.
“It’s a small chance it’ll happen but it’s big enough that
we think there’s no point in looking for a few extra basis points (of
investment performance) for taking the risk,” said William Drake, co-founder of
London-based investment manager Lord North Street.
Drake said the firm favours putting more money in short-
dated UK government bonds as an alternative to deposits in a bank, while the
crisis continues.
“We think you should be absolutely sure you are going to get
100 pence back out of every pound you put in,” he said.
Britain’s Financial Services Compensation Scheme guarantees
recovery of up to £85 000 per person if a bank fails, protecting the savings of
most people but falling short of the amounts deposited by rich investors or
institutions.
David Scott, chief executive of London-based upmarket
investment manager Vestra Wealth, favours parking clients’ cash in UK banks
that were bailed out by the government during the earlier crisis of 2008 to
2009.
Royal Bank of Scotland is 83% owned by the British
government following a state bailout during the 2008 credit crisis, while
Lloyds Banking Group is 40% state owned.
Having stopped people losing their savings once, the British
government is likely to do it again should the need arise, Scott argues.
“There’s no way the UK government will let a high street
bank go,” he said.
Xenfin Capital, a London-based hedge fund trades using a
small amount of the capital it holds for its clients, mostly very rich private
investors, placing the rest on deposit at cooperatively-owned Dutch lender
Rabobank.
Unlike its main Dutch rivals ABN AMRO and ING Group,
Rabobank did not need state aid during the 2008 credit crisis.
“We use Rabobank as a counterparty due to their high credit
standing, and due to the fact that the London FX Prime Broking desk only deals
in spot FX, and has no exposure to more exotic instruments,” said Nick Hocart,
head of business development at Xenfin.
Many of the investors contacted by Reuters said they are
less nervous now about the chances of financial catastrophe than they were
during 2008-2009.
Efforts by monetary authorities late in 2011 to provide
liquidity to struggling European banks are widely seen as evidence of firm
political will to avert collapse, said Rob Burgeman, a divisional director at
investment manager Brewin Dolphin, who sits on the asset allocation committee.
“You have to do your due diligence but at the same time if
you are with a basket of blue chip banks it is inconceivable that the world
will watch this go to hell in a handcart,” he said.
But four years of financial crisis and extreme events like
Lehman Brothers have undermined assumptions about banks and led to long term
shifts in attitudes about how to manage cash, said Frances Hudson, global
strategist at Standard Life Investments.
“Lehmans started counterparty risk awareness and that’ll be
a lesson that will stay with us for some time,” she said.
“One would hope things would ease at some point but there’s
still a credibility deficit from governments and from the banking system.”