More
on the sale of interest rate swaps to farmers,. Which we covered last
week
Risk
experts: banks left farmers in dark
Risk
and derivative experts say banks, including ANZ National Bank and
Westpac, should not have sold complex interest rate swaps to farmers
Rob
Stock
26
August, 2012
Claims
are also emerging that though swaps were sold as "interest rate
risk management" tools, unsophisticated farmers lacked the
expertise and tools to monitor their position, and were provided with
little or no ongoing support or advice to manage their interest rate
risks.
One
of New Zealand's best-known risk advisers, Roger Kerr from
Asia-Pacific Risk Management, said he believed at least a proportion
of the swaps were sold to farmers who did not know what they were
buying.
Kerr
said the banks appeared to have done little to help the farmers to
manage their swap exposures as the global financial crisis emerged,
interest rates plummeted and farmers were left "straitjacketed".
"These
banks marketed these as something better than term loans, more
flexible, but they didn't explain the full story to people," he
said.
"Some
of the banks were very aggressive in seeing this as the way of
generating profits for their dealing rooms."
He
likened the swap sales to the damaging sale of foreign currency loans
for farmers nearly three decades ago.
In
the past two weeks, Sunday Star-Times has reported on claims that
many billions of dollars of farm loans were "covered" by
interest rate swaps sold by banks.
Farmers
bought the swaps as a kind of insurance against rises in interest
rates but, when interest rates fell, they had the effect of locking
them into interest rates in some cases over 10 per cent on their
loans.
It's
a situation that appears to echo stories emerging from Britain, where
swaps were also sold to farmers and small businesses, though there it
led to an investigation by the Financial Services Authority, which
concluded there was widespread mis-selling.
While
farmers continue to call this newspaper to talk about the extra
interest they have found themselves paying, or the large break fees
they faced to unwind their swap positions, the banks concerned are
refusing to talk to Sunday Star-Times about the allegations.
Kerr
said that to use risk-management tools such as interest-rate swaps, a
buyer needed the systems and expertise to monitor their position.
Farmers
we have spoken to said they did not understand they had to monitor
their positions, and had no tools to do so.
They
also say that, when their interest rate costs started to rise as a
result of their swap positions, they did not receive any advice from
the bank about what to do. Several said they struggled to get their
banks to explain what was happening to them.
"Some
of the borrowers thought the bank was going to continue to service
them with interest rate recommendations and managing their swaps.
They didn't," said Kerr, who has consulted with farmers about
their swap positions.
"When
interest rates collapsed, they ran away," he said.
Once
interest rates started moving against businesses with swaps, there
were actions they could take to ameliorate their positions, but the
farmers we have spoken to were not aware of this.
"What
happened with these farmers is they were forgotten about," Kerr
said.
Farmers
have now sent Sunday Star-Times some of the marketing and disclosure
documents provided to them by ANZ National Bank and Westpac.
One
National Bank presentation document said: "Interest rate swaps
are transacted directly with an NBNZ interest rate market specialist
who is available on an ongoing basis to discuss interest rate trends
and opportunities to alter the risk profile over the term of the
swap".
Another
sent by a different farmer says: "NBNZ Rural Banking Interest
Rate Risk Management is about utilising interest rate market
specialists equipped with strong market knowledge and flexible tools
to recognise those opportunities and threats, to proactively manage
this risk."
Under
the "What we do . . ." section of the presentation, it
says: "Advise and recommend to RMs/clients interest rate risk
strategies, including appropriate fixed rate financial objectives."
The
farmer who sent that to us said: "There was no proactivity at
all."
One
derivatives specialist told Sunday Star-Times the disclosure he had
seen from the banks did not misrepresent the nature of the swaps,
though there was a question in his mind over illustrations showing
possible scenarios which assumed an unchanging bank margin.
One
of the biggest sources of anger for the farmers we have spoken to is
that the banks lifted their margins as they were allowed to under the
swap agreements.
But
the expert also said the complexity of pricing swaps meant that
farmers would have had no way of assessing the real costs of the
instrument they were buying.
He
also questioned whether there were sufficient people expert enough in
swaps in New Zealand to have advised farmers independently.
"How
does a farmer in New Zealand get an independent price on that
product? Where does he get it from?" he asked.
He
said using swaps to manage interest-rate risk really required
expertise. "You would need a proper chief financial officer like
Telecom and Fonterra have," he said.
"Taking
swaps on board in a volatile economic environment is akin to
gambling, if you are not an expert.
"The
banks should have more sense than to expose their clients to this."
Exactly
what will happen next is unclear, but Kerr believes that there will
be a repeat of the 1980s when there was a scandal over banks selling
farmers low-interest, Swiss-franc-denominated loans which exposed
them to high currency risk.
Then
lessons were learnt by farmers and the banks but no formal
investigation or court-testing of the facts ever occurred.
"Go
back to the late 80s. They tried to get group actions together, but
the banks stopped it before it got to court," Kerr said. "The
banks will do deals so it does not get into the public arena."
But
Kerr says it is too simple just to blame the banks.
Businesses,
including farmers, need to always apply the principle of caveat
emptor to the products and services they buy, and so they, and their
advisers, must accept some of the fault.
THE
TERMS AND CONDITIONS
When
farmers bought interest rate swaps many say they trusted their bank
adviser. But despite now saying they did not understand the nature of
the swaps, and blaming the banks for not explaining their potential
pitfalls, they signed complex swap agreements, and acknowledged terms
and conditions which said they did.
One
National Bank swap document also states that the bank had no
"fiduciary" duty of care towards the farmer buying the
swap. It reads: "Each party is capable of assessing the merits
of and understanding (on its own behalf or through independent
professional advice), and understands and accepts, the terms, and
conditions and risks of that transaction.
It
is also capable of assuming, and assumes, the risks of that
transaction. No party is acting as a fiduciary for or an adviser to
the other in respect of that transaction." It also says that, in
entering the transaction, the farmer is not relying on any
communication made by the bank.
But
despite the existence of such warnings, and of signed agreements,
some farmers have told Sunday Star-Times of the deals their banks
have done with them. Speaking anonymously as they say they have
signed gagging agreements not to speak of the deals, they report
banks waiving break fees on swaps, which can run into hundreds of
thousands of dollars, or cutting their margins on loans.
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