At $72.8 Trillion, Presenting The Bank With The Biggest Derivative Exposure In The World (Hint: Not JPMorgan)
29
April, 2013
Moments
ago the market jeered
the announcement of
DB's 10% equity dilution, promptly followed by cheering
its early earnings announcement which
was a "beat" on the topline, despite some weakness in sales
and trading and an increase in bad debt provisions (which at €354MM
on total
loans of €399.9 BN net
of a tiny €4.863 BN in loan loss allowance will have to go higher.
Much higher). Ironically both events are complete noise in the grand
scheme of things. Because something far more interesting can be found
on page 87 of the company's 2012
financial report.
The
thing in question is the company's self-reported total gross notional
derivative exposure.
And
while the vast majority of readers may be left with the impression
that JPMorgan's mindboggling $69.5 trillion in gross notional
derivative exposure as
of Q4 2012 may
be the largest in the world, they would be surprised to learn that
that is not the case. In fact, the bank with the single largest
derivative exposure is not located in the US at all, but in the heart
of Europe, and its name, as some may have guessed by now, is Deutsche
Bank.
The
amount in question? €55,605,039,000,000. Which,
converted into USD at the current EURUSD exchange rate amounts to
$72,842,601,090,000....
Or roughly $2 trillion more than JPMorgan's.
The
good news for Deutsche Bank's accountants and shareholders, and for
Germany's spinmasters, is that through the magic of netting, this
number collapses into €776.7 billion in positive market value
exposure (assets), and €756.4 billion in negative market value
exposure (liabilities), both of which are the single largest asset
and liability line item in the firm's €2 trillion balance sheet
mind you, and subsequently collapses even further into a "tidy
little package" number of just €20.3.
Of
course, this works in theory, however in practice the theory falls
apart the second there is discontinuity in the collateral chain as we
have shown repeatedly in thh past, and not only does the €20.3
billion number promptly cease to represent anything real, but the
netted derivative exposure even promptlier become the gross number,
somewhere north of $70 trillion.
Which,
of course, is the primary reason why Germany, theatrically kicking
and screaming for the past four years, has done everything in its
power, even "yielding" to the ECB, to make sure there is no
domino-like collapse of European banks, which would most certainly
precipitate just the kind of collateral chain breakage and
net-to-gross conversion that is what causes Anshu Jain, and every
other bank CEO, to wake up drenched in sweat every night.
Finally,
just to keep it all in perspective, below is a chart showing
Germany's GDP compared to Deutsche Bank's total derivative exposure.
If nothing else, it should make clear, once and for all, just who is
truly calling the Mutually Assured Destruction shots in Europe.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.