December 7, 2024

DealBook: Cyprus Shows How Not to Do a Bailout

Cyprus can’t really be about Cyprus, can it? After all, the banking sector in that country pales in comparison to things like the London Whale trade and the amount of capital the big banks have to raise to meet Basel III.

Some will say it is about depositor insurance. Fair enough.

But by now, I’d think investors would be smart enough to know that when you start chasing yield in small countries with outsize banking sectors, bad things will happen. And deposit insurance is only as good as the sovereign standing behind the insurance.

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Cyprus does show that, for all the faults with the financial crisis rescues in the United States, the European Union still finds ways to show us how poorly a bailout can be handled. Why exactly did we restrict the Federal Reserve’s powers under Section 13(3), which used to allow the Fed to lend to all kinds of financial firms?

Cyprus also shows that even an allegedly “safe” bankruptcy system can be too big and quite dangerous. After all, the banks in Cyprus were noted for their reliance on deposits rather than other forms of dodgy short-term finance like repo and conduits and what not.

Cyprus also shows the difficulty of imposing rigor on an ex post basis. I get the desire to impose the cost of the bailout on the outsiders with allegedly shady connections to quasi-democratic countries. But it seems a bit late in the day to suddenly become concerned about money laundering and tax evasion. Nobody noticed this before March 2013?

The really big issue with Cyprus, that is so often lost in the articles about bank runs and Russian bad guys, is what Cyprus means for the euro zone and the European Union generally.

Surely, Cyprus has to be high on the list of countries that maybe should not have been let into the euro. But if Cyprus can leave, what about Greece, and Spain, and …

And this is not only about the distressed countries. Once one country can leave, any other country can consider it, too, whenever they have a beef with the European Union. What if the Netherlands or Finland decides it doesn’t want to be bit actors in Germany’s dramas any more? What if Britain … well, that one’s easy.


Stephen J. Lubben is the Harvey Washington Wiley Chair in corporate governance and business ethics at Seton Hall Law School and an expert on bankruptcy.

Article source: http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2013/03/20/cyprus-shows-how-not-to-do-a-bailout/?partner=rss&emc=rss