By STEPHEN 
FIDLER<http://mail.google.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=STEPHEN+FIDLER&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>and
NEIL
SHAH<http://mail.google.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=NEIL+SHAH&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>

LONDON -- The U.S. government's stress tests are fueling concerns that
European banks could be falling behind in their efforts to bolster their own
finances.

Unlike in the U.S., there has been no major policy initiative to force banks
in Europe to increase capital cushions, and governments have intervened only
on a piecemeal basis. Meanwhile, as U.S. banks pile in with efforts to raise
capital from investors, European banks aren't taking advantage of a stock
rally to do the same.
 [image: [Bank of Ireland]] Getty Images

The Bank of Ireland and five other financial institutions would need
billions of dollars more to meet some capital standards used in the U.S.
stress testing of its banks, one analysis found.

"Compared to the U.S., the European banking system is rapidly being left
behind," said Philip Finch, bank analyst at UBS AG. "If anything, the rally
that has taken place has allowed complacency to come back at the bank level
and at the policy level."

European banks have raised only about 40% of the $1 trillion they need to
cover losses since the beginning of the financial crisis and maintain
healthy capital levels, according to the latest estimates from the
International Monetary Fund.

By contrast, U.S. banks have raised or announced plans to raise about
two-thirds of the $666 billion the IMF believes they need.

The divergence partly reflects a different attitude toward how to scrutinize
battered banks. The U.K., one of a handful of European countries to
stress-test its banks, never disclosed the parameters or detailed results.

A spokeswoman for the Committee of European Bank Supervisors said national
authorities are carrying out stress tests of their domestic banking systems,
with results due by September. The examinations are aimed at assessing the
European financial system's resilience to shocks, not the capital needs of
individual banks. The findings and methodology won't be disclosed publicly.
 [image: [Swedbank]] Reuters

Some bankers prefer the discreet approach. The U.S. strategy was "not the
way to instill confidence in the process," Stephen Green, chairman of HSBC
Holdings PLC, said in an interview Monday, noting the haggling between banks
and regulators. But that openness boosted the credibility of the U.S. stress
tests -- and last week's results -- in the eyes of some analysts and
investors.

One reason European banks are behind those in the U.S. in raising capital:
The economic downturn took as much as a year to ripple across the Atlantic
Ocean. That delayed the pain for most banks, except a small number of
European financial institutions that invested in shaky U.S. assets or U.K.
banks hurt by a decline in real-estate values.

European banks now face potential losses from risk-taking that U.S. banks
largely avoided, such as investments in Eastern Europe, which is suffering
from a severe recession. Banks in Europe also are more vulnerable to
skittish wholesale money markets because of their higher ratios of loans to
deposits.
 [image: [European banks]]

Weakened banks in Europe have a potentially bigger economic impact than U.S.
financial institutions do, since some 80% of lending to companies in Europe
is through banks, compared with only one-fifth in the U.S. If replenishing
capital levels causes European banks to pull back on lending, it could slow
economic recovery.

Of the $600 billion in additional capital still needed by European banks,
financial institutions in the 16-nation euro zone need $375 billion,
followed by $125 billion in the U.K. and $100 billion elsewhere on the
Continent, according to the IMF. The IMF's figures are larger than other
estimates, partly because they include all banks. In Germany, many of the
so-called Landesbanks owned by individual German states are seen as needing
more capital.

The U.K. has injected £80 billion ($121.88 billion) of new capital into its
banks and is insuring some £562 billion of bank assets under a government
program aimed at putting a lid on losses.

Analysts at investment firm Keefe, Bruyette & Woods Ltd. who attempted to
replicate the U.S. stress tests for European banks came up with what they
called a "broadly positive" result. Six banks with widely traded shares,
including 
Commerzbank<http://mail.google.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=CBK.XE>AG
and Danske
Bank<http://mail.google.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=DANSKE.KO>AS,
would need to raise a total of only about €8 billion ($10.9 billion)
in
capital to meet the 4% equity Tier 1 capital ratio used in the U.S. tests.

In reality, the European banks probably would want to raise a lot more
capital -- as much as €60 billion -- to maintain investor and customer
confidence under a bad scenario similar to one used by the U.S. government,
said Andrew Stimpson, a KBW analyst.

Tonny Thierry Andersen, finance chief at Danske Bank, said the Danish bank
raised about 26 billion kronor ($4.76 billion) in early May, making it the
best-capitalized bank in the Nordic region. A representative for Commerzbank
said the German bank is "capitalized adequately."
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124207929839408119.html


-- 
We must have friendship for all; we must be merciful toward those that are
in misery; when people are happy, we ought to be happy; and to the wicked we
must be indifferent. These attitudes will make the mind peaceful.

*Swami Vivekananda*

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