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17 September 2018

Financial Times: Private equity buying banks is not a good mix


One deal does not necessarily signal a trend. But it is to be hoped that Blackstone’s €1bn purchase last week of a 60 per cent stake in Luminor, a Baltic lender — one of the largest private equity banking deals of the past decade — does not mark the start of a series of such acquisitions.

In itself, the deal looks straightforward. If approved by regulators, it will offer Sweden’s Nordea and Norway’s DNB, Luminor’s owners, a convenient way to reduce exposure to a market they no longer view as a priority. Blackstone sees a chance to boost Luminor’s return on equity, which lags behind some other Nordic banks, and says the Baltics are a high-growth market.

That makes this deal different from the rescues over the past two years of Germany’s HSH Nordbank by US private equity groups led by Cerberus and JC Flowers, and of Portugal’s Novo Banco by Lone Star of the US — or from JC Flowers’ stake in the UK’s Kent Reliance building society in 2010. Those deals either saved ailing institutions or met regulators’ demands to find new owners for parts of restructured banks.

While specialist investors may offer the only viable option in exceptional cases, any tendency in which banking becomes a normal destination of private equity funds seems ill-advised. Indeed, widespread mixing of private equity with banking could be a recipe for disaster.

Both sectors are highly leveraged. Boosting one with the other would be toxic. If the financial crisis taught us anything, it is that spiralling levels of leverage are not a good idea. A decade since the crisis erupted, the continuing weakness of parts of Europe’s banking sector makes prudence even more well-advised. High volumes of non-performing loans continue to afflict several banking markets; economic growth remains subdued.

Banking should not become just another investment sector for private equity houses. Problems could quickly escalate and move from the latter to the former, potentially leading to systemic failures. The consequences could be dangerous. Blackstone’s acquisition may well turn out a success for all parties involved. But it is not one that other PE counterparts should be rushing to copy. Banking regulators should keep a close eye on such deals.

Full article on Financial Times (subscription required)



© Financial Times


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