Interbank FX dealers should show more respect toward their core customers – institutional FX companies – Op Ed

Deutsche Bank, one of the world’s largest FX dealers, is experiencing even more turmoil as shares drop a further 7.5%, however it is astonishing that the bank does not value its main customers – the institutional FX firms of London, not the tumbleweed-strewn, bailout-dependent retail abyss that is Europe

Deutsche Bank has had a disastrous year and a half in terms of revenues.

So much so, that its appalling corporate performance attracted the attention of German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble earlier this year, his response to the company’s extremely precarious position being “don’t panic!”

Back in October 2015, FinanceFeeds first reported way ahead of the mainstream media that the interbank FX giant had estimated a third quarter loss of £4.4 billion, with sentiment from within the FX industry, especially surrounding the circumstance in which the loss of approximately 5.8 billion Euro was contrary to the forecast of 1 billion Euro profit.

Deutsche Bank is the second largest interbank FX dealer in the world with 14.54% of global market share in 2015.

“No, I have no concerns about Deutsche Bank,” Mr. Schaeuble told Bloomberg Television in Paris after a meeting of French and German finance officials in October last year.

Indeed, Mr. Schaueble does not have concerns. The dreadful position that Germany’s major institutions, along with many European peers find themselves in is pretty much aligned with the entire fiscal policy and economic ineptitude that marks out the entire European Union as a socialist, anti-business abyss whose major cities utilize 1970s infrastructure and whose leaders have never in their entire careers left the chambers of a government office.

The real reason Mr. Schaueble has no concerns is because he knows that on home territory the inability to modernize, the lack of participation in global electronic markets and the overbearing ineptitude of Europe’s business environment does not ultimately matter, because never mind Deutsche Bank’s several thousand retail traditional banking facilities which conduct business with High Street customers in a method which is about as modern and relevant to today’s global financial market economy as the Merneptah Stele in ancient Egypt, he knows that just one Deutsche Bank office out of thousands provides the vast majority of profitable business for the firm.

That’s right, the Canary Wharf facility, from which Deutsche Bank was responsible in 2014 for handling 14.54% of the entire world’s FX order flow. Not the European retail banking branches which make unsecured loans at almost zero interest to people with no collateral and no income.

If it were not for that one office, Deutsche Bank would be either moribund, or the subject of the usual mainland European cap-in-hand trip to the International Monetary Fund or European Central Bank for a bailout.

The only reason that Deutsche Bank has not resorted to selling its debt to its own retail customers – the European taxpayers – is because of its FX business, the very business that it shows disdain for, and the very business whose top of the line location in London among the giants of the entire world’s financial and technological ecosystem is the subject of derision by the German government, the European Commission and shamefully, Deutsche Bank itself.

Today, a further drop emerged for Deutsche Bank shareholders as the year and a half of low share prices and corporate loss has been emphasized even further.

Shares in Deutsche Bank plummeted yesterday by a massive 7.5% to 10.55 EUR following German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s statement that no state assistance to the bank would be proffered.

Speculators are now considering that Deutsche Bank is too big to fail, but the reality is that the firm is living from its FX order flow commission revenue, yet biting the hand that feeds it continually, along with other interbank dealers at the top of the market share list, by continually restricting credit to prime brokerages and non-bank electronic communication networks, and even worse, making the occasional call for a move to Europe from London.

If Deutsche Bank wants to disappear into oblivion, the way to do it is to continue to restrict Tier 1 liquidity to massive primes with huge capital bases and to continue to deny banking facilities to FX brokerages for lodging client trading capital and operational resources, as these firms are the lifeblood of the banking sector.

Without aggregators, or without the likes of Thomson Reuters FXall, ICAP’s EBS, Currenex or the large prime of primes in London there would be no more Deutsche Bank, along with several other potential casualties.

Too big to fail really means too reliant on London’s institutional FX order flow to continue to bolster a failing business based on old fashioned principles in the failing economic mire that is the European Union. Yet they will not open commercial bank accounts for FX firms, will not hold client funds, will expose their own core business customers and most loyal and worthwhile generators of business to the dangers of having to place capital with 3rd tier banks which FinanceFeeds investigated last week.

This banal business model is rather like a major car manufacturer spending millions of dollars employing people to go to everyone’s house and confiscate their driving licenses.

Comment from within the FX industry on Deutsche Bank’s position is of great interest indeed.

Neil Wilson, an analyst at ETX Capital in London this morning stated “Deutsche is too big to fail. I don’t see how the German government could let it go under. There would have to be a backstop along the way and, in good European tradition, there’ll be a fudge found to sort it, I’m sure.”

Speaking to mainstream media this morning, Jasper Lawler, Market Analyst at CMC Markets said “There is a fear that Deutsche Bank is setting up as Europe’s Lehman Brothers moment. US banks have been taking advantage of the difficulties in the European banking sector by taking market share but trouble at a multinational with a big presence in US capital markets like Deutsche Bank carries huge counterparty risk.”

In the spring of this year, Deutsche Bank Co-CEO John Cryan stated publicly that institutional investors should trust the counterparty credit rating that the bank has from Moody’s Investors Service (!!), rather than the cost of insuring Deutsche Bank’s debt, which grew dramatically during the early parts of this year. Interesting, bearing in mind that Moody’s keeps downgrading it.

The prime brokerage gained client balances even as hedge funds suffered their worst withdrawals since the financial crisis, yet Deutsche Bank’s market share dropped from 14.54% in 2014 to 7.5% in 2015 for global FX interbank order flow.

“When we focus clients on the A2 rating, I think they’re more than satisfied with us as a counterpart,” Cryan said on a call with analysts. “In our prime finance and the repo business, they like the service level, they like the products we offer, and we are keen to grow balances there.”

“We’ve made a lot of progress with most of our major institutional counterparts in communicating to them” on total loss-absorbing capital, Mr. Cryan also said, despite the firm having not provided a summary of quarter on quarter earnings for the first part of 2016.

This outmoded commercial attitude toward providing good quality Tier 1 liquidity to the top quality non-bank prime brokerages of this highly advanced industry must stop.

The sooner that banks such as Deutsche Bank, which will lick its wounds for a considerable amount of time if it continues to focus on its defunct home market rather than its standing as one of the top liquidity providers in the world’s financial capital of London, the sooner they will not only drag themselves out of the financial mire, but they will end their paranoia toward extending credit to the very OTC derivatives firms that are their most lucrative and least risky commercial customers.

Deutsche Bank must make a priority that London’s institutional sector is the place to do business, and the place which will haul it out of the financial mire, not its native Germany, for reasons that are quite apparent indeed.

Will any of such banks repatriate their Canary Wharf offices to Europe long term? No chance!

Read this next

Fintech

PayPal ends protection for certain crypto transactions

PayPal has announced changes to its terms of service that alter the protections provided for non-fungible token (NFT) transactions. Effective May 20, the payment giant will no longer cover NFT purchases under its buyer protection policy, and it will limit seller protections for NFT sales exceeding $10,000.

Retail FX

Plus500 sees modest growth in Q1 revenues, EBITDA margin decreases

Israeli-based, but London-stock market listed Plus500 Ltd (LON:PLUS) today reported a 4% increase in revenue for the first quarter of 2024, with figures rising from $207.9 million in Q1 2023 to $215.6 million.

Technical Analysis

FTSE 100 Technical Analysis Report 16 April, 2024

FTSE 100 index can be expected to fall further toward the next support level 7760.00, former strong resistance from last year, acting as the support after it was broken this January.

Digital Assets

Cyprus keeps FTX EU license suspended until September

The Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) has extended the suspension of FTX.com’s CIF license, which allowed the insolvent platform to operate throughout Europe, until September 30, 2024.

Metaverse Gaming NFT

Mon Protocol and Pixelverse Forge a Groundbreaking Partnership to Revolutionize Blockchain Gaming

Mon Protocol and Pixelverse make history in the annals of Blockchain gaming as they set up the architecture for the melding of their technologies.

Chainwire

Nimiq Pay Launch: A New Standard For Self-Custodial Crypto Payments

Nimiq, the blockchain ecosystem for payments that is designed to make cryptocurrency easy for everyone to use, has taken the first concrete steps towards its goal of becoming the world’s most widely-accepted digital asset for payments with the launch of Nimiq Pay.

Inside View, Interviews

Exclusive: GoMining’s Mark Zalan wants to democratize opportunities of Bitcoin halving

As the Bitcoin community counts down to the upcoming Bitcoin halving, Mark Zalan, CEO of GoMining, shared exclusive insights into how the company is gearing up for this pivotal event in the cryptocurrency world.

Digital Assets

Umoja Partners with Merlin Chain to Launch Revolutionary Bitcoin-Based Synthetic Dollar – USDb

Umoja, an innovative smart money protocol, has embarked on a strategic partnership with Merlin Chain, a leading Bitcoin Layer-2 network, to introduce USDb, the first Bitcoin-based, high-yield synthetic dollar.

Crypto Insider

Bybit Report Highlights Imminent Bitcoin Supply Shortage and Rising Scarcity Post-Halving

Bybit, recognized as one of the top three cryptocurrency exchanges globally in terms of trading volume, has recently published a comprehensive report highlighting the future supply constraints of Bitcoin.

<