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New disclosure required for banks' covered bonds

Thursday 10th May 2012

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New Zealand banks issuing covered bonds will be required to register their programmes with the Reserve Bank and disclose the pool of assets that investors could call on if the bank defaulted.

Covered bonds are becoming increasingly popular as a source of core funding as banks seek to bolster their balance sheets in response to tougher capital adequacy rules being imposed globally as a response to banking sector under-capitalisation revealed during the 2008 global financial crisis.

Finance Minister Bill English tabled legislation covering the new regime to Parliament today, saying it would give covered bonds investors greater certainty "in the unlikely event of a bank defaulting."

The New Zealand branches of Australian banks, including Bank of New Zealand and Westpac, have issued the bonds ahead of their parent banks, as Australian restrictions on such bond issues have only recently relaxed.

Covered bonds are debt securities where the bond holder is an unsecured creditor of the issuing bank, but holds a secured interest in a separate ‘cover pool’ of assets.

The central bank already imposes a limit on issuance of covered bonds to balance the benefits of covered bond issuance against the impact on unsecured creditors, although their value as a "long term source of relatively stable finance" was recognised, said English.

"They also allow banks to diversify their funding by providing access to new investors and to a funding market that has been very resilient, even during the global financial crisis.

The RBNZ register would offer greater clarity for investors and depositors as to which assets are set aside for the benefit of covered bond holders.

“Providing a legislative framework will give investors greater legal certainty as to the treatment of cover pool assets in the unlikely event that the issuing bank defaults. Such frameworks already exist in most other countries with covered bond markets,” said English.

The new framework is expected to come into effect this year, with a transition period to enable the registration of existing covered bonds programmes.

BusinessDesk.co.nz



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