Sunday, April 13, 2008

Offshore Banking Woes


What Happens if Your Offshore Bank Goes Belly-Up?
The sub-prime catastrophe has spread far beyond the United States. Certain foreign banks have already been swept up into this sub-prime mess. And it's hardly beyond the realm of plausibility that more foreign banks could fail.
That concern came into particularly sharp focus last week, when Switzerland's largest bank, UBS AG, said it expected to write off a staggering US$40 billion in sub-prime losses.
So far, financial regulators have succeeded in preventing a widespread banking panic. The closest we've come to that nightmare scenario is in the United Kingdom, where the government nationalized Northern Rock Bank after a run on the bank by depositors last September. Not to mention last month's mysterious acquisition by JP Morgan-Chase of Bear Stearns.
It remains to be seen whether regulators can continue to sweep multi-billion-dollar portfolio problems under the rug through expanded borrowings, selective capital injections, or further nationalizations. But if you have substantial assets in any bank - either abroad or in your home country - you don't want to wait for the regulators to act. You should take action now to evaluate how safe your assets really are in your accounts.
The assets in your account at any bank are either on or off the bank's balance sheet. If your assets are on the bank's balance sheet, and the bank becomes insolvent, then your assets are at risk. Your funds may or may not be protected by a national deposit insurance scheme. If they're not, you're simply another unsecured creditor of the bank.
Assets that are on the bank's balance sheet include checking accounts, savings accounts, money market accounts the bank operates, "unallocated" holdings of precious metals, and (at some banks) CDs. The basic operating account for a bank (called a current account, giro account, or other names) is also on the balance sheet. At offshore private banks, this operating account is the springboard for all other investments.
When you purchase securities - stocks, bonds, etc. - through your offshore account, the bank establishes a "safe custody" account for these investments. Those assets are off the bank's balance sheet. Precious metals the bank holds for you in "allocated" storage are also off its balance sheet.
Naturally, investments in safe custody are subject to market risk, but they won't be affected if the bank becomes insolvent. However, if your offshore bank goes belly up, it will likely be part of a larger economic catastrophe that would decrease the value of any securities portfolio. Also, there may be a period of time where the securities an insolvent bank holds in safe custody can't be traded.

No comments: