Who or what is an IKB? I know there are lots of obscure European banks, but
IKB is obscure even by German standards. And somehow – really, no one
seems to have the foggiest notion how – IKB’s Rheinland Funding vehicle
seems to have contrived to amass an eye-popping €17 billion ($23 billion)
in US
subprime exposure.
The good news is that there isn’t any systemic risk here. IKB is supporting
Rheinland Funding, and KfW, the state-owned giant which, it turns out, owns
38% of IKB, is
supporting IKB.
The bad news is that this is proof that there are fund managers out there running
truly enormous portfolios and who (a) seem to have absolutely no idea what they’re
doing, and (b) seem to be doing it without anything in the way of useful oversight.
The FT’s Ivar Simensen reports that "the warning came
just 10 days after the bank had reassured investors about its market positions."
The FT’s Gillian Tett says that it’s a German thing:
It is a peculiar irony of Germany’s business world that while the country
produces hordes of sophisticated, ultra-smart engineers, it is notably poor
at churning out the type of sophisticated bankers it also needs. As a result,
many German financial institutions are woefully ill-equipped to handle complex
derivatives risk (or indeed, capital market risks at all).
But of course Deutsche Bank is the one financial institution which seems to
be making a
lot of money out of the subprime mess.
Germany’s largest bank is poised to reap a bonanza of at least $270 million
and as much as $540 million from a strategy that enabled its traders to sell
subprime mortgage loans with derivatives contracts that appreciated as the
U.S. housing market suffered its worst slump in 16 years.
I’m quite sure that the Deutsche Bank trade wasn’t put on by Germans, but Germans
were certainly ultimately responsible for it. What’s more, it was Deutsche Bank
CEO Josef Ackermann who dropped
the dime on IKB to the German regulators.
I am worried about this IKB news, however. If hedge funds lose a lot of money,
I’m not going to shed too many tears. But a lot of the global liquidity glut
came not from hedge funds but from large and much more boring pools of capital,
like Rheinland Funding. If they start suffering, some real people – as
opposed to financial-market professionals – could start to feel pain.