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Cheap money exposes weakness of German banks

Frankfurt skyline with the Commerzbank headquarters is pictured in Frankfurt, Germany February 11, 2016. REUTERS/Ralph Orlowski/File Photo (Reuters)

By Jonathan Gould FRANKFURT (Reuters) - European Central Bank money-printing has exposed the fault lines in Germany's banking system, forcing its sprawling network of lenders to rethink their business models and slash costs. Profits at one-time flagship banks of Europe's largest economy are near the bottom of the pile among their regional peers. Germany's nearly 2000 commercial, mutual and government-owned lenders have some of the thinnest margins in the region. For years, most German banks' strategy was based around winning new business by offering fee-free accounts and cash bonuses for switching lenders. They used the margins on their lending businesses to subsidize the cost of their retail operations and payment systems. When rates were higher that model covered up inefficiencies in their businesses. German banks' costs ate up around 73 percent of their earnings compared with 64 percent in the rest of the euro area in 2015, according to credit ratings agency Moody's. This cost-to-income ratio has been above the bloc's average for the last five years, the data show. But negative ECB interest rates have exposed a dependence on interest margins and throttled earnings needed to invest in improvements and make sure they have the required amount of capital to protect the bank on a rainy day. The pressure is expected to lead to mergers and closures over time but in the meantime, banks are trying new strategies. Earlier this month Bavarian bank Raiffeisen Gmund - one of more than 1,000 German co-operative lenders - broke a long-held taboo. It said it saw no alternative but to start charging wealthy clients to deposit their money, as it did not want to cut back services or merge with other lenders. [nL8N1AT1RY] "The only way we could really save on costs would be to reduce our presence in the market," the bank's head Josef Paul said. Postbank, one of the pioneers of free customer accounts, this month introduced a 3.90 euro monthly fee for the "vast majority" of its 5.3 million current account holders. [nL8N1B01CA] Other banks are investing more in their digital offerings, but are still reluctant to give up their labor-intensive bricks-and-mortar branches. Michael Kemmer, head of German banking association BDB, said such steps makes sense but the number of lenders in the fragmented market means ones that take the lead on fees and charges may end up losing business without reaping the benefits. "The question is whether competition will allow it," he said. Online bank ING-Diba says it tends to see an uptick in regional demand for its free account when local rivals increase fees. "Fees can go up somewhat but you cannot completely offset the negative margin," ING Vice-Chairman Koos Timmermans told Reuters, adding that the German ING unit had no plans to scrap cost-free status for its accounts. BERLIN HELPLESS The German government is aware of the banking sector's steady decline in earnings. But the decentralized political and economic structure, which gives a strong role to federal state governments, means Berlin is unable to force through wholesale reform of the financial sector. "We see it but what are we supposed to do?" asked a high-ranking government official, who spoke on condition of anonymity. Regional politicians enjoy the prestige and power to influence the local economy through public-sector savings banks and the landesbanks that provide them with wholesale funding. "Politicians have traditionally looked at the German banking system as a utility to serve retail, and more importantly, SME and corporate clients to support the German economy," said Katharina Barten, bank analyst at Moody's. The financial crisis that started nearly a decade ago saw No. 2 lender Commerzbank, a clutch of state-owned landesbanks and property lenders rack up billions of euros in losses. The government bailed them out, upsetting taxpayers and briefly raising pressure for reform. Over the last five years, however, the banks have shaken off state support and largely put their finances in order, removing urgent pressure for consolidation and leaving the fragmented and low-margin market little changed. The finance ministry says that the mix of international and regional lenders of different sizes proved its worth in the financial crisis. Smaller banks played a major role in ensuring unfettered lending to local businesses. "German banks must find their own way to surmount the challenges facing them," a ministry spokeswoman said. FRAGILE FUTURE There is no letup to competition on the horizon, regardless of whether banks are successful in making account charges stick. "Each bank is pursuing some growth strategy but considering the saturation of the market and low demand, this is not something that would point to any recovery of margins; that's going to remain a problem," Moody's Barten said. Slashing costs - branches, staff and product offerings - is the main lever banks still have at their disposal but using it requires skill. UniCredit's HVB has closed about half its branches and Deutsche Bank is pruning rapidly. Total bank branches fell by about 1,300 last year to 34,000, Bundesbank data show. But severance payments boost upfront costs and branch closures can poison relations with employees and clients. Mergers and controlled closures of failed banks are expected to winnow down the players in the German market over the next few years. The ranks of public sector savings banks have fallen by a few a year but still number more than 400. The co-operative bank network is making faster progress - shrinking by around 50 banks per year - and is expected to fall below 1,000 this year. Local shareholders of four cooperative banks in a region north of Stuttgart voted in June to create VR-Bank Neckar-Enz to better face mounting regulatory and digital costs. "At the same time, we predict a prolonged period of low interest rates that will successively reduce our most important source of revenue: net interest income," the banks said in explaining the need for the four-way merger. ($1 = 0.8856 euros) (Additional reporting by Gernot Heller, Reinhard Becker, Alexander Huebner, Arno Schuetze, Andreas Kroener and Frank Siebelt; editing by Anna Willard)