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China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

China’s $1.7 trillion hangover

Up to 40% of China’s $1.7 trillion LGFV loans are at high risk of default. What’s a panicking Beijing to do?

January 2006

LBBW emerges anew from cocoon of state guarantees

Siegfried Jaschinski has a grand ambition for Landesbank Baden-Württemberg to be a regional, if not a national, champion of wholesale banking in Germany. A year after he became the bank’s chairman, Philip Moore spoke to Jaschinski about the realistic prospects of a self-proclaimed house bank.


It is too early to judge if Germany’s Landesbanks have already been impacted by the loss, in July, of the Anstaltslast and Gewährträgerhaftung state guarantees that infuriated private banks by artificially protecting their triple-A ratings.

Their existing liabilities are grandfathered, and most have in any case extensively pre-funded themselves. As a result, they have yet to be exposed to the full glare of capital market scrutiny by issuing unsecured debt on the basis of standalone ratings.

But when they are, the general consensus among ratings agencies, credit analysts and even competitors is that Landesbank Baden-Württemberg (LBBW) will be the player best prepared to compete without the cocoon of its former state guarantees. “Manageable” was how Standard & Poor’s (S&P) described the loss of the guarantees for LBBW in a report released shortly before their official removal. S&P’s long term rating on...


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