CoCos in Europe: What Is Wrong – and How to Fix It?

Edoardo Martino (University of Amsterdam)
Casimiro Nigro (Goethe University Frankfurt)
Tom Vos (Maastrict University)

Abstract

On March 19 2023, UBS Group AG agreed to buy Credit Suisse. The merger was necessary to avoid the collapse of Credit Suisse and the deal was supported by the Swiss regulator with the decision to write down 17bn CHF of contingent convertible bonds.

Contingent convertibles bond (CoCos) are hybrid capital instruments that should absorb bank losses in going concern. CoCos entered into the regulatory landscape with the Basel III Accords in 2010. However, in the first decade of application, their going-concern loss absorption was never activated.

This article analyses the reasons why CoCos have not kept their promises in terms of prudential regulation. Building on banking theory, the analysis of financial regulation, and several case studies, the article identifies a vicious link between the regulatory framework and CoCos’ contractual design.

Thereafter, the article proposes a set of reforms that would break this vicious circle, enabling CoCos to actually safeguard the going concern value of solvent banks as they approach distress. The proposed reforms would limit the autonomy of market players in defining the CoCos’ contractual design and lower the threshold for their write-down or conversion. Importantly, this article argues that, should these reforms prove unimplementable, CoCos should be eliminated from the prudential framework and bank equity requirements should be increased accordingly.

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