Broad-Based Capital Injections

Finland’s 1992 Capital Injection

Purpose

“The aim is to counteract the deterioration of deposit banks’ solvency, which significantly limits their ability to lend and thus worsens the recession as investment and consumer demand decline.” (Finland 1992)

Key Terms

  • Announcement Date
    Supplementary Budget: proposed March 1992; approved April 29, 1992; terms defined June 1992
  • Operational Date
    Autumn 1992
  • Termination Date
    Not defined
  • Program Size
    FIM 8 billion (U.S. $1.8 billion)
  • Peak Usage
    FIM 7.9 billion deployed to 56 cooperative banks and 22 savings banks of which FIM 5.0 billion went to five banks
  • Other
    Capital Characteristics: Tier-1 capital, noncumulative convertible preferred shares with an interest rate set slightly above market rate that increased gradually
  • Other
    Injection’s Percent of Total Tier-1 capital: 14% of the sectors’ regulation-prescribed capital
  • Notable Features
    - Offer to all banks regardless of their solvency - Amount per institution was related to their RWA or in proportion to their balance-sheet size and their off-balance-sheet commitments - Losses could only eat into the capital after a bank’s distributable equity capital and the reserve fund had been exhausted - Banks could apply only twice, final time in December 1992

Key Design Decisions

Part of a Package 1

Communication 1

Governance 1

Program Size 1

Eligible Institutions 1

Individual Participation Limits 1

Capital Characteristics 1

Other Conditions 1

Restructuring Plan 1

Fate of Existing Board and Management 1

Exit Strategy 1

Key Program Documents

Taxonomy

Intervention Categories:

  • Broad-Based Capital Injections

Countries and Regions:

  • Finland

Crises:

  • Finnish Banking Crisis 1990s