IMF says 'weak tail' of banks could struggle in an economic downturn
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[October 10, 2023] By
Pete Schroeder and Elisa Martinuzzi
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Around 5% of banks globally are vulnerable to
stress if central bank interest rates remain higher for longer, despite
the easing of turmoil in the sector in recent months, the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Tuesday.
A further 30% of banks - including some of the world's largest - would
be vulnerable if the global economy enters a period of low growth and
high inflation, or "stagflation," the IMF also said in its semi-annual
Global Financial Stability Report.
The warning was based on a new, tougher global stress test that the IMF
applied to around 900 lenders in 29 countries following the collapse
earlier this year of California-based Silicon Valley Bank, Switzerland's
Credit Suisse Group and two other U.S. lenders.
"There's a weak tail of banks in many countries," Tobias Adrian,
director of the IMF's Monetary and Capital Markets Department, said in
an interview conducted last week prior to the attacks by Palestinian
Islamist group Hamas on Israel and retaliatory air strikes on the Gaza
Strip.
The IMF adjusted this year's stress test to probe the impact of its
baseline economic scenario of higher interest rates for longer, as well
as the possibility of consumers yanking deposits. Its
"severe-but-plausible" scenario envisages the global economy entering
"stagflation."
"Under the baseline, it's about 5% of banks that are relatively weak in
terms of their capital. And in severe stress, that number goes up to 30%
or sometimes higher," Adrian said.
The IMF did not identify the banks that could be in trouble if those
economic circumstances arose, but they included both small and large
lenders.
"There's certainly some large institutions that could be under pressure
in some scenarios, absolutely," Adrian said, though he noted the recent
U.S. banking crisis showed how even smaller bank failures could
undermine financial stability.
Governments need to aggressively supervise their banks, and examiners
must be more "intrusive" and direct lenders must take more "timely and
conclusive" corrective action, the IMF said. It also said there was an
"urgent need" to improve bank resilience by boosting capital levels.
The report was issued as global financial leaders gathered in Marrakech,
Morocco, for the IMF and World Bank annual meetings.
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The International Monetary Fund (IMF) logo is seen outside the
headquarters building in Washington, U.S., September 4, 2018.
REUTERS/Yuri Gripas/File Photo
INFLATION BATTLE
Recent ructions in government bond markets have been orderly, Adrian
told reporters at a briefing on Tuesday. "The rise in yields has
been quick, but we haven't seen sort of like forced deleveraging or
other market dysfunction," Adrian said.
The difference in bond yields between German government bonds and
those of southern European countries such as Italy which blew out
during the sovereign debt crisis a decade ago remain "well
contained", he added.
The U.S. Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes in 2022 and 2023 led
to heavy losses on the government bond portfolios held by regional
U.S. banks, which in turn spooked depositors and led to a string of
failures in March and early May of this year.
The U.S. central bank held its benchmark overnight interest rate
steady in the 5.25%-5.50% range last month, but signaled one more
quarter-percentage-point hike would likely be needed before the end
of this year to cement inflation's downward path, and that the
policy rate would probably end 2024 above 5%.
Weak banks were considered those whose capital levels fell by more
than five percentage points over the course of the IMF's stress
test, or below a floor of 7%.
Under its baseline, 55 banks representing 4% of global assets proved
weak. Under the stagflation scenario, that number expanded to 215
banks holding 42% of assets.
The report urged central banks to stick with higher rates until
inflation cools, but warned that some investors appear to be too
confident that inflation will fall quickly. "History cautions
against declaring victory too soon and prematurely easing monetary
policy," the report noted.
(Reporting by Pete Schroeder; editing by Michelle Price, Paul Simao
and Chizu Nomiyama)
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