The head of the International Monetary Fund has warned that the global economy faces risks to its financial stability because of the turbulence in the banking sector.
Kristalina Georgieva, the managing director of the
Washington-based lender of last resort, said rising interest rates had put
pressure on debts, leading to “stresses” in leading economies, including among
lenders.
Georgieva said the world economy would expand by just 3% in
this year as rising borrowing costs, combined with the war in Ukraine and
scarring from the Covid-19 pandemic, would suffocate growth.
Adding to a growing chorus of warnings from economic
leaders, the IMF chief said it was clear that risks to financial stability had
increased after the recent collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the
Swiss-government brokered rescue of Credit Suisse by UBS.
Investors will be watching shares in Deutsche Bank when
European markets reopen on Monday after they led the sell-off in banking stocks
on Friday.
“At a time of higher debt levels, the rapid transition from
a prolonged period of low interest rates to much higher rates – necessary to
fight inflation – inevitably generates stresses and vulnerabilities, as evidenced
by recent developments in the banking sector in some advanced economies,”
Georgieva said at a conference in Beijing.
Her stark comments came as the European Central Bank (ECB)
said the recent turmoil in banking would have a real-world impact on business
and growth.
The EU central bank fears problems in the banking sector
will result in lower growth and dampen inflation, the ECB vice-president, Luis
de Guindos, said in an interview with Business Post.
“Our impression is that they will lead to an additional
tightening of credit standards in the euro area. And perhaps this will feed
through to the economy in terms of lower growth and lower inflation,” he said.
The outlook for the UK after Brexit is also presenting a
challenging trade-off between low growth and high inflation, putting central
bankers in a tricky position when it comes to increasing interest rates.
The head of Britain’s public spending watchdog underlined
the negative impact of leaving the EU for the UK economy, saying it would cause
economic scars even deeper than the pandemic.
“We think that it in the long run [Brexit] reduces our
overall output by around 4% compared to had we remained in the EU,” Richard
Hughes, the chair of the Office for Budget Responsibility, told the BBC. “It’s
a shock to the UK economy of the order of magnitude to other shocks that we’ve
seen from the pandemic, from the energy crisis.”
Guindos said that as economic stress increased in the UK, EU
and the US, so-called shadow banks, a term for non-bank financial institutions,
could further expose cracks in the financial system. “We do believe it could be
a source of problems for the whole financial system, and we need to be
careful,” he said.
These non-banks, which are outside the supervision powers of
central banks such as the ECB, had taken “a lot of risks during the times of
very low-interest rates” and all while “growing as share of the financial
system in Europe”, Guindos continued.
Regulators in Switzerland continued to grapple with the
fallout from the collapse of Credit Suisse. Public pressure has mounted on
regulators after a vast package of support for the bank before its emergency
merger with fellow Swiss bank UBS. The controversies over the bailout have
added to echoes of the global financial crisis caused by the recent toppling of
major financial institutions in the US and Switzerland.
The Swiss financial regulator said it was “still open” to
taking disciplinary action against managers at Credit Suisse. However, it was a
lower priority than “preserving financial stability” by overseeing the marriage
between Switzerland’s second largest lender and UBS, said Finma’s head, Prof
Marlene Amstad.
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