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IMF report warns of global financial risks
By Nick Beams
17 September 2002
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While the global financial system appears to be relatively
stable at present, it could face serious risks in the future arising
from a collapse of investor confidence or a tightening of credit.
This warning is contained in the latest quarterly Financial
Global Stability report released by the International Monetary
Fund last week.
The past few months, it explained, had seen a sharp erosion
of investor confidence, heightened risk aversion, and growing
concerns about the strength and durability of the global recovery
and the pace and quality of corporate earnings which had
repercussions in all of the major equity, credit and foreign
exchange markets.
In the worlds key financial markets, it said, the most
immediate concern is that investor trust and confidence may erode
to the point where investors withdraw en masse from financial
and economic risk-taking.
Deterioration in credit conditions had created a record number
of fallen angels, that is, companies whose outstanding
bonds have been downgraded from investment grade to junk status.
The decline in the value of the dollar, coupled with the continuous
stream of accounting irregularities in the United States,
had raised concerns about how much further the major currencies
would be realigned and the sustainability of capital flows
needed to finance the US current account deficit.
The report noted that as of early last month the global financial
system remained resilient despite major price movements
and significant financial losses for investors and suggested that
there was little evidence now of the type of shifts
in liquidity and credit that could give rise to systemic
problems.
But a reading of the report makes clear that stability
could be a short-term affair. It warned that financial risks could
emanate from both mature and so-called emerging financial
markets.
A major source of instability continues to be the technology,
media and telecommunications (TMT) sector which has sustained
some the heaviest financial losses.
The implosion of the TMT sector in 2000 and that sectors
continued weakness raise the concern that further equity price
corrections could cascade across markets and thereby trigger liquidity
and/or credit events, the report noted. Such a process could
trigger the withdrawal of funds from financial markets, leading
to further sharp corrections in already weak corporate securities
markets, a continued loss of resilience and flexibility by global
financial institutions, and a greater withdrawal of lending even
to low-risk borrowers.
If such a scenario were to develop it could create conditions
in which fear feeds upon fear and panic selling
occurs.
Another source of financial risk is the possibility that the
accumulated losses incurred by major financial institutions could
impair the capital positions either of key institutions or a number
of smaller ones.
This is a particular concern in Europe, where TMT and
energy companies have been hard hit and face significantly higher
funding costs, where insurance and reinsurance companies have
fared poorly recently, and where bank stocks overall have been
devalued about as sharply as the overall European markets.
The report identifies a third source of risk in the possibility
of a rapid slowdown of net capital flows into the United States.
By the end of 2001 these inflows had reached the level of $400
billion a year. Throughout the 1990s, it noted, capital inflows
into US markets were associated with sharp increases in asset
prices and a persistent increase in the value of the dollar. But
to the extent that inflows decline some of the dynamics
associated with the inflows will necessarily be reversed.
Highlighting the dependence of the US on capital inflows, the
report pointed out that it now draws in some 70 percent of net
savings (comprising current account surpluses) available from
the rest of the world.
That dependence was further underscored by other figures released
last week which showed that in the second quarter of this year
the balance of payments deficit widened to a record $130 billion,
beating the previous record of $112.5 billion set in the first
quarter of this year.
The significance of foreign capital inflows for US financial
markets can be seen from the following figures: At the end of
2001 foreign investors held about $1.7 trillion in US equities,
$1.2 trillion in corporate debt and another $1.2 trillion in treasury
debt, representing 12 percent, 24 percent and 42 percent of the
outstanding amounts, respectively.
The report points out that even a 10 percent reduction in these
holdings, resulting from such factors as fears of a further fall
in equity values or a rapid decline in the value of the US dollar
could adversely affect conditions in financial markets.
Summing up the overall outlook the report said that while major
global financial institutions remained resilient,
there were considerable downside risks in the immediate
future.
These include: the possibility of further equity declines and
a worse case scenario of panic selling by both institutional
and retail investors; a further weakening of the balance
sheets and profit outlook of banks and insurers, particularly
in Europe and; an accelerating slowdown in net capital inflows
to the US with the associated potential for substantial
exchange rate movements.
See Also:
Fear of global slump sparks share market
plunge
[4 September 2002]
Is the US economy heading
into deflation?
[29 August 2002]
Bankers' bank sounds some
warnings
[28 August 2002]
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