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Financial stability risks: old and new

Hyun Song Shin*


Bank for International Settlements
4 December 2014
Brookings Institution
Washington DC
*Views expressed here are mine, not necessarily those of the BIS
1

Rear view mirror


Our understanding of crisis propagation is heavily influenced by

the experience of the 2008 crisis; watch words are


Credit growth
Leverage and maturity mismatch
Complexity
Insolvency and Too-Big-To-Fail
Still relevant for key EMEs and some advanced economies (BIS

2014 Annual Report, chapter 4)


But it does not follow that future bouts of financial disruption

must follow the same mechanism as the past


Yet accountability exercises can focus on known past weaknesses

Two themes
Changing pattern of financial intermediation

Shift from banking sector to capital markets


Focus on market liquidity
Shift from banks to long-term investors as protagonists
Impact on real economy; what happens in financial markets
dont always stay in financial markets
Global perspective

US dollar as global unit of account in debt contracts


Stronger dollar constitutes a tightening of global financial
conditions
Impact on global growth and further upward pressure on
the dollar
3

Direct and Intermediated Finance

Intermediated
Credit

Banks

Ultimate
Borrowers

Claim
Ultimate
Creditors

Directly granted credit

Credit to US non-financial corporate sector


Amount outstanding, in trillions of US dollars

6
5
4
3
2
1
0
1990

1992

1994

Total mortgages

1996

1998

Bank loans n.e.c.

2000

2002

2004

Other loans and advances

2006

2008

Commercial papers

2010

2012

2014

Corporate bonds

Source: US Flow of Funds.

Changes in outstanding corporate bonds and loans1


to US non-financial corporate sector
In billions of US dollars

600
300
0
300
600
900
1990

1993
Bond change

1996

1999

2002

2005

2008

2011

2014

Loan change

Loans are defined as sum of mortgages, bank loans not elsewhere classified (n.e.c.) and other loans .
Source: US Flow of Funds.
1

Year-on-year rate of growth in international bank claims1


In per cent

48

20

32

10

16

10

2001
VIX (lhs)

2002

2003

2004

2005

Credit to non-banks (rhs)

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Credit to banks (rhs)

The vertical lines indicate: 2007 beginning of global financial crisis; 2008 collapse of Lehman Brothers.
1 Includes all BIS reporting banks cross-border credit and local credit in foreign currency.
Sources: Bloomberg; BIS locational banking statistics by residence.Source: Bloomberg.

Two phases of global liquidity


Banking sector-led credit growth (2003 2008)

Procyclical leverage driven by wholesale bank funding as


marginal source of finance
Driven by combination of
- steep yield curve
- certain path of short-term rate
Bond market-led credit growth (2010 )
Long-term investors as creditors
Focus on corporate borrowers, especially EME corporates
Driven by low long rates and flat yield curve

16.0

3 month
12.0

Jan-12
Jan-10
Jan-08
Jan-06
Jan-04
Jan-02
Jan-00
Jan-98
Jan-96
Jan-94
Jan-92
Jan-90
Jan-88
Jan-86
Jan-84

0.0

10 year
14.0

Percent

US Treasury 10 year and 3 month rates

10.0

8.0

6.0

4.0

2.0

Term premium used to be determined by short rate; but


not any more
12 month change in term spread (%)

5.0
4.0
3.0
2.0

Jan 1985 June 2010

1.0
0.0
July 2010 Dec 2012

-1.0
-2.0
-3.0
-4.0
-5.0 -4.0 -3.0 -2.0 -1.0 0.0

1.0

2.0

3.0

4.0

12 month change in 3 month rate (%)

10

McCauley, McGuire and Sushko (2014): US yield curve


flattening associated with US dollar offshore bond issuance

Estimates based on 16-quarter rolling regressions for growth in offshore US dollar bond market credit on lagged term premium; controlling for the financial
market conditions using lag VIX; the dependent variable persistency is controlled for via the lag term. All the variables enter in first-differences or in logdifferences, expressed in per cent. The ten-year real term premium is estimated using term structure models as the deviation in nominal yield from the sum
of expected growth rate, expected inflation, and inflation risk premium.
Sources: Bloomberg; Consensus Economics; BIS international debt statistics; BIS locational banking statistics by residence; authors calculations

11

US dollar-denominated credit to borrowers outside US

US
border
Banks
3.8

Banks
1.0 trillion

Non-bank
borrowers

1.3 trillion

Bond
investors
2.7

Bond
investors

Source: McCauley, McGuire and Sushko (BIS 2014); data as of Dec 2013.
12

US dollar credit to non-banks outside the United States


Outstanding stocks (USD trillion)

Per cent

65

60

55

50
99

00

01

02

03

04

05

Bank loans to non-banks (lhs)


Bank loan share, including non-bank financial bonds (rhs)

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

13

14

Bonds issued by non-bank financial sector (lhs)


Bonds issued by non-financial sector (lhs)

Notes: Bank loans include cross-border and locally extended loans to non-banks outside the United States. For China and Hong Kong SAR, locally extended loans
are derived from national data on total local lending in foreign currencies on the assumption that 80% are denominated in US dollars. For other non-BIS reporting
countries, local US dollar loans to non-banks are proxied by all BIS reporting banks gross cross-border US dollar loans to banks in the country. Bonds issued by US
national non-bank financial sector entities resident in the Cayman Islands have been excluded.
Sources: IMF, International Financial Statistics; Datastream; BIS international debt statistics and locational banking statistics by residence; authors calculations.

13

US dollar credit to non-banks outside the United States


Year-on-year growth rate, in per cent

30

20

10

10
2000

2001

2002

2003

Bank loans to non-banks

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

Bonds issued by non-financial sector

Notes: Bank loans include cross-border and locally extended loans to non-banks outside the United States. For China and Hong Kong SAR, locally extended loans
are derived from national data on total local lending in foreign currencies on the assumption that 80% are denominated in US dollars. For other non-BIS reporting
countries, local US dollar loans to non-banks are proxied by all BIS reporting banks gross cross-border US dollar loans to banks in the country. Bonds issued by US
national non-bank financial sector entities resident in the Cayman Islands have been excluded.
Sources: IMF, International Financial Statistics; Datastream; BIS international debt statistics and locational banking statistics by residence; authors calculations.

14

US dollar credit to non-banks outside the United States


By counterparty country, in trillions of US dollars

0
1998
World (rhs)

2000

2002
Euro area (lhs)
United Kingdom (lhs)

2004

2006

Other advanced countries (lhs)


Offshore centres (lhs)

2008

2010

2012

Emerging markets (lhs)


Non-reporting countries (lhs)

Notes: Bank loans include cross-border and locally extended loans to non-banks outside the United States. For China and Hong Kong SAR, locally extended loans
are derived from national data on total local lending in foreign currencies on the assumption that 80% are denominated in US dollars. For other non-BIS reporting
countries, local US dollar loans to non-banks are proxied by all BIS reporting banks gross cross-border US dollar loans to banks in the country. Bonds issued by US
national non-bank financial sector entities resident in the Cayman Islands have been excluded.
Sources: IMF, International Financial Statistics; Datastream; BIS international debt statistics and locational banking statistics by residence; authors calculations.

15

Local currency appreciation leads to lending boom


Local
corporate
A

Regional
Bank

Stage 3
Local
USD
currency

Global Bank
A

L
Stage 1

Stage 2
USD

USD

USD

USD

Wholesale
Funding
Market

Local currency appreciation strengthens borrower balance sheet


Creates slack in lending capacity of local banks; creates slack in global bank
lending capacity; local and global banks drive credit boom

Higher interest rate differential vis--vis the dollar amplifies boom


Source: Bruno and Shin (2014) http://www.bis.org/publ/work458.pdf
16

USD effective exchange rates


2000=100, quarterly averages, an increase indicates appreciation of the US dollar.

120

100

80

60
79

84

NEER (FED, major currencies)

89

94

REER (FED, CPI-based, broad)

99

04

09

14

REER (OECD, ULC-based)

Sources: FED; OECD, Economic Outlook and Main Economic Indicators; national data.

17

Traditional boundaries
are not sufficient in understanding the second phase of global liquidity
Border

Bank

A
Local
currency

Local
currency

Local
currency

US
dollars

International
capital market

Non-financial
corporation
18

Using overseas subsidiaries as financial vehicles: case from


the 1920s

Source: Borio, James and Shin (2014) http://www.bis.org/publ/work457.pdf


19

Surrogate intermediation: borrowing and holding deposit claims


Leverage ratio of EME corporations1, ratio to earnings

2.4

1.8

1.2

0.6

0.0
2009
Gross leverage

2010

2011

2012

2013

Net leverage

Firm-level data from S&P Capital IQ for 900 companies in seven EMEs; simple average across countries; gross leverage = total
debt/earning; net leverage = (total debt-cash)/earnings.
1

20

Annual gross issuance of international debt securities by EM


non-bank corporations: residence basis
Emerging market economies1 (weighted average)
Maturity in # years
12

10
$ 152 bn

4
2000

2002

2004

2006

2008

2010

2012

2014

Year
Bulgaria, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hong Kong SAR, Hungary, Indonesia, India, Iceland,
Korea, Lithuania, Latvia, Mexico, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, Thailand,
Turkey, Venezuela and South Africa.
1

Sources: Dealogic; Euroclear; Thomson Reuters; Xtrakter; BIS.

21

Longer maturity of outstanding debt securities


Maturity of debt securities has been increasing
Average maturity of outstanding EME non-bank corporate

international debt securities now exceeds 8 years


Longer maturities have two effects

Mitigates roll-over risk for borrowers


But only at expense of increased duration risk for investors
Longer duration may exacerbate potential for non-linear

market disruptions due to flight by investors


Possibility of perverse impact of increased maturity on roll-over

risk if non-linear disruptions shut down dollar bond market for


extended period
22

Projected redemptions on international debt securities of


EM non-bank corporations
Emerging market economies, in billions of US dollars
Residence basis

Nationality basis

120

120
90

90
60

60
30

30
0

0
16

18

20

22

US dollar denominated

24

26

28

30

16

18

20

22

24

26

28

30

Domestic currency denominated

Non-US dollar foreign


currency denominated

23

Projected redemption of foreign currency denominated EME corporate bonds


In billions of US dollars

10
8
6
4
2
0
Q4 2014

Q1 2015
Foreign US dollars
currency
Oil and Gas

Q2 2015

Real Estate/Property

Q3 2015
Q4 2015
Foreign US dollars
currency
Utility and Energy
Other

Q1 2016

Q2 2016

Q3 2016

Q4 2016

Country sample: Bulgaria, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hong Kong SAR, Hungary, Indonesia, India,
Iceland, Korea, Lithuania, Latvia, Mexico, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, Thailand, Turkey,
Venezuela and South Africa. Source: Dealogic.

24

Projected redemptions of securities of EM non-bank


corporations: by nationality basis
Emerging market economies1 (weighted average)
USD bn

600

450

300

150

0
16

18

20

22

Issued on any market

24

26

28

30

International debt securities

Bulgaria, Brazil, Chile, China, Colombia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hong Kong SAR, Hungary, Indonesia, India, Iceland,
Korea, Lithuania, Latvia, Mexico, Malaysia, Peru, Philippines, Poland, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Slovenia, Thailand,
Turkey, Venezuela and South Africa.
1

Sources: Dealogic; Euroclear; Thomson Reuters; Xtrakter; BIS.

25

Yields of local EM government bonds and the


EM exchange rates
Five-year govt bond yields

Volatility of yields

The exchange rate


2010=100

%
7

0.045

100

0.030

90

0.015

80

0.000

4
2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

70
2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

The black vertical line corresponds to 1 May 2013 (FOMC statement changing the wording on asset purchases).
Countries included: Brazil, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mexico, the Philippines, Poland, South Africa and Turkey.

26

Elements in possible distress loop


1.

Steepening of local currency yield curve

2.

Currency depreciation, corporate distress, freeze in corporate


CAPEX, slowdown in growth

3.

Runs of wholesale corporate deposits from domestic banking


sector

4.

Asset managers cut back positions in EME corporate bonds


citing slower growth in EMEs

5.

Back to Step 1, and repeat...

Shin (2013) http://www.frbsf.org/economic-research/events/2013/november/asiaeconomic-policy-conference/Shin-AEPC2013.pdf


27

Leverage-like behaviour without leverage


Relative performance evaluation

Ranking influences asset gathering ability (La Spada (2014))


The real business of money management is not managing
money, it is getting money to manage [WSJ 16/11/95]
Selling volatility through writing straddles and then hedging
price moves with delta hedging
Marking to market with thin secondary market
Risk limits and mandates on minimum credit quality

What scope for feedback loop with real economy?


What scope for interactions with other regulatory/accounting

restrictions in place for governance motives?

28

Asset managers derivatives positions


Weekly change in institutional asset managers net long positions; 000 3-month Eurodollar futures contracts

250
0
250
500
750
1,000
Apr 14

May 14

Jun 14

Jul 14

Aug 14

Sep 14

Oct 14

Nov 14

Source: Bloomberg.

29

Unfamiliar problems
Asset managers (not banks) are at the heart of transmission

mechanism in the Second Phase of Global Liquidity


Textbooks say long-term investors are benign, not a force for

destabilization
How do we adjust to the new world?

30

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