foreign banks

Californian tech bank SVB sows global fear about rising cost of money

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Californian tech bank SVB sows global fear about rising cost of money

SVB. A sign for Silicon Valley Bank headquarters is seen in Santa Clara, California, March 10, 2023.

Nathan Frandino/Reuters

It's a wake-up call not just for investors, who have until now largely shrugged off the rapid rise in interest rates, but also for banks, which are vulnerable to a sharp sell-off in government bonds

LONDON, United Kingdom – For months, investors had shrugged off the threat of rising interest rates. That changed this week.

US tech bank SVB Financial Group’s scramble for fresh capital, after losing $1.8 billion selling a package of bonds to meet depositor demands for cash, sparked a global rout in bank stocks – and a rethink.

In SVB’s case, venture capital clients pulled money from the bank because they struggled to raise funds elsewhere, forcing its hasty sale of bonds at a loss. On Friday, March 10, banking regulators closed the lender amid a run on deposits, the largest bank failure since the 2008 global financial crisis.

It’s a wake-up call not just for investors, who have until now largely shrugged off the rapid rise in interest rates, but also for banks, which are vulnerable to a sharp sell-off in government bonds.

“This is the first moment since rates started to rise where systemic risk has really arisen,” said Florian Ielpo, head of macro at Lombard Odier Investment Managers.

“It’s just tremors of it so far but we need to be extra cautious.”

After more than a decade of economic life support by way of easy policy and the flooding of markets with trillions in cash that even spawned virtual crypto money, central banks have slammed into reverse.

Bonds and company shares suffered hefty losses last year as borrowing costs shot up, yet the resilience of major economies, as well as China’s post-pandemic reopening and an unexpected reverse in energy prices buoyed the general mood – until now.

Major developed economies alone have lifted rates by more than 3,000 basis points in this tightening cycle, the fastest pace since the 1980s in a bid to tame prices.

Bets on further hikes have ratcheted up in recent days as inflation remains stubbornly high, with Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday, March 8, reaffirming his message of higher and potentially faster rate hikes.

Unease triggered by SVB left European banking stocks nursing their biggest weekly losses since September and US bank shares have slumped more than 12% this week, their biggest weekly drop since early 2020. Germany’s Commerzbank issued a rare statement playing down any threat from SVB.

Demand for US dollars in the currency derivative markets meanwhile surged on Friday, another sign of stress trickling through the system.

Bank watch

After triggering the great financial crash more than a decade ago through high-risk bets on housing loans, banks are now shooting back up the list of investor worries.

SVB’s loss on the sale of its $21-billion available-for-sale securities, consisting mostly of US Treasuries, has sparked concerns about the bond portfolios of US banks.

Regulators have said US banks had unrealized losses of more than $620 billion on securities, underscoring the scale of the risks.

Banks are not required to immediately recognize paper losses on a bond, allowing some of these risks to slumber on their books.

Jason Benowitz, senior portfolio manager at CI Roosevelt, said SVB’s risks were not unique with many banks sitting on such unrealized losses because rates have moved so rapidly.

“Those aspects of the SVB crisis are common to the banking system more broadly,” he noted.

Bonds lose value when yields rise in a high rate environment. Smaller banks are at greater risk, analysts said.

US benchmark 10-year yields surged by more than 200 basis points last year and almost 40 bps in February alone on renewed rate-hike bets.

“The SVB situation is a reminder that many institutions are sitting on large unrealized losses,” said AJ Bell investment research director Russ Mould. Geoffrey Yu, senior EMEA market strategist at BNY Mellon, said investors could “take heart” from signs that the financial system has taken global rate hikes in its stride.

But he added “it’s a reminder that there is a repricing perhaps needed to reflect that higher rates do translate into loan losses and some banks will face stress.”

“It’s just a wake-up call that there’s still a chance you will identify pockets of risk and that you will see loan losses and a rise in bankruptcies.” – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!