The
International Monetary Fund has warned of new risks to global financial
stability.
Low
interest rates could lead investors to buy riskier assets as they seek better
returns, the IMF says.
In a
new report, it says there is a danger that this behaviour could derail the
economic recovery, which the IMF has already described as "weak and
uneven".
The
report says the risks require "increased vigilance".
The
IMF has already given its assessment of the wider economic recovery and is
concerned about
its lack of vigour.
This
new report takes a closer look at the health of the financial system. Its
problems gave us the global recession and it will have a central role in
determining the strength and durability of the recovery.
Side-effects
The
conclusions are unsettling. The root of the problem is the actions taken by
central banks to stimulate the recovery.
The
IMF report does not for a moment dispute that they are necessary. But, as
medication often does, they have had side-effects.
The
measures involved are very low interest rates, now in place in the US, Britain,
Japan and the eurozone, for example.
There
are other steps - such as quantitative easing or creating new money to buy
financial assets - taken by some central banks.
The
impact has been to drive down the return investors can get from lending money
to borrowers with good credit ratings, or from buying their bonds - which are a
way of borrowing using tradable financial assets.
So
in what is often called a "search for yield", they have bought other
types of assets - such as shares, and bonds issued by less creditworthy
borrowers - driving up the prices of those assets.
Low
interest rates have also made it more attractive to borrow money to make
speculative investments.
Signs of excess
The
IMF says that now prices "in virtually all the major asset classes are
simultaneously stretched".
Volatility
in financial markets is low and so is the premium that high-risk borrowers have
to pay - the extra interest it costs them compared to a safer borrower.
The
report says: "What is is unusual [about these developments] is that they
have occurred simultaneously across broad asset classes and across countries in
a way that is unprecedented."
In
particular, it says: "Growing signs of financial excesses are emerging in
the United States."
There
is a risk of financial instability, the IMF says. Rising interest rates -
expected in the US and Britain next year - would trigger falls in bond prices.
Geopolitical
developments could also trigger a change in attitude to riskier investments.
There
is some good news in this report. Banks are generally in better shape - they
have more capital - than at the start of the crisis. And household debt has
come down from its peaks in some countries, including the US, Britain and
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But
big picture for this report is one of a financial system that still needs a
very wary eye on it.
BBC
Business
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