| Click for the Finfacts Ireland Portal Homepage |

Finfacts Business News Centre

   
Home 
 
 News
 Irish
 Irish Economy
 EU Economy
 US Economy
 UK Economy
 Global Economy
 International
 Property
 Innovation
 
 Analysis/Comment
 
 Asia Economy

RSS FEED


How to use our RSS feed

 
Web Finfacts

See Search Box lower down this column for searches of Finfacts news pages. Where there may be the odd special character missing from an older page, it's a problem that developed when Interactive Tools upgraded to a new content management system.

Welcome

Finfacts is Ireland's leading business information site and you are in its business news section.

We provide access to live business television and business related videos from: Bloomberg TV; The Wall Street Journal; CNBC and the Financial Times. Click image:

Links

Finfacts Homepage

Irish Share Prices

Euribor Daily Rates

Irish Economy

Global Income Per Capita

Global Cost of Living

Irish Tax 2008

Climate Change Reports

Global News

Bloomberg News

CNN Money

Cnet Tech News

Newspapers

Irish Independent

Irish Times

Irish Examiner

New York Times

Financial Times

Technology News

 

Feedback

 

Content Management by interactivetools.com.

News : International Last Updated: Apr 24, 2009 - 5:31:05 PM


Global Financial Stability Report: IMF says losses on US subprime assets/securities will total $1.45 trillion - more than 50% above April estimate; Financial firms face reducing assets, raising capital and implementing new business models
By Finfacts Team
Oct 8, 2008 - 5:05:25 AM

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

Global Financial Stability Report:With financial markets worldwide facing growing turmoil, internationally coherent and decisive policy measures are required to restore confidence in the global financial system, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) says in a new report. The IMF estimates that the losses on US subprime assets and securities will ultimately total $1.45 trillion (€1.07trn; £828bn), more than 50% above its April 2008 estimate of $945bn, and it called for "a comprehensive set of measures that could arrest the currently destructive process".

"Failure to do so could usher in a period in which the ongoing deleveraging process becomes increasingly disorderly and costly for the real economy,"it said in its Global Financial Stability Report (GFSR), released on Tuesday. Financial institutions have been shedding bad assets, reducing borrowing and seeking new capital, but strains on the system intensified dramatically in mid-September following the collapse or near-collapse of several key institutions.

Confidence in financial institutions and markets has been badly shaken by the global credit turmoil that has its roots in the U.S. subprime mortgage market but that has spread globally to other financial sectors. The GFSR said that risks in a number of areas have risen, especially credit risk, and market and liquidity risks.

The latest GFSR examines how credit deterioration has continued to spread to more sectors and countries—from subprime to prime mortgages, and from residential mortgages to consumer credit, commercial real estate, and now to the corporate sector. European countries are also feeling the pain—some of them also had high house prices and overextended borrowers. Emerging markets appear increasingly at risk as well.

Also on Tuesday, John Lipsky, First Deputy Managing Director of the IMF, who is a former JP Morgan manager, said in a speechto the National Association of Business Economics in Washington DC, that "there is no doubt that the financial sector in general is still overscaled. At the same time, the sector is in the midst of a high-speed restructuring in terms of both institutions and instruments."

"It is clear that financial institutions' inevitable deleveraging will involve three aspects: reducing assets, raising capital, and, ultimately, implementing new business models," Lipsky said. "The difficult and protracted nature of this deleveraging process is likely to keep credit growth under pressure for some time, representing a drag on the economic recovery," he added.

Consistent and coherent

"Today's GFSR report shows how serious a crisis we currently face,"IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn stated."The time for piecemeal solutions is over. I therefore call on policymakers to urgently address the crisis at a national level with comprehensive measures to restore confidence in the financial sector. At the same time, national governments must closely coordinate these efforts to bring about a return to stability in the international financial system."

Experience from past global financial crises suggests that the policies to tackle systemic instability need to be consistent and coherent across the affected countries. The GFSR provides a set of principles on which to guide the scope and design of measures that can help to bolster confidence in financial institutions and markets. Most important: developing a three-part approach to break the downward spiral of disorderly deleveraging—taking illiquid and impaired assets from banks, injecting capital into viable institutions suffering unduly from incorrect market perceptions, and aiding dysfunctional funding markets get back to normal.

"A comprehensive approach, if consistent among countries, should be sufficient to restore confidence and the proper functioning of markets and avert a more protracted downturn in the global economy. We believe that a more resilient financial system will ultimately emerge from the restructuring and deleveraging process that is under way," Jaime Caruana, Director of the IMF's Monetary and Capital Markets Department, told a press briefing.

Mounting losses

Financial institutions' losses continue to mount, and unless they receive sufficient capital infusions, the viability of some of them is uncertain. The GFSR estimates that losses on U.S.-based loans and securities may rise to some $1.4 trillion—a significant increase from the estimate of $945 billion in the April 2008 GFSR.

While roughly $560 billion of the losses had already been realized through end-September 2008, bank share prices have continued to plummet and their revenue prospects have stalled. Raising new capital has become much harder, making it much more difficult for banks to repair their aching balance sheets.

The most serious risk going forward is an intensifying adverse feedback loop between the financial system and the real economy— in which financial institutions' distress leads to impaired credit intermediation and slower economic growth, which in turn leads to further credit deterioration. The GFSR—using forecasts from the IMF's World Economic Outlook—projects that credit growth in the United States, the euro area, and the United Kingdom, will slow to near zero over the next year before picking up again in 2010.

Deleveraging: necessary, inevitable

The GFSR says that the deleveraging process is both necessary and inevitable—but it need not be disorderly. Current market conditions have meant that asset sales and the run-off of maturing assets have made the process difficult because prices of the many illiquid mortgage-backed securities are depressed and buyers are scarce. Private market solutions to put a floor under these securities haven't worked.

Recently, the U.S. government approved a plan to have the U.S. Treasury use about $700 billion, under some restrictions, to purchase U.S.-based troubled assets with the hope of curtailing "fire sales" of these assets and establishing realistic prices. But a major issue for the plan is the difficulty for anyone, include a cadre of government-chosen experts, to determine future cash flows from these assets under such uncertain conditions.

Three-part solution

Supporting asset prices is necessary, but it is only one element in a three-part solution, the GFSR notes. Financial institutions need to raise more capital—an estimated $675 billion—but cannot do so under current conditions. Some potential investors stepped forward earlier, but now are reluctant. Current business models and revenue streams are more uncertain because mortgage securitization has nearly halted, making private capital investments in banks more chancy.

Without the ability to obtain new capital from private markets, recapitalization using the public sector balance sheet should now be considered, as solvency concerns have led to a seizing up of interbank funding markets. Finally, public action is being taken to provide much-needed liquidity to the financial sector and its clients.

Spread to emerging markets

The IMF said until recently, emerging markets had appeared resilient to spillovers from mature markets. But in recent weeks that changed. Capital outflows have intensified, leading to tighter external and, in some cases, domestic liquidity conditions. The problems were more serious in those economies with leveraged banking systems and corporate sectors that rely on international financing.

Although "decoupling"—the notion that emerging markets' dependence on mature economies has declined—had faded from most economists' vocabularies, some held out hope that this time emerging markets would not succumb. It is true that emerging economies have made progress on a number of fronts.

Overall, they have higher fiscal balances, less sovereign debt, more foreign exchange reserves, better policy making structures, and healthier economies. Many of these improvements are related to the recent commodity price boom. Nonetheless, the linkages to global markets and economies have continued to grow and these have begun to overwhelm the improved domestic fundamentals.

Moreover, although many emerging economies made fiscal and financial improvements, others remain vulnerable. The report highlights the reasons some countries may be at particular risk—for instance those dependent on terms-of-trade improvements or external credit.

The IMF said that Emerging European economies have relied on credit supplied by foreign banks or foreign investors through the issuance of local bank bonds abroad. This latter source has dried up and even though foreign banks say they remain committed to their subsidiaries in these countries, if funding conditions in their home country become difficult they may have little choice but to slow their credit extension abroad as well as at home.

Related Articles


© Copyright 2007 by Finfacts.com

Top of Page

International
Latest Headlines
Markets: Greece back at the brink; Barclays reports dip in 2011 profits - - cuts cash bonuses
Friday Newspaper Review - - Irish Business News - - February 10, 2012
Markets: Credit Suisse reports Q4 2011 loss; UK-listed Greencore has strong start to its financial year; ECB expected to keep rates on hold
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 09, 2012
Markets: Smurfit Kappa reports pre-tax profits trebled in 2011; Nokia to cut 4,000 jobs and move production to Asia
Wednesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 08, 2012
Markets: UBS reports plunge in 2011 profit: BP reports profit surge; Santander adds €2.3bn to provisions; Toyota's 9-month profit dips; Glencore to buy Xstrata
Tuesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 07, 2012
Markets News: Aer Lingus reports rise in January traffic
Monday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 06, 2012
Markets: Ryanair warns Aer Lingus on covering €400m deficit in staff pension fund
Friday Newspaper Review - - Irish Business News - - February 03, 2012
Markets: Deutsche Bank plunges to loss in Q4 2011; Baltic Dry Index sinks to 25-year low on shipping glut
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 02, 2012
Markets News: Amazon.com's fourth-quarter earnings fell 57%
Wednesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - February 01, 2012
Markets News: EU25 leaders agree to sign fiscal compact agreement in March
Tuesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 31, 2012
Markets News: EU leaders expected to approve text of new intergovernmental treaty today
Monday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 30, 2012
Spain's jobless rate at end 2111 was 22.85%; Samsung reports record profits; Baltic Dry Index down 27 days in a row
Friday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 27 , 2012
Markets News: Japan's struggling giants NEC and Nintendo expect big losses; NEC to cut 10,000 jobs
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 26, 2012
Markets News: Japan reports first annual trade deficit since 1980; World Economic Forum opens in Davos
Wednesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 25, 2012
Markets News: Irish retail sales continued to fall in Q4 2011; India's Reserve Bank switches stance to economic growth
Tuesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 24, 2012
Markets News: EU finance ministers to discuss new bailout fund and Greece restructuring talks
Monday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 23, 2012
Markets: Year of Dragon set to commence as China's manufacturing weakness persists; Greencore decamps to London
Friday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 22, 2012
Markets News: 1880 vintage Eastman Kodak has little left but a patents' trove; Readymix in takeover talks
Thursday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 19, 2012
Markets News: Tullow Oil says revenues doubled to $2.3bn in 2011
Wednesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 18, 2012
Markets News: RBS sells Dublin-based aviation leasing unit for $7.3bn; C&C reports strong Christmas drinks performance
Tuesday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 17, 2012
Markets News: Sarkozy to continue to implement reforms despite ratings downgrade; DCC says good weather is bad news
Monday Newspaper Review - Irish Business News and International Stories - - January 16, 2012