Section 2: Credit risks to the UK banking system.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The outlook for the economy – May 2011 Peter Andrews, Bank of England Construction Industry Council May 2011.
Advertisements

Section 2 : Structure of the UK financial system.
Inflation Report February 2014 Demand. Chart 2.1 Contributions to average quarterly GDP growth (a) (a)Average contributions to quarterly GDP growth (chained-volume.
Section 5: Prospects for financial stability. Sources: Markit Group Limited and Bank calculations. (a)Probability of default, derived from CDS premia,
Inflation Report August Output and supply Chart 3.1 GDP and sectoral output (a) (a)Chained-volume measures. GDP is at market prices. Indices of.
Monetary Policy in Extraordinary Times Prof. David Miles CEPR Lecture, London Business School Wednesday 23 rd February.
Section 4: Prospects for financial stability. Sources: Bank of England and Bank calculations. (a) Percentage change on a year earlier in the stock of.
Visual summary. World equity prices during crises(a) Sources: Global Financial Data Inc. and Bank calculations. (a) Previous peaks were: 1929 crash =
Financial stability report 2007:1 24 May CHAPTER 1 Financial markets.
Financial Stability Report 2007:2 4 December 2007.
Overview. Chart 1 European sovereign spreads(a) Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a)Spread of ten-year government bond yields.
Inflation Report May 2011 Demand. Chart 2.1 Contributions to quarterly growth in nominal GDP (a) (a) At market prices. Contributions may not sum to total.
Part A: Global environment. Chart A.1 Greek government bond spreads have risen sharply Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a)
Section 2: Credit risks to the banking system. Sources: Bank of England, FSA regulatory returns and Bank calculations. (a) End-December 2010 adjusted.
Inflation Report February 2012 Costs and prices. Chart 4.1 Contributions to CPI inflation (a) (a) Contributions to annual CPI inflation. Data are non.
FSR 2009:02 26/11/2009. Government support from the Riksbank and the Swedish National Debt Office to financial institutions on the Swedish market SEK,
Chapter 1.
Inflation Report August 2012 Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May Demand Chart 2.1 Contributions to quarterly growth in nominal GDP (a) (a) At market prices. Contributions may not sum to total.
Section 3: Prospects of the UK financial system. Chart 3.1 Asset prices during the recent market turbulence Sources: Halifax, IPD, JPMorgan Chase & Co.,
Financial Stability Report 2005: Summary of the stability assessment.
Section 3: Credit risks to the banking system. Table 3.A UK-owned banks’ claims (a)(b) Sources: Bank of England and Bank calculations. (a) End-June 2010.
Inflation Report August Money and asset prices.
Financial Stability Report 2009: Financial Markets.
Inflation Report May 2013 Demand. Chart 2.1 Contributions to calendar-year GDP growth (a) (a)Chained-volume measures. Components may not sum to total.
Overview. Chart 1 Tail risk (a) (a) In this simple schematic diagram, the distribution of possible events is assumed to be normal. (b) Probability density.
Inflation Report November Demand Chart 2.1 Nominal demand (a) (a) At current market prices.
Norges Bank 11 Executive Board meeting 23 April 2008.
Section 2: Structure of the financial system. Chart 2.1 Major UK banks’ aggregate balance sheet as at end-June 2007 (a) Sources: Bank of England, FSA.
Inflation Report November Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report February Money and asset prices.
Chapter 1. Sovereign debt Percentage of GDP Sources: Reuters EcoWin and IMFChart 1:1.
Section 5: Prospects for financial stability. Chart 5.1 Selected European government bond spreads (a) Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations.
Inflation Report August Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report November Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report February Output and supply.
Inflation Report November Output and supply.
Inflation Report August 2012 Costs and prices. Chart 4.1 Contributions to CPI inflation (a) (a) Contributions to annual CPI inflation. Data are non seasonally.
Inflation Report February Money and asset prices.
Financial stability report 2006:2 5 December 2006.
Norges Bank 1 Executive Board meeting 31 October 2007.
Inflation Report November Money and asset prices.
Section 1: The provision of financial services. Table 1.A Selected payment systems(a) Sources: Bank of England, CLS Bank International, Euroclear UK &
Inflation Report February Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May Money and asset prices.
Section 1: An extended global credit boom. Chart 1.1 Volatility of real GDP growth(a) Sources: ONS, Thomson Datastream and Bank calculations. (a) Five-year.
Norges Bank 1 Executive Board meeting 26 September 2007.
Inflation Report November Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May Money and asset prices.
Part A: Emerging market economy risks. Chart A.1 The United Kingdom is linked to EMEs through several channels Sources: BIS Consolidated Banking Statistics,
Inflation Report November 2011 Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May 2011 Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report November Demand Chart 2.1 UK GDP (a) Chained-volume measure at market prices. The latest observation is 2009 Q3. (b) At current.
Inflation Report May Demand Chart 2.1 World trade (a) Sources: CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis and OECD. (a) Volume measure.
Inflation Report August Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report November Demand Chart 2.1 Stockbuilding by sector (a) (a) Chained-volume measures. (b) Excluding the alignment adjustment.
Inflation Report November Demand Chart 2.1 Nominal demand (a) (a) At current market prices.
Inflation Report February Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report May Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report August 2011 Money and asset prices.
Inflation Report August Money and asset prices.
Part A: Global environment. Chart A.25 UK and euro-area banks’ equity prices have come under particular pressure Sources: SNL Financial, Thomson Reuters.
Overview. Table A Key risks to the UK financial system.
Part B: Resilience of the UK financial system – Banking Sector
Part B: Banking Sector Resilience
Part A: Global environment
Overview.
Part A: UK current account
Section 4: Prospects for financial stability
Presentation transcript:

Section 2: Credit risks to the UK banking system

Sources: Bank of England, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), published accounts and Bank calculations. (a) Aggregate balance sheet at end-2009, except for National Australia Bank and Nationwide which are as of March 2010 and April 2010 respectively. (b) Includes exposures to households, non-financial companies, banks and other financial corporations, and holdings of sovereign debt. (c) Total assets come from consolidated accounts. UK-owned banks’ foreign exposures reflect consolidated claims of their banking operations. Non-UK owned banks’ foreign exposures are sourced from consolidated global group accounts. (d) The percentages do not sum to 100% due to rounding. Chart 2.1 Major UK banks’ credit exposures(a)(b)(c)(d)

Chart 2.2 International GDP growth forecasts Source: Consensus Economics Inc.

Table 2.A Selected sovereign credit default swap premia(a) Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream. (a) Senior five-year credit default swap premia in basis points.

Chart 2.3 Externally-held public debt for selected European economies(a) Sources: BIS, IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2010), Joint External Debt Hub, OECD and World Bank. (a) As at end-2009.

Sources: IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2010), OECD.Stat Extracts and Bank calculations. (a) Total household loans as a proportion of GDP. Annual data, available to end Chart 2.4 Household debt relative to GDP for selected European economies(a)

Source: Moody’s Investors Service. (a) Trailing twelve-month issuer-weighted speculative-grade corporate default rate and forecasts as of May 2010 for the United States and Europe. (b) Solid green lines show Moody’s ‘baseline’ forecasts. Dashed green lines show Moody’s ‘pessimistic’ and ‘optimistic’ forecasts. (c) December 2009 Report. Chart 2.5 Speculative-grade corporate default rates(a)(b)

Table 2.B UK-owned banks’ foreign claims(a)(b)(c) Sources: Bank of England and Bank calculations. (a) End-2009, adjusted for risk transfers. Excludes guarantees and derivatives. (b) UK-owned banks, including local claims by subsidiaries and branches. (c) Peer group composition differs from Chart 2.1. (d)Developing Asia, Hong Kong and Singapore. (e) Africa, Middle East, Latin America and Caribbean. (f) All other external claims.

Sources: BIS, ECB, national central banks and Bank calculations. (a) All claims are as a fraction of end-2008 aggregate shareholders’ equity. (b)Grey bars show claims of resident banks on domestic residents (left-hand scale). Other bars show selected foreign claims (right-hand scale). Coverage and timeliness of data vary slightly across countries. (c) Includes Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania and Poland. (d) Includes Kazakhstan, Russia and Ukraine. (e) Includes Bulgaria, Croatia, Romania and Serbia. Chart 2.6 European banking systems’ claims on selected countries and regions(a)(b)

Chart 2.7 Counterparty credit risk for selected European banking systems(a)(b) Sources: Capital IQ, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a) Average five-year senior credit default swap premia, weighted by assets, for banks with assets of more than US$100 billion. (b) Data to close of business on 14 June 2010.

Sources: Capital IQ, Moody’s Investors Service, published accounts and Bank calculations. (a) Includes banks with total assets of more than US$100 billion. (b) Aggregated from individual banks, weighted by total assets. Chart 2.8 Tier 1 capital ratios for selected European banking systems(a)(b)

Sources: Capital IQ, published accounts and Bank calculations. (a) Includes banks with total assets of more than US$100 billion. (b) Aggregated from individual banks, weighted by total assets. (c) As a fraction of gross loans. Chart 2.9 Loan loss provisions for selected European banking systems(a)(b)

Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a) Data to close of business on 14 June (b) FTSE bank equity price indices, which are expressed in US dollar terms. (c) Excluding the United Kingdom. Chart 2.10 Equity prices for selected international banking systems(a)(b)

Sources: FDIC, Federal Reserve, IMF and Bank calculations. (a)Diamonds represent implied 2010 adverse scenario loss estimates from the Federal Reserve’s Supervisory Capital Assessment Program. These are calculated by deducting 2009 loss rates from the mid-points of the 2009–10 range of loss estimates published in the overview of results on 7 May Dashed lines represent the IMF’s central forecast of the future path of US loss rates. Chart 2.11 Loan loss rates in the United States(a)

Sources: IPD, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a) Annual data, except for United Kingdom and Ireland, which are quarterly to 2010 Q1. Chart 2.12 International commercial property prices(a)

Sources: Bank of England and Bank calculations. (a) Only includes loans from banks’ UK operations. Chart 2.13 Major UK banks’ loans to UK customers(a)

Sources: Bank of England, ONS and Bank calculations. (a) Households’ total financial liabilities less mortgage and unsecured debt. (b) Unsecured debt owed to monetary financial institutions only. (c) Household debt relative to the value of households’ financial assets and gross housing wealth. Chart 2.14 UK household debt and capital gearing

Sources: Bank of England, ONS and Bank calculations. (a) Gross interest payments as a percentage of post-tax income, excluding the impact of Mortgage Interest Relief at Source. (b) Mechanical impact only, holding household debt and income constant. Bank Rate was most recently 5% on 7 October Chart 2.15 UK household income gearing(a)

Chart A US household formation and housing units built Sources: US Bureau of the Census and Bank calculations.

Sources: Mortgage Bankers Association, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. Chart B US mortgage loan delinquencies

Sources: Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller, Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. Chart C US house price:income ratio

Sources: Fiserv and Standard & Poor’s Case-Shiller. Chart D US house prices

Mortgage loansRMBSTotal United Kingdom(a) European Union(b) United States(c) Table 1 Exposure to US mortgages and US non-government RMBS as a percentage of core Tier 1 capital (end-2009) Sources: Published accounts and Bank calculations. (a) Barclays, HSBC, LLoyds Banking Group and RBS. (b) BNP Paribas, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank and Société Générale. (c) Bank of America Merrill Lynch, Citi, Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley.

Sources: IMF World Economic Outlook (April 2010) and Bank calculations. (a) 1995–96 average. (b) 2003–07 average. (c) IMF Western Hemisphere country group. (d) IMF Central and Eastern Europe country group. (e) IMF Developing Asia country group plus Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan, excluding Bangladesh and Pakistan. Chart A Net private capital flows to EMEs

March 2010 to May 2010May 2009 to March 2010 Risk appetite (push) Market liquidity (push)0-125 Credit rating (pull) Growth forecasts (pull)0-40 Unexplained-1070 Total change in actual bond spreads Table 1 Accounting for changes in EME spreads Basis points Source: Bank calculations.

Sources: Thomson Reuters Datastream and Bank calculations. (a) All ratios are based on domestic currencies, except for Brazil and Russia price to forward earnings ratios which are in US dollars. (b) Market capitalisation of the index in each country divided by current earnings of all companies in the index. (c) Weighted average price to earnings ratio based on twelve-month forward earnings. (d) China’s mainland A-share market. (e) Averages are median values over sample periods that vary by country, the longest starting in 1995 and the shortest in Chart B EME equity price to earnings ratios(a)

Sources: CEIC and Bank calculations. (a)Data are on a monthly basis until April 2010, except for Singapore which is quarterly to March 2010 and China which is quarterly from June 1999 to December (b) Using residential property indices, except for China which uses broader property indices. (c) Series averages are calculated over the period shown on the chart. Chart C Property price to rental indices(a)(b)

Sources: Bloomberg, IMF International Financial Statistics and Bank calculations. (a) Appreciation and accumulation are year-on-year changes to end-March Chart D Reserve accumulation and currency appreciation(a)

Sources: Council of Mortgage Lenders and Bank calculations. (a) Quarterly rates expressed as a percentage of mortgagors. Series converted from semi-annual rates to quarterly rates between 1985–99. (b) Arrears of more than six months, brought forward six months. Chart 2.16 Arrears and possessions rates on secured lending to UK households(a)

Sources: British Household Panel Survey (BHPS), NMG Financial Services Consulting survey and Bank calculations. (a)Mortgage debt from the BHPS (1995 data) captures mortgage debt owed by households on all properties they own. Mortgage debt from the NMG survey (data for other years) captures only mortgage debt owed on households’ primary residences. Chart 2.17 Loan to value ratios on UK borrowers’ outstanding secured debt(a)

Sources: Bank of England, ONS and Bank calculations. (a) Only includes debt owed to UK monetary financial institutions. (b) Debt net of liquid assets relative to the market value of capital. Chart 2.18 UK corporate debt and capital gearing

Chart 2.19 Ratio of total debt to total global turnover by UK company sector(a) Sources: Bureau van Dijk Fame database and Bank calculations. (a)Data include firms reporting turnover, short-term debt and long-term debt (a sample of around 28,000 firms in 2008 and 41,000 in 2002). Subsidiaries, as identified from current company structures, are excluded from the data set. Company accounts are assigned to calendar years according to the end of their accounting period. Sectors are based on SIC (2003) codes.

Chart 2.20 Major UK banks’ intra-system large exposures(a) Sources: FSA regulatory returns and Bank calculations. (a) Exposures that exceed 10% of eligible capital at the end of the reporting period. (b) Includes Barclays, HSBC and RBS. (c) Excludes Bank of Ireland.

Source: The Insolvency Service. (a) Figures for administrations, receiverships and company voluntary arrangements are not directly comparable to those for the 1990s due to changes introduced by the Enterprise Act In some cases companies moving from one insolvency procedure into another will appear twice in the chart. Administration figures for 2006 Q4 and 2008 Q4 exclude the failures of multiple separate companies for which a single administrator was appointed which distorted the official statistics. None of the figures are seasonally adjusted Q1 figures are provisional. Chart A Corporate insolvencies in England and Wales(a)

Sources: The Insolvency Service and ONS. (a) Recessions are defined as two consecutive quarters of falling output (at constant market prices) estimated using the latest data. The recessions are assumed to end once output began to rise. (b) Chained-volume measure at market prices. (c) Calculated as the total number of liquidations in the previous four quarters divided by the average number of active registered companies. Since the Enterprise Act 2002 a number of administrations have subsequently converted to creditors’ voluntary liquidations. These are not included in the chart. Chart B Corporate liquidations rate in England and Wales and GDP

Sources: The Insolvency Service, ONS and Bank calculations. Chart C Number of corporate liquidations in England and Wales

Sources: Bank of England, The Insolvency Service and Bank calculations. (a)Write-off rate on lending by UK monetary financial institutions to domestic private non-financial corporates. Figures are calculated by dividing write-offs in a quarter by the corresponding loans outstanding at the end of the previous quarter, with the figures chain-linked over the four most recent quarters to produce an annual rate. Quarterly write-off data are only available from 1993 Q4 onwards. The blue diamonds prior to this show estimated annual data. (b) Corporate liquidations rate is calculated as in Chart B and relates only to England and Wales. Chart D Corporate liquidations and write-off rates