Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byWalter Mark Knight Modified over 9 years ago
1
Oliver Burrows Financial Stability, Bank of England Discussion for session 4 24 February 2014 ESRC Conference on Diversity in Macro
2
Credit by type: purchasing existing assets vs financing activity UK-resident banks’ sterling lending to UK residents, % of GDP
3
Credit by type: purchasing existing assets vs financing activity UK-resident banks’ sterling lending to UK residents, % of GDP
4
The UK financial system (stripped down)
5
The UK financial system, with cross-border inter- bank connections
6
The UK financial system, with cross-border inter- bank connections and derivatives
7
As a per cent of GDP in 1978
8
As a per cent of GDP in 2012
9
Growth of savings vs asset price inflation: insurance companies and pension funds
10
MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk Monetary circuits
11
MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk Monetary circuits
12
MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk Monetary circuits
13
MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk Monetary circuits
14
If demand for household and PNFC deposits grows in line with income, then lending can be accommodated out of deposit growth… MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk Monetary circuits
15
If demand for household and PNFC deposits grows in line with income, then lending can be accommodated out of deposit growth…...but if it grows faster, the financial network can become larger and more fragile MPC/FPC awayday on credit System-wide network effects / liquidity risk
16
The balance sheets (maroon is cash, blue is debt, orange is loans, green is equity, purple is contingent claims and red is other)
17
Leverage
18
Maturity Transformation
19
Network risks: concentration
20
The UK financial system (stripped down)
21
END
22
Side issue 1: the size of the UK banking system UK-resident bank assets are large by international comparison......in part because of the UK’s role as a financial sector.......which means there are lots of foreign-owned banks in the UK......and that UK-owned banks’ global balance sheets are large. Banking sectors by residency Sources: BIS, national central banks
23
Side issue 1: the size of the UK banking system UK-resident bank assets are large by international comparison......in part because of the UK’s role as a financial sector.......which means there are lots of foreign-owned banks in the UK......and that UK-owned banks’ global balance sheets are large. London’s share of selected global markets Sources: BIS, national central banks
24
Side issue 1: the size of the UK banking system UK-resident bank assets are large by international comparison......in part because of the UK’s role as a financial sector.......which means there are lots of foreign-owned banks in the UK......and that UK-owned banks’ global balance sheets are large. Resident banks by ownership Sources: BIS, national central banks
25
Side issue 1: the size of the UK banking system UK-resident bank assets are large by international comparison......in part because of the UK’s role as a financial sector.......which means there are lots of foreign-owned banks in the UK......and that UK-owned banks’ global balance sheets are large. Global balance sheets by country of ownership Sources: BIS, national central banks
26
The UK financial system, with cross-border inter- bank connections
27
UK-resident banks’ derivatives-book breakdown 27
28
UK-resident banks’ derivatives-book breakdown 28
29
UK-resident banks’ derivatives-book breakdown 29
30
Bank A Corporate Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
31
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk Tailored IR + FX hedge IR risk Hedging example
32
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +10 Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
33
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +10 Bank C IR risk FX risk Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
34
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +20 +15 Bank C IR risk FX risk +5 Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
35
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +20 +15 Bank C IR risk FX risk +5 Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
36
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +20 +15 Bank C IR risk FX risk +5 = Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
37
Bank A Corporate Bank B FX risk IR risk +20 +15 Bank C IR risk FX risk +5 = Gross MV = 6020 Hedging example Tailored IR + FX hedge
38
The UK financial system base case
39
As a per cent of GDP in 2012
40
As a per cent of GDP in 1959
41
As a per cent of GDP in 1978
42
As a per cent of GDP in 2012
43
Flow of funds Access to payment systemsMitigate risksProvision of credit
44
The balance sheets (maroon is cash, blue is debt, orange is loans, green is equity, purple is contingent claims and red is other)
45
Risk metrics
46
Leverage
47
Maturity Transformation
48
Network risks: concentration
49
Network risks: interconnections ?
50
? Chart 1: Stylised map of UK-resident banks’ £3.1 trillion repo market activity as of end-2011 From Paul Baverstock’s note on Mapping UK- resident banks’ repo activity Chart 8: Contagious links (orange arrows) and exposed banks (red dots) From Tomo Ota’s note on Mapping the UK interbank system – some insights from a new dataset
51
UK-resident deposit-takers 51
52
UK-resident deposit-takers 52
53
UK-resident deposit-takers 53
54
Example of further work on repo Breakdown balance sheets further by underlying collateral- type Use this to assess the impact of - increased hair-cuts - falls in asset prices (e.g. due to a snap-back in yields) on the value of sectors’ repo books and resultant collateral shortfalls (to maintain current levels of funding via repo).
55
Network risks: research agenda Gabaix (2011): The granular origins of aggregate fluctuations – heavy-tailed distributions of firm size invalidate usual assumptions on idiosyncratic shocks to firms not affecting aggregate output Acemoglu et al (2012): The network origins of aggregate fluctuations – network structure of the real economy affects aggregate output => How does the network structure of the financial system propagate real and financial shocks?
56
Disaggregate data
57
UK Private Sector 4,794,105 UK Private Sector 4,794,105 Companies 1,341,115 Companies 1,341,115 Partnerships 448,020 Partnerships 448,020 Sole Proprietors 3,004,970 Sole Proprietors 3,004,970 Large 6,390 Large 6,390 Small and Medium 1,334,725 Small and Medium 1,334,725 Private 1,334,258 Private 1,334,258 Public 467 Public 467 Private 5,705 Private 5,705 Public 685 Public 685 Bond Issuers 36 Bond Issuers 36 Non-Bond Issuers 5669 Non-Bond Issuers 5669 Bond Issuers 175 Bond Issuers 175 Non-Bond Issuers 510 Non-Bond Issuers 510 Breakdown of the UK corporate sector
58
Data issues
59
Back to today - Data quality (green=good ONS data, amber=made-up ONS data, and white=no ONS data)
60
Divisional coverage of the financial system
61
Key takeaways and questions In principle, the maps are very useful for understanding and assessing risk across the system has thrown up some interesting issues – such as differences within the PNFC sector (public/private; PE-owned; property/non-property) has been used in PE and CRE analysis – see QBs if interested is being used in work on cumulative impact of regulation But very serious data issues quality of much of the ONS data is very poor – care needed interpreting PNFC and OFI accounts in particular coverage is too narrow – work ongoing with ONS to improve and very little data on interconnections between sectors (“who-to- whom” data)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.