Global Financial Stability Report
Potent Policies for a Successful Normalization
April 2016
The current report finds that global financial stability risks have risen since October 2015. The report finds that the outlook has deteriorated in advanced economies because of heightened uncertainty and setbacks to growth and confidence, while declines in oil and commodity prices and slower growth have kept risks elevated in emerging markets. These developments have tightened financial conditions, reduced risk appetite, raised credit risks, and stymied balance sheet repair. A broad-based policy response is needed to secure financial stability. Advanced economies must deal with crisis legacy issues, emerging markets need to bolster their resilience to global headwinds, and the resilience of market liquidity should be enhanced. The report also examines financial spillovers from emerging market economies and finds that they have risen substantially. This implies that when assessing macrofinancial conditions, policymakers may need to increasingly take into account economic developments in emerging market economies. Finally, the report assesses changes in the systemic importance of insurers, finding that across advanced economies the contribution of life insurers to systemic risk has increased in recent years. The results suggest that supervisors and regulators should take a more macroprudential approach to the sector.
Contents
Executive Summary and Preface
Chapter 1: Potent Policies for a Successful Normalization
Chapter 1 finds that risks to global financial stability have increased since the October 2015 Global Financial Stability Report. In advanced economies, the outlook has deteriorated because of heightened uncertainty and setbacks to growth and confidence. Disruptions to global asset markets have added to these pressures. Declines in oil and commodity prices have kept risks elevated in emerging market economies, while greater uncertainty about China’s growth transition has increased spillovers to global markets. These developments tightened financial conditions, reduced risk appetite, raised credit risks, and stymied balance sheet repair, undermining financial stability. A broad-based policy response is needed to secure financial stability.
Boxes | |||||
Chart | Data | 1.1 Developments in Financial Conditions | |||
Chart Chart |
Data Data |
1.2 Brazil: Financial System Risks | |||
Chart Chart |
Data | 1.3 Impact of Low and Negative Rates on Banks | |||
1.4 Euro Area Financial Architecture—Progress, but Gaps Remain | |||||
Tables | |||||
1.1 The Effects of Energy Commodities on Emerging Market Economies and Other Economies and Their Buffers and Policy Indicators | |||||
Data | 1.2 Loss-of-Market-Access Indicators | ||||
Data | 1.3 Selected Indicators of Advanced Economy Banks | ||||
Figures | |||||
Chart | Data | 1.1 Global Financial Stability Map: Risks and Conditions | |||
Chart | Data | 1.2 Global Financial Stability Map: Components of Risks and Conditions | |||
Chart | Data | 1.3 Recent Market Developments | |||
Chart | Data | 1.4 Equity Risk Premiums and Earnings Decompositions | |||
Chart | Data | 1.5 Global Oil Prices, Equity, and Bond Markets | |||
Chart | Data | 1.6 U.S. High-Yield Markets and Lending Conditions | |||
Chart | Data | 1.7 Deterioration of Inflation Expectations | |||
Chart | Data | 1.8 Interest Rate Expectations and Bond Term Premiums | |||
Chart | 1.9 Simulated Peak Effects under Global Market Disruption Scenario | ||||
Chart | Data | 1.10 China and Emerging Market Economies: Credit and Profitability | |||
Chart | Data | 1.11 Chinese Listed Companies: Leverage, Interest Coverage, and Debt-at-Risk | |||
Chart | Data | 1.12 Chinese Listed Companies’ Performance | |||
Chart | Data | 1.13 China: Corporate Bond Issuance and Pricing | |||
Chart | Data | 1.14 China: Equity Markets and Exchange Rates | |||
Chart | Data | 1.15 The Global Commodity Crisis | |||
Chart | Data | 1.16 Corporations, Sovereigns, and Their Nexus | |||
Chart | Data | 1.17 Banking System Health | |||
Chart | Data | 1.18 Oil Prices and Economic Links in the Caucasus and Central Asia, and Middle East and North Africa Regions | |||
Chart | Data | 1.19 Performance of the Banking System in the Caucasus and Central Asia, and Middle East and North Africa Regions since June 2014 | |||
Chart | Data | 1.20 Falling Bank Valuations Reflect Weakening Outlook | |||
Chart | Data | 1.21 Valuations Reflect Legacy and Business Model Challenges | |||
Chart | 1.22 Simulated Peak Effects under Successful Normalization Scenario | ||||
Annex Figures | |||||
Chart | 1.1.1 China: Reported NPL + SML Ratio, and Debt-at-Risk Ratio | ||||
Chart | 1.1.2 Sensitivity of Variations in Interest Coverage Threshold | ||||
Chart | 1.1.3 Corporate Sector Loans Potentially at Risk | ||||
Chart | 1.2.1 Successful Normalization Scenario Simulation Results | ||||
Chart | 1.2.2 Global Market Disruption Scenario Simulation Results |
Chapter 2: The Growing Importance of Financial Spillovers from Emerging Market Economies
Chapter 2 finds that spillovers from emerging equity and foreign exchange markets have risen substantially, and now explain more than a third of the variation in asset returns in other countries. This underscores the importance for policymakers of taking account of economic and policy developments in emerging market economies when assessing domestic macrofinancial conditions. More than economic size and trade integration, the degree of financial integration matters for a country’s importance as receiver and emitter of financial spillovers. The level of integration explains, for example, why purely financial contagion from China remains less significant even as the impact of Chinese growth shocks is increasingly important for equity returns in both emerging market and advanced economies. As China’s role in the global financial system continues to grow, clear and timely communication of its policy decisions and transparency about its policy goals and strategies consistent with their achievement will be ever more important. Given the evident relevance of corporate leverage and mutual fund flows in amplifying spillovers of shocks, it will also be important to shape macroprudential surveillance and policies to contain systemic risks arising from these channels.
Boxes | |||
Chart Chart |
Data | 2.1 Spillover Channels from China—From Real to Financial Linkages? | |
2.2 Bilateral Cross-Border Exposure through Mutual Funds | |||
Figures | |||
Chart | Data | 2.1 Trade between Advanced and Emerging Market Economies | |
Chart | Data | 2.2 Global Financial Integration | |
Chart | Data | 2.3 Global Gross Exports and Domestic Value-Added Exports | |
Chart | 2.4 Example of Shock Transmission through Common Lenders | ||
Chart | Data | 2.5 Advanced Economies' Financial Exposures to Emerging Market Economies | |
Chart | Data | 2.6 Spillover Indices for Various Asset Classes and Components | |
Chart | 2.7 Spillovers before and after the Global Financial Crisis | ||
Chart | Data | 2.8 Average Equity Spillovers from Selected Emerging Market Economies | |
Chart | Data | 2.9 Contribution to Variation in Emerging Market Economy Equity Spillovers, 1995–2014 |
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Chart | Data | 2.10 Emerging Market Economy Outward Equity Spillovers by Sector | |
Chart | Data | 2.11 Chinese Industrial Sector: Equity Market Spillovers to Advanced Economy Sectors | |
Chart | Data | 2.12 Emerging Market Economy Equity Market Spillovers: Role of Firm-Level Factors | |
Chart | Data | 2.13 Contribution to Variation in Emerging Market Economy Foreign Exchange Spillovers, 1995–2014 | |
Chart | Data | 2.14 Foreign Exchange Spillovers of Selected Emerging Market Economies, 2011–15 | |
Chart | 2.15 Spillover of Growth Surprises in Major Emerging Market Economies | ||
Chart | Data | 2.16 Financial Interdependence on Emerging Market Economies through Global Funds | |
Chart | Data | 2.17 Contributions to Variation in Bond and Equity Returns in Advanced and Emerging Market Economies |
Chapter 3: The Insurance Sector—Trends and Systemic Risk Implications
Chapter 3 shows that across advanced economies, the contribution of the insurance sector, particularly of life insurers, to systemic risk has increased, although it is not yet to the level of the banking sector. This increase is largely a result of growing common exposures to aggregate risk, partly because insurers’ interest rate sensitivity has risen and partly because of higher correlations across asset classes. In the event of an adverse shock, therefore, insurers are unlikely to fulfill their role as financial intermediaries at a time when other parts of the financial system are also struggling to do so. These findings suggest that a more macroprudential approach to supervision and regulation of insurance companies should be taken. Measures could include regular macroprudential stress testing or the adoption of countercyclical capital buffers. Steps that would complement a push for stronger macroprudential policies include the international adoption of capital and transparency standards for the sector. In addition, the different behavior of smaller and weaker insurers warrants attention by supervisors.
Boxes | |||||
Chart | Data | 3.1 Insurance Models | |||
Chart |
Data | 3.2 Designation of Global Systemically Important Insurers | |||
Chart | Data | 3.3 Reinsurance, Retrocession, and Financial Stability | |||
Chart | Data | 3.4 Insurance in China | |||
Chart | Data | 3.5 Inward and Outward Spillovers and Centrality of European Insurers | |||
Figures | |||||
Chart | Data | 3.1 Selected Countries: Relative Size of Financial Intermediaries | |||
Chart | 3.2 Systemic Risks in Insurance | ||||
Chart | Data | 3.3 Global Insurance Sector Size and Market Structures | |||
Chart | Data | 3.4 Changing Insurance Business Models and Systemic Risk Factors | |||
Chart | Data | 3.5 Time-Series Clustering of Life Insurers on Equity Returns | |||
Chart | Data | 3.6 Variation of Insurers’ Equity Return Due to First Principal Component | |||
Chart | Data | 3.7 CoVaR Indices | |||
Chart | Data | 3.8 Conditional Capital Shortfall | |||
Chart | Data | 3.9 Forward-Looking Default Correlation Networks | |||
Chart | Data | 3.10 Spillovers between Insurance and Other Financial Sectors | |||
Chart | Data | 3.11 Life Insurers' Investments | |||
Chart | Data | 3.12 Sensitivity of Life Insurers' Risky Assets to Firm-Level Factors | |||
Chart | Data | 3.13 U.S. Life Insurers' Higher Risk Assets | |||
Chart | Data | 3.14 U.S. Insurance Sector Bond Holdings and Turnover | |||
Chart | Data | 3.15 Insurers' Interest Rate and Market Return Sensitivity | |||
Chart | Data | 3.16 Compliance with Insurance Core Principles |