‘Be very vigilant’: Bank of England chief says the market is testing banks to identify weakness
Andrew Bailey, Governor of the Bank of England, attends the Bank of England Monetary Policy Report Press Conference, at the Bank of England, London, Britain, February 2, 2023.
Pool | Reuters
LONDON — Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey on Tuesday vowed to be “very vigilant” amid ongoing volatility and suggested that the market is “testing out” banks to find weaknesses.
Global banking stocks have taken a beating in March, as contagion fears spread following the collapse of U.S.-based Silicon Valley Bank — the largest bank failure since the financial crisis — and the emergency rescue of Credit Suisse by Swiss rival UBS.
Bailey told the U.K.’s Treasury Select Committee that U.S. authorities are dealing with particular issues relating to regional banks stateside, and that Credit Suisse was an “institutional story” — but affirmed that the U.K. banking system is “in a strong position capital and liquidity-wise.”
Friday saw a sharp sell-off of European banking shares led by Deutsche Bank, which confounded many analysts, given the German lender’s return to consistent profitability, along with its robust capital and liquidity position.
Deutsche recovered partially on Monday to lead gains as the market panic appeared to subside, after First Citizens agreed to buy a large chunk of failed Silicon Valley Bank’s assets.
“I also think what we saw at the tail end of last week, Friday in particular, when there were quite sharp market movements [were] moves in markets to, if you like, test out firms,” Bailey told lawmakers.
“I would not want to say that those in my estimation are based on identified weaknesses, more than testing out, I mean there is quite a bit of testing out going on at the moment.”
Bailey pointed out to differences between U.S. and U.K. regulations in the treatment of interest rate risk in the banking book (IRRBB) — which refers to prospective risks to bank capital and earnings from adverse movements in interest rates — as a key reason why the British system was not as exposed as were U.S. regional banks.
The Bank of England revealed last week that it warned U.S. regulators of the mounting risks at SVB prior to its collapse, flagging that its Prudential Regulation Authority had “understood that SVB UK was exposed to concentration risk, as it provided loans to and took deposits from the same relatively concentrated client base in the innovation sector.” It said it warned the firm and the San Francisco Federal Reserve of this risk and of “overlap of clients on the asset and liability side of the balance sheet” of SVB UK.
The U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks around the world have hiked interest rates aggressively over the past year, in a bid to rein in soaring inflation, and tightening monetary conditions have left some banks’ bond portfolios exposed.
Bailey also echoed market consensus that, within Europe, the forced sale of Credit Suisse was caused by “idiosyncratic” features that would not cause stress in the U.K. banking system.
“Markets are trying on to find points of weakness at the moment. I don’t think we are at all in the place that we were in in 2007/8, we’re in a very different place to then, but we have to be very vigilant,” Bailey said in response to a question about whether the banking system was now out of the woods.
“So if I give you the answer ‘I don’t think there’s a problem going forwards,’ I do not want to give you for a moment the idea that we are not very vigilant, because we are. We are in a period of very heightened, frankly, tension and alertness, and we will go on being vigilant.”