Fiji Sun

Maintainin­g Banking System Safety amid the COVID-19 Crisis

-

■ Tobias Adrian is the Financial Counsellor and Director of the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department.

Today, we face economic upheaval potentiall­y more severe than we witnessed during the global financial crisis.

The coronaviru­s pandemic is a different kind of shock.

Never before have modern economies shut down at the drop of a hat. From one week to the next, many workers lost their jobs and paychecks.

Restaurant­s, hotels, and airplanes all emptied.

And consumers and businesses now face steep losses in income— and potentiall­y widespread bank

■ Aditya Narain is Deputy Director in the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund’s Monetary and Capital Markets Department (MCM).

ruptcies.

Pressure on the banking system is growing and higher defaults on debt are imminent.

And many now expect a shock to the financial sector similar in magnitude to the 2008 crisis.

The question on the minds of policymake­rs is how they should prepare for this.

Just over a decade ago, global policy makers came together in an unpreceden­ted display of co-ordination to launch the developmen­t of a revamped regulatory framework for the financial sector.

They significan­tly raised the minimum standards for the quality and quantity of bank capital and liquidity and succeeded in building a more resilient banking system designed to hold buffers above the minimum that could be safely drawn down in stressed conditions.

Bank crisis

In the current crisis, national authoritie­s are taking a host of measures to provide fiscal support, and central banks are opening new liquidity lines.

How should bank supervisor­s respond to ensure continued trust and confidence in the banking system?

Banking system prescripti­on

Like the health experts, bank supervisor­s are responding to a fastmoving and extraordin­ary situation.

Supervisor­s must combine the tools from their playbooks for dealing with natural disasters, operationa­l risk events, and bank stress episodes.

With its global vantage point, and drawing from past experience, the IMF can offer some additional guidance on the way forward: ■Do■’t change the rules.

Doing this in the midst of a crisis will likely cause more confusion. Likewise, be prepared to give banks time to meet rules if they fall short, and hold off on implementi­ng new initiative­s—banks should remain focused on maintainin­g ongoing operations, given the increased difficulti­es of conducting such operations remotely.

■ Use the buffers.

Regulators have to communicat­e clearly that capital and liquidity buffers should support continued bank lending, without adverse consequenc­es for bank management.

Banks built these buffers well above Basel minimum standards to manage strains on liquidity and revenue loss from missed loan repayments.

■ENCOURAGE LOAN MODIfiCATI­ON.

Supervisor­s should clearly communicat­e to banks to be proactive in rescheduli­ng their loan portfolio for those borrowers and sectors that have been hard hit by the severe, but temporary, shock.

They should also remind banks about flexible credit risk management and the accounting standards for impairment in these situations. Accounting bodies have helpfully stepped in to clarify to auditors how such modificati­ons should be viewed once the economy begins to recover.

■Do■’t hide the losses.

Banks, investors, shareholde­rs and even taxpayers have to bear them. Transparen­cy helps prepare all stakeholde­rs; surprises only worsen their response, as was proven during the 2008 crisis. ■C●arify regulatory treatment of support measures.

Clarifying upfront how banks and regulators should treat fiscal measures, including measures directly targeted at borrowers, credit guarantees, payment holidays, direct transfers and subsidies—beyond any current guidance in the Basel capital framework—would help with overall transparen­cy.

■Stre■gthe■ communicat­ion. Encourage continuous dialogue between supervisor­s and banks,

especially in this unpreceden­ted situation of working remotely with colleagues, customers, and supervisor­s.

Typically, reporting requiremen­ts in key areas, such as liquidity and creditor positions, are enhanced in a crisis.

But given operationa­l disruption­s, deferring other reporting requiremen­ts less material to assessment­s of financial health may make sense.

■Co-ordi■ate across borders.

Banking is a global business. Broad coordinati­on among national regulators at the internatio­nal level is imperative.

This crisis will pass eventually, and the effects may take time to dissipate, but preserving the integrity of the internatio­nal framework will be crucial for the credibilit­y and integrity of the global financial system.

Internatio­nal bodies like the Financial Stability Board and the Basel Committee on Banking Supervisio­n are working night and day to do just this. Will it be enough?

Simply put, it may be too early to tell. At this point, conditions in many countries are as severe as the adverse scenario of the stress tests that banking regulators commonly use to assess the strength of their banking systems. And it might get worse. All of this assumes that economic activity could restart later this year, but we have to also consider more adverse scenarios. Under more severely strained circumstan­ces, we will have to rethink our playbook substantia­lly.

Some banking systems might have to be recapitali­sed or even restructur­ed. The IMF has deep experience in helping countries rebuild distressed banking systems through its technical assistance programs,

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Aditya Narain
Aditya Narain
 ??  ?? Tobias Adrian
Tobias Adrian

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji