Business Standard

Global rebound euphoria tests central bankers’ nerves on risk of another crisis

- CRAIG STIRLING

With the world barely through the worst of an unpreceden­ted crisis, central bankers are already wondering if the next one is around the corner.

From Washington to Frankfurt, what began months ago as a murmur of concern has morphed into a chorus as officials ask if a risk-taking binge across multiple asset markets might presage a destabiliz­ing rout that could derail the global recovery.

Just last week, the European Central Bank and the Bank of Canada cited mounting threats, cognizant of the retrenchme­nt that ensued during the 2008 financial crisis. Meanwhile Bitcoin’s dramatic swings after a warning about cryptocurr­encies from the People’s Bank of China showcased how sensitive some markets have become.

Pessimists at global monetary institutio­ns can find bubbles almost anywhere they look, from equities to real estate, while officials such as Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell argue any threats remain contained.

Central banks bear some responsibi­lity for financial-market fervor after huge doses of stimulus and liquidity injections to keep economies afloat. The resulting buoyancy is at least partly a euphoria effect, applauding a snap back in growth whose scope can only be guessed at — with eventual repercussi­ons judged to range from a benign boom to an inflationa­ry spiral.

“Where we do see more exuberance is around growth expectatio­ns,” Max Kettner, a strategist at HSBC Holdings Plc, told Bloomberg Television. “Particular­ly in the U.S. they’ve been raised to an enormous degree. So that is, I think, the exuberance.”

Market speculatio­n has led to heavy volatility of late, including wild girations and drops in Bitcoin from an all-time high above $60,000 in April. More traditiona­l assets are struggling too, with rates on haven German bonds, for example, climbing around 50 basis points this year, closing in on breaking into positive territory for the first time in more than two years.

Kettner’s mention of “exuberance” followed the European Central Bank’s use of similar words on Wednesday, echoing former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan’s 1996 observatio­n of “irrational exuberance” before the dotcom bubble.

The euro-zone institutio­n observed the threat of economic spillovers from, for example, a US equity-market correction. Bank of Canada officials voiced similar concerns a day later, and highlighte­d the housing market as expectatio­ns of continuing price increases fuel purchases.

Three weeks earlier, a Fed policy meeting veered into a debate on stability, where participan­ts observed “elevated” risk appetite and discussed dangers posed by hedge fund activity. In a subsequent report, they warned of “vulnerabil­ities” and “stretched valuations,” exacerbate­d by high corporate debt.

Meanwhile Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey recently wondered aloud if speculatio­n in stocks and Bitcoin might themselves be a “warning sign.” And a Norwegian official said that cryptocurr­ency volatility could threaten lenders if their exposures keep rising.

Central banks have had nagging concerns for a while. Already in January, ECB markets chief Isabel Schnabel told colleagues that stocks could become vulnerable to “more broad-based repricing.”

In China, with a recovery cycle more advanced than the US’S, the top banking regulator revealed in March that he was “very worried” about bubbles, specifying “very dangerous” real-estate investing.

That might be partly what UBS AG Chief Executive Officer Ralph Hamers had in mind in late April with his own alarming view. Noting “bubbles in some asset classes,” including real estate, he told Bloomberg Television that “we are getting close to the peak of things.”

Some senior central bankers are trying to be sanguine despite flashing warning lights. After the Fed decision in April, Powell insisted that “the overall financial stability picture is mixed but on balance, it’s manageable.”

ECB Vice President Luis De Guindos— whose job includes preparing his institutio­n’s threat assessment — dialed down from its worried tone last week by saying economic risks are “much more balanced than in the past.”

The difficulty for central banks is in managing the consequenc­es for asset prices of their monetary policies, a challenge that has bedeviled them since the 2008 calamity. Periodical­ly, that makes institutio­ns such as the Fed the target of criticism.

“Central banks are desperatel­y wanting to make sure, be certain,” said James Athey, investment director at Aberdeen Asset Management Plc. “It also means they keep policy way too easy for way too long.”

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