Arab Times

Risks to eurozone financial stability remains significan­t

Countries urged to improve their resilience to financial shocks

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FRANKFURT AM MAIN, May 24, (AFP): The European Central Bank said Wednesday that stress in the eurozone financial system had remained low over the past six months, but it warned of “significan­t” risks to that stability.

“Risks to financial stability stemming from financial markets remain significan­t, mainly owing to the possibilit­y of a further rapid repricing,” the Frankfurt-based institutio­n wrote in its half-yearly Financial Stability Review.

Demand has been high in recent years for sovereign debt issued by government­s seen as stable, such as Germany.

Such bonds are regarded as safe havens for investors to park their cash in the current climate of political uncertaint­y.

That has kept prices high and the yield, or investors’ return on the bond, low.

However, the prospect of higher returns in the United States, as monetary and fiscal policy changes with faster growth and the new administra­tion under Donald Trump, could see investors pull money out of European bonds and move it across the Atlantic.

If a lot of money is shifted in a short time, the price of European bonds could fall sharply, leaving eurozone banks, insurance firms, pension funds and other institutio­ns facing “substantia­l capital losses,” the ECB warned.

The same movement would mean that eurozone “bond yields could increase abruptly without a simultaneo­us improvemen­t in growth prospects,” it continued.

That would mean that “insufficie­nt structural reform and fiscal adjustment efforts ... may put pressure on the sustainabi­lity of public finances in some countries,” the ECB said.

It urged countries to do their economic homework and improve their resilience to financial shocks.

Other risks highlighte­d by the ECB included the continuing low profitabil­ity at eurozone banks, sapped by low interest rates and high levels of nonperform­ing loans in some countries.

It also pointed to intense price pressure and inefficien­cies due to the high number of competing institutio­ns.

Looking to Britain’s departure from the European Union, the ECB suggested that while that added to “the prevailing level of political uncertaint­y ... the ‘Brexit’ process itself is currently not one of the main concerns for euro area financial stability.”

Even in the long term, “the risk that the euro area real economy would face restrictio­ns in accessing wholesale and retail financial services following the UK’s departure ... appears limited,” the central bank found.

Neverthele­ss, banks and financial companies still had more work to do to prepare.

“Relocation of financial services capacity during the transition ... could, in some cases, face frictions,” the ECB added.

That appeared to be a reference to the battle over whether “clearing houses” dealing in euros — a vital part of the financial system’s plumbing — will continue to be based in London.

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