The Daily Telegraph

Shadow bank lending ‘risks financial crisis’

- By Szu Ping Chan

‘Credit quality could deteriorat­e sharply, spurring defaults and significan­t losses’

RISKY lending by “shadow banks” threatens to trigger a new financial crisis, the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund has warned.

It said there were “systemic risks” posed by the $2.1 trillion (£1.7 trillion) “opaque world of private credit”, which has boomed in recent years against a backdrop of record low interest rates.

Companies deemed too large or risky for commercial banks and too small to float their shares on the stock market have increasing­ly turned to non-bank funds to borrow money quickly, flexibly and confidenti­ally. However, regulation in this corner of financial markets is relatively lax and the IMF said a severe economic downturn could quickly expose vulnerabil­ities.

“In a severe downturn, credit quality could deteriorat­e sharply, spurring defaults and significan­t losses,” the IMF said in its Financial Stability Report.

The impact would be felt beyond just private lenders as more public and private pension funds are pouring money into these private funds.

The IMF’S warning comes just weeks after the Bank of England launched a review into financial stability risks posed by private equity.

Threadneed­le Street is concerned about the value of assets controlled by private equity companies, how much money has been lent against them and how these loans are linked back to commercial banks and investors.

Some of Britain’s biggest companies are now backed by the private equity industry, including the supermarke­ts Asda and Morrisons.

While private credit differs from private equity, the IMF noted that “growth in private credit has followed the rise in private equity”. It said private equity firms were involved in around 70pc of private credit deals.

Some of the biggest “shadow bank” lenders include funds run by Apollo, Blackstone, KKR and Carlyle Group, which have driven some of the biggest private equity deals over the past decade. The IMF said the immediate financial stability risks from private credit appeared to be “limited”.

However, the nature of these risks is unclear. It said: “Given that this ecosystem is opaque and highly interconne­cted, and if fast growth continues with limited oversight, existing vulnerabil­ities could become a systemic risk for the broader financial system.” It added that the opaque nature of deals made losses hard to assess, which could trigger a new crisis.

“Significan­t interconne­ctedness could affect public markets, as insurance companies and pension funds may be forced to sell more liquid assets,” it said. The IMF urged regulators to take a more “proactive supervisor­y and regulatory approach” to the sector.

A separate IMF report warned that the Bank of England risked leaving interest rates too high for too long, inflicting unnecessar­y damage on the economy. It noted that the high share of UK homeowners who have borrowed at fixed rates left many exposed to a mortgage shock when their deals run out. This could trigger a sudden drop in consumer spending, which would be damaging for the economy.

The IMF said: “Most central banks have made significan­t progress toward their inflation targets. It could follow from the discussion that if transmissi­on is weak, erring on the side of too much tightening is always less costly.

“However, overtighte­ning, or leaving rates higher for longer, could neverthele­ss be a greater risk now.”

The UK now has one of the highest shares of people on fixed-rate mortgages in the world. The share of households who have fixed their borrowing costs, usually for two or five years, has climbed from around a third in 2011 to almost 90pc at the end of 2022.

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