The Guardian

‘Creeping sense of complacenc­y’ among banks over risks of private equity

- Kalyeena Makortoff Banking correspond­ent

UK banks are leaving themselves open to “severe, unexpected losses” by failing to properly measure how exposed they are to the $8tn private equity industry, the Bank of England has warned. Rebecca Jackson, a senior excecu

tive at the central bank, said there was a “creeping sense of complacenc­y” among lenders, who – despite a boom in loans and financing to the sector – had almost no ability to put together data “or even appreciate its crucial importance”. She said the issue was partly due to the fact that banks had not previously been exposed to a private equity downturn.

Under the private equity model, large sums are borrowed from banks to finance the purchase of businesses, with profits from those businesses then relied on to make interest payments on the loans.

It means banks could be accruing huge and unintentio­nal exposures to the private equity industry, which would be unable to immediatel­y selloff assets to pay down loans in a crisis.

“It’s not difficult to imagine a scenario, such as malpractic­e at a financial sponsor or the bankruptcy of multiple portfolio companies, where risk correlatio­ns increase significan­tly and liquidity evaporates, leaving banks open to severe, unexpected losses,” Jackson said in a speech to the City lobby group UK Finance ysterday.

The amount of assets managed by private equity businesses globally has grown at a rate of about 13% a year, Jackson said, rising from $2tn (£1.6tn) in 2012 to about $8tn last year.

Individual funds have grown exponentia­lly too, with the largest – run by the private equity firm CVC – having set a record by raising $29bn last summer. In 2006, the record for fundraisin­g was $15.6bn, Jackson said.

The Bank said it was running out of patience, having raised similar concerns about the exposure of banks to risky loans after the collapse of the hedge fund Archegos – which left major banks such as Goldman Sachs and Credit Suisse nursing more than $10bn in losses – as well as the bond market crisis that followed the disastrous mini-budget led by the former prime minster Liz Truss in 2022.

“The risk of outsized, illiquid, and unintentio­nally concentrat­ed exposures is something that we have been pointing out for some time now, and for which we have very little patience,” Jackson said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom