By Nasrin Sultana| Mar 20, 2023
The bank crises are unlikely to result in a great financial disaster, but are sizeable enough to create volatility and shake confidence
[CAPTION]Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) was closed by California bank regulators, making it the second largest bank failure since Washington Mutual in 2008.
Image: Rebecca Noble / AFP [/CAPTION]
Nothing can be more lethal for any economy than the collapse of two large banks in two continents in such a short span of time. What the world fears is a snowballing of the crisis, just like the Asia financial crisis in 1997 or the Lehman Brothers failure that brought the world economy to a grinding halt following an economic recession.
On March 10, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) was closed by California bank regulators, making it the second largest bank failure since Washington Mutual in 2008. There was turbulence in Europe as well due to Credit Suisse, with its key shareholder refusing to provide additional support through infusion of capital.
_RSS_While regulators have stepped in to bail out SVB, and UBS Group AG, Switzerland's largest banking group, has agreed to acquire the crisis-hit Credit Suisse Group AG in an unprecedented deal, investors are growing nervous of a financial contagion. As monetary tightening continues, investors fear the world economy may be rapidly sliding towards recession with the end of the easy money cycle making it riskier than ever before.
“Financial instability is fanning credit risk aversion globally and raising the likelihood of recessions in many economies, with one notable exception: China,” say Nomura analysts. Although the analysts do not think there is any material fundamental impact on Asian stocks from US banking sector issues, there is always the risk of some “skeletons emerging from the closet”. They believe these issues will not be systemic to the health of the banking sector and continue to see medium-term value in Asian stocks.
Markets have been volatile since beginning of 2023 with slump in currencies and crude oil pushing investors to opt for asset classes other than just equity. Since January, Indian markets have been in a turmoil, declining around 5-6 percent while the US, China, Japan and Hong Kong have been volatile, but gaining.
Also read: SVB and Credit Suisse failure, and how it will affect your equity portfolio
Bond markets are also in a phase of extreme volatility around the banking crisis developments. “The yield curve has bull steepened by 60 basis points in a matter of days, something seen only a few times in history and usually the bond market’s way of saying recession risk is now more elevated. An inversion of the curve typically signals a recession within 12 months, but the real risk starts when it re-steepens from the trough,” says Michael J Wilson, equity strategist, Morgan Stanley.
Even after the banking crisis, the European Central Bank (ECB) further hiked the policy rates by 50 basis points on expected lines. With its rate hike action, the ECB has indicated that central banks around the world consider inflation as a much bigger issue while showing confidence in their banking system. Recent turmoil in the banking system of the US and EU raised questions on the ability of central banks to further tighten. However, ECB has signalled that it is ready to supply liquidity to banks if needed.