Impact of war on energy prices, inflation and growth amplifies existing vulnerabilities; Market reaction to invasion largely orderly, but risk of further correction remains; Banks face weaker profitability after strong recovery in 2021
Financial stability conditions in the euro area have worsened as the
Russian invasion of Ukraine leads to higher energy and commodity prices
and increases risks to euro area inflation and growth, the May 2022 Financial Stability Review (FSR) published today by the European Central Bank (ECB) concludes.
“The
terrible war in Ukraine has brought immense human suffering,” ECB
Vice-President Luis de Guindos said. “It has also increased financial
stability risks through its impact on virtually all aspects of economic
activity and financing conditions.”
The market reaction to the
Russian invasion of Ukraine has been largely orderly. However, prices
for commodities and energy have remained elevated and volatile, which
has caused some stress in derivatives markets for these products.
Despite recent adjustments, some assets remain at risk of further
corrections should the growth outlook weaken further and/or inflation
turn out to be significantly higher than expected.
Vulnerabilities
may increase due to the uncertain path of the Russia-Ukraine war and
shifting expectations of policy normalisation in advanced economies.
Other potential global developments, such as a broader resurgence of the
coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, weaknesses in key emerging market
economies or a sharper slowdown in Chinese economic activity, could also
affect risks to growth and inflation.
Euro area non-financial
corporations face challenges from rising input prices and a more clouded
economic outlook. This may increase corporate defaults, especially for
firms and sectors that have not yet fully recovered from the pandemic.
Moreover, highly indebted firms and those with lower credit ratings may
struggle with tighter financing conditions.
Euro area house prices
have continued rising and mortgage lending growth has been
accelerating, although a widespread extension of fixed-rate mortgages
should shield many borrowers from higher interest rates in the near
term.
The profitability prospects for European banks have weakened
again, following a strong recovery in 2021. The potential impact of
increased energy prices, higher inflation and weaker growth could cause
asset quality risks to materialise. At the same time, only a few banks
have significant direct exposure to Russia and Ukraine, and a recent
vulnerability analysis carried out by the ECB indicates that the euro
area banking system should remain resilient even under severely adverse
economic scenarios.
Significant flows have taken place from
investment funds that manage corporate bond portfolios to funds that
manage sovereign bond exposures, as well as from growth to value equity
funds. So far, these shifts have not been systemically disruptive, but
the sector remains vulnerable due to its low liquidity, high duration
risk and high exposure to bonds issued by weak corporates. Some funds
also face additional risks from excessive leverage in derivatives or
from investments in crypto-assets.
The resilience of the financial system would benefit from a more effective capital buffer framework. As recently proposed by the ECB,
higher buffers that can be released in periods of stress would improve
the ability of banks to absorb losses and maintain lending. Regulation
to address risks in the non-bank financial sector, stemming for example
from liquidity mismatches, leverage or margining practices, also needs
to be strengthened.
ECB
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