March 2017 BIS Quarterly Review: Beyond swings in risk appetite

06 March 2017

Investors have started to discriminate more across asset classes, regions and sectors as they try to make sense of the implications of a changing political environment, in contrast to the cross-asset herd behaviour that characterised markets in recent years.

The shift away from the consistent waves of risk-on, risk-off buying and selling suggests that, during the quarter, central bank decisions, and the associated swings in investor risk appetite, played less of a role in driving valuations. In the United States, for example, winners and losers emerged as sectors such as defence, construction and manufacturing outperformed import-intensive sectors.

"Politics tightened its grip over financial markets in the past quarter, reasserting its supremacy over economics," said Claudio Borio, Head of the Monetary and Economic Department.

The March BIS Quarterly Review also:

"These structural changes highlight the increasing role of offshore dollar funding in the global banking system," said Hyun Song Shin, Economic Adviser and Head of Research.

The publication contains four special features, three of them focusing on challenges for the structural plumbing which underpins the smooth functioning of markets and the financial system.

Press release

Quarterly review


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