Kristin Forbes, Christian Friedrich and Dennis Reinhardt
Recent episodes of financial stress, including the ‘dash for cash’ at the onset of the Covid-19 (Covid) pandemic, pressure in the UK’s liability-driven investment funds in 2022, and the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank in 2023, were stark reminders of the vulnerability of financial institutions to shocks that disrupt liquidity and access to funding. This post explores how the funding choices of banking systems and corporates affected their resilience during the early stages of Covid and whether subsequent policy actions were effective at mitigating financial stress. The results suggest that policy responses targeting specific structural vulnerabilities were successful at reducing financial stress.
In March 2023, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB), the 16th largest US bank, was forced to close and declared bankruptcy after it was unable to stem a spike in deposit outflows and obtain new funding (Weder di Mauro (2023)). About six months earlier, UK liability-driven investment (LDI) funds were severely stressed after the Government’s ‘mini budget’ was followed by sharp price movements that forced the funds to sell assets at substantial losses to obtain funding in response to margin calls (Breeden (2022)). In March 2020, as Covid morphed into a global pandemic, financial institutions around the world struggled to obtain liquidity and funding – with the subsequent ‘dash for cash’ even causing stress in the US Treasury market (Ivashina and Breckenfelder (2021), Vissing-Jorgensen (2021), FSB (2020a)). Each of these episodes was a stark reminder of the vulnerability of financial institutions to any shock that disrupts liquidity and access to funding.
Each of these episodes also raised questions about the impact of the extensive post-2008 regulatory reforms. Had these reforms meaningfully bolstered the resilience of the broader financial system to most shocks? Had stricter regulations on banks shifted vulnerabilities to other financial institutions in ways that created new systemic risks? Even if large banks were stronger and better capitalised, did interconnections with other financial intermediaries generate new vulnerabilities (eg, Aramonte et al (2022), FSB (2020a), (2020b))?
In a recent paper (Forbes et al (2023)), we use the price dynamics of credit default swaps (CDS) during March 2020 to better understand how the risks from different funding exposures have evolved after a decade of regulatory reforms. We test whether the different funding choices of banks and corporates – including the source, instrument, currency and geographical location of the counterparty – amplified or mitigated the impact of this severe risk-off shock on financial stress. We also test which policy interventions were most effective at reducing the financial stress in 2020 around these different funding vulnerabilities.
The results suggest that although the post-2008 regulatory reforms strengthened the resilience of banking systems overall, meaningful vulnerabilities still exist through exposures related to non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) and dollar funding. Policy interventions targeting these specific vulnerabilities during periods of financial stress, however, could significantly mitigate these fragilities (eg, policies supporting the NBFI sector and US dollar swap lines).
An extensive body of literature has previously explored a range of vulnerabilities around funding characteristics and exposures. For example, Forbes (2021) surveys the literature showing how tighter regulations on banks shifted financial intermediation to NBFIs (or ‘shadow banks’), generating new risks to financial stability. Ahnert et al (2021) highlights how stricter regulations on banks’ foreign exchange (FX) exposures caused changes in funding strategies (such as increased US dollar bond issuance by non-US companies) that increased corporate vulnerability to exchange rate fluctuations (Vij and Acharya (2021)).
Our paper builds on this literature in several ways. We simultaneously test for the importance of these different types of funding vulnerabilities across sectors – a broader perspective that is important as macroprudential reforms may have bolstered certain segments of the economy (such as banks) while simultaneously increasing the vulnerability of others. By focusing on high-frequency CDS spreads, our analysis is also able to capture short-lived periods of financial stress for each sector that arise for different reasons. The extreme risk-off period in March 2020 is a useful natural experiment as it was an exogenous shock (ie, not caused by prior funding decisions) and is the first opportunity to evaluate how the widespread macroprudential reforms and corresponding changes in funding structures over the previous decade affected the resilience of financial systems.
A cross-country and cross-sector approach to understand funding vulnerabilities
Chart 1 below shows the evolution of average CDS spreads for sovereigns, banks and corporates in a cross-section of countries in the first half of 2020. On average, CDS spreads increased sharply as Covid evolved into a global pandemic, but the CDS for banks increased less than for corporates and sovereigns, consistent with arguments that macroprudential reforms over the past decade meaningfully improved the resilience of banking systems. CDS spreads declined as governments and central banks announced a series of policy responses, albeit remaining substantially elevated compared to their pre-crisis levels. The individual CDS spreads underlying these averages show, however, substantial variation across countries and sectors. This variation is useful in the empirical analysis identifying the role of different funding structures.
Chart 1: CDS spreads across countries
Notes: Chart shows the mean CDS spreads across countries, with each series normalised to 100 on 1 January 2020. The sample for ‘All Countries’ is all countries with CDS data for each of the three sectors (Sovereign, Bank and Corporate). Underlying data on individual CDS is from Refinitiv, compiled and collapsed as described in Section 3 and Online Appendix A of Forbes et al (2023).
Next, we combine these data with detailed information on the funding structures of banks and corporates from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) to build two data sets. One is a panel with country-sector information (for banks and corporates, with the sovereign as the benchmark), and the other incorporates daily information to utilise the time-series dimension. Both data sets cover the period from 1 January 2020 through 23 March 2020 (when most measures of financial stress peaked) for a sample of 25 (mainly advanced) economies.
Our main analysis regresses financial stress (measured by per cent changes in CDS spreads for sovereigns, banks and corporates) on pre-Covid funding exposures. We focus on four types of funding exposures: the source of funding (from household deposits, corporate deposits, banks or NBFIs), the instrument of funding (from loans versus debt/equity markets), the currency of funding (US dollar versus other currencies), and the geographical location of the funding counterparty (domestic or cross-border). We include country fixed effects (to control for any country-wide factors) as well as interactions between each sector and the number of reported Covid cases.
Our results suggest that banking systems which were more reliant on funding from NBFIs experienced significantly more stress during the spring of 2020. To put this in context, banks with a 10 percentage points higher share of funding from NBFIs had a 30 percentage point larger increase in CDS spreads. Banking systems also experienced significantly more stress if they were more reliant on US dollar funding. Corporate sectors that were more exposed to NBFI and US dollar funding were also more vulnerable, although the estimates were less consistently significant.
Also noteworthy, although the source and currency of funding significantly affected financial stress, the form and the geography of funding was usually insignificant for both sectors. More specifically, whether banks or corporates relied more on loans (instead of debt markets), or on cross-border counterparties (instead of domestic) did not significantly increase their resilience during March 2020.
Policy implications
Chart 1 shows that financial stress fell significantly after March 2020. To assess which policy responses were most effective at reducing financial stress, we incorporate the impact of a wide range of policy responses (all taken from Kirti et al (2022)). We assess the impact of: ‘economy-wide policies’ (lower interest rates, quantitative easing, liquidity support and fiscal stimulus), ‘bank-focused policies’ (changes in prudential regulations and macroprudential buffers), and ‘structure-specific policies’ (which target vulnerabilities related to funding from market-based sources, NBFIs, and US dollars). Chart 2 shows the number of countries adopting the last two of these interventions.
Chart 2: Policy interventions – two examples
Panel A: NBFI policies
Panel B: US dollar swap lines
Notes: The panels above show the use of NBFI policies and US dollar swap lines during Covid. The left-hand side of each set shows the policy actions on a daily basis. The right-hand side shows the cumulative policy actions over time. An increase corresponds to a policy loosening and a decrease to a tightening. The sample ranges from 1 January 2020 to 31 July 2020 and includes 24 countries.
The results suggest that policy responses targeting specific structural vulnerabilities – such as measures supporting the NBFI sector and providing FX swap lines – were successful at reducing financial stress. These policies had significant effects – even after controlling for broader, ‘economy-wide’ macroeconomic responses. These highly targeted policies were also more successful at mitigating the stress related to NBFI or US dollar funding than easing more generalised banking regulations. These results suggest that during the next period of market fragility or financial stress, policymakers should consider whether any funding pressures could be addressed with targeted policies focused on specific vulnerabilities rather than a general easing of banking regulation or with broader macroeconomic policies.
This evidence also helps set priorities for the next phase of financial regulations. The results highlight the importance of focusing on regulations related to vulnerabilities from NBFIs and US dollar exposures. This could include strengthening NBFI regulations (as suggested in Carstens (2021) and FSB (2020a)) and reviewing liquidity regulations corresponding to specific FX funding currencies. The results also suggest that macroprudential FX regulations (which focus on the currency of the borrowing) would be more effective at reducing vulnerabilities than capital controls (which focus on nationality).
Most important, the results from this analysis combined with the recent funding vulnerabilities exposed in SVB and the UK LDI funds over the last year are potent reminders of the risks that remain in financial systems. Even though the post-2008 regulatory reforms have increased the resilience of banking systems, there is still more work to be done.
Kristin Forbes works at MIT-Sloan School of Management, NBER and CEPR, Christian Friedrich works at the Bank of Canada and CEPR, and Dennis Reinhardt works in the Bank’s Global Analysis Division.
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