IMF warns on risk of new credit bubbles

More policy reforms needed to restore long-term health to financial system

Traders in the New York Stock Exchange yesterday. Photograph: Reuters/Brendan McDermid
Traders in the New York Stock Exchange yesterday. Photograph: Reuters/Brendan McDermid

Extraordinarily loose monetary policy risks sparking credit bubbles which threaten to tip the world back into financial crisis, the International Monetary Fund warned yesterday.

In its global financial stability report, the fund cautioned that further policy reforms were needed urgently to restore long-term health to the financial system before the long-term dangers of monetary stimulus materialised.

Without continued progress, the IMF said “the global financial crisis could morph into a more chronic phase, marked by a deterioration of financial conditions and recurring bouts of financial instability”.

In the short term, however, the fund is more upbeat. José Viñals, IMF head of financial stability, said: “Spring has arrived to global financial markets where after very rainy days and threatening clouds, we are beginning to see some blue skies and more sunny days.”

READ MORE

The IMF believes unorthodox monetary policies to boost growth are better than the alternatives, but is nevertheless concerned that the long-term consequences of the policy represent a “new risk” to financial stability.


Economic growth
"When the patient is still under treatment, you should not suspend the medicine, but you should always be vigilant about the side-effects," Mr Viñals said, adding that central banks could not be the "only game in town" to support economic growth.

The report warned that when the time came to exit from extraordinarily loose monetary policy, the effects could potentially expose vulnerabilities among companies and households facing higher long-term interest rates, destabilise credit markets and reverse capital inflows to emerging economies.

Given these risks and the need for stimulus, Mr Viñals advised central banks to maintain low interest rates and money-printing operations.


Extraordinarily detrimental
"Lifting interest rates and exiting from these policies now . . . would be extraordinarily detrimental – not only for the economy, but also for financial stability."

The fund added that there was a need to improve the health of banks in both the troubled euro zone and its core.

“Many banks in the euro area periphery remain challenged,” the IMF said.

The fund repeated its advice that the euro zone needs a single resolution regime for banks, providing common backstops and deposit guarantees.

It added that the US banking industry’s restructuring was largely complete and the authorities now needed to begin to think about the side-effects of loose monetary policy,

This was seen to be encouraging some investors to buy much riskier assets and motivating banks to lower lending safeguards.

“While we are at the very early stage [of the US recovery], we are already seeing a deterioration in the quality of issuance which is typical of the late stages of the credit cycle,” Mr Viñals said. – (Copyright 2013 The Financial Times Limited)