• Aucun résultat trouvé

Risks from outside euro area rise according to latest ECB Financial Stability ReviewPDF

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Risks from outside euro area rise according to latest ECB Financial Stability ReviewPDF"

Copied!
2
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

European Central Bank Directorate General Communications

Global Media Relations Division, Sonnemannstrasse 20, 60314 Frankfurt am Main, Germany Tel.: +49 69 1344 7455, e-mail: media@ecb.europa.eu, website: www.ecb.europa.eu Reproduction is permitted provided that the source is acknowledged.

 

PRESS RELEASE

25 November 2015

Risks from outside euro area rise according to latest ECB Financial Stability Review

Euro area financial system resilient to occasional bouts of financial market volatility

Possibility of an abrupt increase of risk premia at global level has become more pronounced

Balance sheet repair continues in banking sector amid rapid expansion in non-bank sector

Sovereign and private sector debt remains high in several euro area countries

The euro area financial system has been resilient through occasional bouts of financial market volatility in the second half of the year, according to the ECB’s latest Financial Stability Review. The twice-yearly report highlights that the likelihood of an abrupt rise in global risk premia has become more pronounced as concern shifts to emerging market economies.

The review finds that measures of systemic stress remained contained amid periods of stress related to turbulence during the summer in Greece, followed by a sizeable correction in Chinese asset prices.

While euro area banks have limited direct exposure to emerging market economies outside Europe, exposures have been gradually increasing in the euro area investment fund industry. As large emerging market economies have grown in their share of global economic output and financial market activity, so too has their role as drivers of global confidence.

The report also highlights improvement in the shock-absorbing capacity of the euro area banking system in the first half of the year. Both profitability and solvency positions of banks have improved. Challenges that euro area banks still face include a weak macroeconomic recovery, low profitability and a large stock of non-performing loans. Sovereign and private sector debt also remains high in several euro area countries. These factors continue to constrain banks’ lending capacity and ability to build up further capital buffers. Looking ahead, banks – as well as insurers – may need to further adjust their business

(2)

PRESS RELEASE / 25 November 2015

Risks from outside euro area rise according to latest ECB Financial Stability Review

European Central Bank Directorate General Communications

Global Media Relations Division, Sonnemannstrasse 20, 60314 Frankfurt am Main, Germany Tel.: +49 69 1344 7455, e-mail: media@ecb.europa.eu, website: www.ecb.europa.eu Reproduction is permitted provided that the source is acknowledged.

models to cope with persistently weak economic conditions, along with an environment of historically low interest rates across the maturity spectrum.

The review also notes that financial stability risks stretch beyond traditional entities such as banks and insurers. The shadow banking sector continues to expand robustly at the global and euro area level.

Vulnerabilities are likely to be accumulating below the surface as investment funds take more risk on their balance sheets.

The ECB has singled out four risks to financial system stability over the next two years:

 Increased risk of an abrupt reversal of global risk premia amplified by low secondary market liquidity

 Weak profitability prospects for banks and insurers in a low nominal growth environment, amid incomplete balance sheet adjustments

 Potential risk of rising debt sustainability concerns in the public and non-financial private sectors amid low nominal growth

 Increased potential risk of stress in a rapidly growing shadow banking sector amplified by spillovers and liquidity risk

The full report is available on the ECB’s website www.ecb.europa.eu

For media queries, please contact Uta Harnischfeger, tel.: +49 69 1344 6321. 

Références

Documents relatifs

The security of the public finance sector of Ukraine requires monitoring of indicators of the stability of the financial system of the country, as well as modeling the

This configuration will serve as a benchmark to compare the impact on the aggregate financial stability indicator of the other three policy-mix configurations:

Annual audit verification is not expressly required by IPSAS, but the United Nations Panel of External Auditors, at its December 2009 meeting, confirmed that all United

The report by the Secretariat to the Sixty-third World Health Assembly on amendments to the Financial Regulations 2 noted, inter alia, that annual audit verification is not

Moving to more formal empirical analysis, section 5 investigates the impact of a European wide fiscal indicator on the average yield on government bonds, section 6 while narrows

Because the FED has constitutionally an eye on the growth rate, its room for manœuvre is objectively greater. First these duality of objectives has the great advantage of preventing

This assessment is performed having as starting point a standard Taylor’s rule, which assigns two ob jectives to the monetary policy: price stability and real

The amendments mainly reflect the changes introduced in European Commission Implementing Regulation (EU) No 680/2014 on supervisory reporting to align reporting on