Shadow banking risks shift from US towards China, FSB report says
As off-balance-sheet lending cooled last year in the United States, emerging economies such as China made up the difference in loosely regulated finance
China, along with Ireland and the United States, drove growth in the world’s non-bank finance industry last year, a sector which topped US$80 trillion in assets, a new report from the Financial Stability Board said.
Global shadow banking, or lending not captured on banks’ balance sheets and therefore lightly regulated, grew by US$1.6 trillion in 2014. Much of that growth originated in trusts and money market funds in China, the report said
A narrower measure of shadow banking, which takes most trust funds out of the picture, hit US$36 trillion, a 10.1 per cent increase on the year before, the report showed. Bank lending hit US$135 trillion last year, growing by 6.4 per cent year on year.
The report covered 26 jurisdictions accounting for about 90 per cent of the assets in the global financial system. The FSB, a global oversight body that advises the world’s biggest economies on banking policy, noted the necessity for off-balance-sheet finance in the global economy. But it also warned that shadow banking , when treated like bank finance, has the potential to increase systemic risk, as it did in the build up to the global financial crisis.
One warning signal for from the report was on the funding from what the FSB calls “other financial intermediaries”. Those assets hit 128 per cent of global gross domestic product last year, which is just shy of the level hit before the near-collapse of the global financial system in 2008. However, the pre-crisis buildup in those assets was concentrated in the United States and other developed countries. Last year, the fastest growth in loosely regulated lending had shifted to developing economies, most notably China.