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Financial Sector Stability
Financial stability is much improved since last year's stress.
By Ryan Boyle
My first professional turn as an economist came when I worked in consulting. And I do mean worked: Late nights and weekend deadlines were routine. In contrast, the work-life balance of bank employment has been a tremendous relief. With rare exceptions, weekend time is our own.
One memorable exception came last March, as the failure of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) carried the risk of contagion to the entire financial sector—as I learned while on an emergency Sunday conference call. High stress endured through the closure of First Republic Bank on May 1, 2023.
A year later, we can see that weekends across the financial sector are more relaxed. Last week, the Federal Reserve published its semiannual Financial Stability Report. The report was broadly encouraging, noting that banks maintain capital ratios well above statutory minimums, with ample liquidity. Bank profits have been stable in spite of a volatile rate environment, as interest income has nearly kept pace with rising interest expense. Deposit outflows were a point of great concern in the wake of SVB, but they stabilized and returned to net inflows in the fourth quarter of 2023.
Still, the report noted a bevy of risks: Banks carry unrealized market value losses on their fixed-income portfolios. Office commercial real estate is an albatross for many lenders. Subprime consumer credit delinquencies are on the rise, as are some small business loans. Financial sector participants reported inflation and its corresponding impact on monetary policy as the top risk.
Pressure on the banking system has diminished over the past year.
The report also spotlighted the Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP), the Fed’s special facility launched to ameliorate last year’s distress. After injecting $168 billion of liquidity into the system, BTFP was closed on schedule this past March; its loans will wind down to zero by March 2025. We have now learned that BTFP extended advances to 1,804 depository institutions, 95% of which were institutions with total assets below $10 billion.
This suggests that the liquidity challenges facing the system last year were fairly widespread. The BTFP provided a very effective bridge to a more normal environment, and will likely be resurrected in the event of future financial instability.
In sum, risks facing the U.S. banking system are still present, but they are well-understood and not nearly as pressing as they were a year ago. That should keep our weekends clear.
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