Bonds were seen as a safe haven – but they are central to this bank crisis | Toby Nangle (2024)

If you’re a banker, it’s been a month to forget. Two regional US banks have gone to the wall, central banks on both sides of the Atlantic have been forced to provide hundreds of billions of dollars in emergency lending to shore up the financial system, and the Swiss financial group Credit Suisse has been ignominiously absorbed into the larger UBS at the behest of its regulator. About half a trillion dollars have been wiped from banks’ stock market valuations.

Although history doesn’t repeat itself, it rhymes sufficiently to ask whether we are on the brink of another global financial crisis. A bit of context for the current troubles might help answer.

Inflation is high in the UK, mainland Europe and the US. The standard macroeconomic policy to arrest high inflation is not to strike hard public sector pay deals; it is for central banks to increase interest rates. Higher rates mean a higher cost of borrowing for everyone, reducing the propensity of households and businesses to spend money on credit and reducing aggregate demand versus supply. Doing this in a way that cools inflation without inducing a recession is a hard balance to strike. This is precisely what the Bank of England, European Central Bank and the US Federal Reserve have been trying to do for the past year.

Explainer: are we in a banking crisis? Read more

Increasingly, these interest rate increases are causing problems to pop up in different parts of the global financial system. And the common thread running through this and other recent crises is the bond market, composed of IOUs issued by governments and companies alike.

While Kwasi Kwarteng’s mini-budget was the spark that ignited the financial maelstrom in the UK last autumn, rising interest rates and sinking bond prices in the months leading up to that moment laid the foundations for vulnerabilities among pension funds that were engaging in a form of asset allocation called liability driven investment (LDI) to turn nasty. When they did turn nasty, it took the fall of Liz Truss’s government and an emergency intervention by the Bank of England to steady the system.

In the US, Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) collapsed this month after a depositor run – the second-largest US banking failure by assets in history. The run followed an admission of a near-$2bn (£1.6bn) loss on its long-dated government bond holdings, putting it in need of recapitalisation. Signature Bank and the tiny Silvergate – the two banks who were by reputation the most closely linked to the cryptocurrency industry – were also shuttered as depositors fled.

Government bonds are considered to be the best collateral around. But in its intervention, the Federal Reserve reversed decades of orthodoxy and has offered emergency lending against the full-face value of government bond holdings rather than their (much lower) market value. This sounds arcane, but is telling. It points to a recognition that banks’ unrealised losses on their bond portfolios are sufficiently large as to represent a systemic risk and therefore requires an extraordinary policy response.

At about $128tn, the bond market dwarfs the global stock market in size. It’s where governments, large firms and big banks go to borrow money. As such it plays an absolutely central role in the global financial system. The way bonds are valued is directly linked to market expectations as to the future path of interest rates. Over the past year, central banks such as the Bank of England have surprised financial markets with the pace and magnitude of their interest rate rises. And this has hit bond prices hard. To put some numbers on this, 10-year government bond prices are about 20% lower today than where they were at the end of 2021. Bonds are considered safe – boring even. They have been anything but.

Was Credit Suisse another victim of bond market losses? Not directly. Rather, the firm spent the last decade lurching from scandal to strategic misstep and back again. It built a reputation as Europe’s weakest big bank. Banks require trust to survive, and with failures like SVB and Signature popping up in North America, Credit Suisse’s already nervous depositors and clients found reason enough to flee to safer institutions. With a substantial bank run in progress, there was a very real threat that Credit Suisse would have collapsed had regulators not forced a deal. This would have been truly ugly.

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The Bank of England’s response to the LDI crisis was swift and large. So too was the Federal Reserve’s response to the collapse of SVB and Signature, and the Swiss National Bank’s response to the run on Credit Suisse. The context for these episodes is rising interest rates and the financial fallout that such moves bring.

Monetary policy supposedly works with “long and variable lags”. From time to time, it comes through with sharp and nonlinear spikes.

Toby Nangle is an independent economist and spent 25 years as a fund manager at Columbia Threadneedle

Bonds were seen as a safe haven – but they are central to this bank crisis | Toby Nangle (2024)

FAQs

Which banks are failing in 2024? ›

Republic First Bank reported unrealized securities losses in excess of its equity as early as June 2022. State regulators closed Republic First Bank in April 2024, marking the first bank failure of the year.

What caused the banking crisis of 1933? ›

By early 1933, the Depression had been ravaging the American economy and its banks for nearly four years. Mistrust in financial institutions grew, prompting a rising flood of Americans to withdraw their money from the system rather than risk leaving it in banks.

Do banks own treasury bonds? ›

Foreign banks often buy U.S. Treasury securities as investments. In 2010, about 25 percent of all U.S. Government debt was held by foreign investors. Out of that group of investors, a very large percentage of U.S. debt is held by the central banks of foreign countries.

Why do banks issue bonds? ›

Issuing bonds is one way for companies to raise money. A bond functions as a loan between an investor and a corporation. The investor agrees to give the corporation a certain amount of money for a specific period of time. In exchange, the investor receives periodic interest payments.

Which US banks are in trouble? ›

Additional Resources
Bank NameBankCityCityClosing DateClosing
Signature BankNew YorkMarch 12, 2023
Silicon Valley BankSanta ClaraMarch 10, 2023
Almena State BankAlmenaOctober 23, 2020
First City Bank of FloridaFort Walton BeachOctober 16, 2020
56 more rows
Apr 26, 2024

Which banks are most at risk? ›

These Banks Are the Most Vulnerable
  • First Republic Bank (FRC) . Above average liquidity risk and high capital risk.
  • Huntington Bancshares (HBAN) . Above average capital risk.
  • KeyCorp (KEY) . Above average capital risk.
  • Comerica (CMA) . ...
  • Truist Financial (TFC) . ...
  • Cullen/Frost Bankers (CFR) . ...
  • Zions Bancorporation (ZION) .
Mar 16, 2023

How much is a $100 savings bond worth after 30 years? ›

How to get the most value from your savings bonds
Face ValuePurchase Amount30-Year Value (Purchased May 1990)
$50 Bond$100$207.36
$100 Bond$200$414.72
$500 Bond$400$1,036.80
$1,000 Bond$800$2,073.60
May 7, 2024

Are Treasury bonds safer than banks? ›

Money market accounts are worth considering as well. They're FDIC-insured, and combine features of checking and savings accounts. U.S. government securities—such as Treasury notes, bills, and bonds—have historically been considered extremely safe because the U.S. government has never defaulted on its debt.

Will all banks cash savings bonds? ›

Where do I cash in a savings bond? You can cash paper bonds at a bank or through the U.S. Department of the Treasury's TreasuryDirect website. Not all banks offer the service, and many only provide it if you are an account holder, according to a NerdWallet analysis of the 20 largest U.S. banks.

Why can you lose money on bonds? ›

Inflation erodes the purchasing power of money over time, and that applies to the fixed interest coupons paid by bonds, too. When inflation is increasing (or inflationary expectations are increasing), bonds can start to look less attractive, and demand may fall – leading to changes in market prices.

Why are banks losing money on bonds? ›

Bond prices decline when interest rates rise, when the issuer experiences a negative credit event, or as market liquidity dries up. Inflation can also erode the returns on bonds, as well as taxes or regulatory changes.

Why are bonds in trouble? ›

The problem for bonds is that inflation hasn't gone away and the U.S. economy still looks remarkably resilient—a combination that makes it seem increasingly less likely that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates soon. Bond prices fall when interest rates rise, so bond investors are getting crushed.

What three banks are too big to fail? ›

RBI continues to classify SBI, ICICI Bank and HDFC Bank in the category of D-SIBs. But, what are D-SIBs? These are the banks which are so important for the country's economy that the government cannot afford their collapse. Hence, D-SIBs are thought of as “Too Big to Fail” (TBTF) organisations.

Which is the safest bank? ›

JPMorgan Chase, the financial institution that owns Chase Bank, topped our experts' list because it's designated as the world's most systemically important bank on the 2023 G-SIB list. This designation means it has the highest loss absorbency requirements of any bank, providing more protection against financial crisis.

Is Bank of America in financial trouble? ›

Bank of America's Financial Health

In recent years, Bank of America's financial performance has been relatively stable. In 2022, the bank reported a net income of $20.4 billion, a decrease from the previous year's $27.4 billion. However, its revenue increased from $91.2 billion in 2021 to $95.2 billion in 2022.

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