What is happening in financial markets and could there be a global crisis? (2024)

The global banking system is reeling from a series of shocks over the past week, prompted by the collapse of California’s Silicon Valley Bank. That has stoked fears that this is the start of another banking crisis, posing big questions for central banks as they try to fight inflation while ensuring financial stability.

What is happening in financial markets?

Severe stresses in the global financial system have become apparent in the past week. In the US, Silicon Valley Bank’s (SVB) collapse last Friday was the first domino to fall, followed by New York’s Signature Bank on Sunday. Wall Street’s biggest lenders clubbing together to rescue First Republic Bank after its shares crashed, pumping $30bn (£25bn) into it. In Europe, the Swiss National Bank was forced to offer a £44.5bn lifeline to Credit Suisse. Although there were specific problems at SVB and Credit Suisse, there is evidence of wider distress.

Every week, the Federal Reserve, the US’s central bank, provides details of the emergency help it has provided to American banks over the past seven days. In the last week, this rose from $15bn to $318bn – well in excess of the $130bn at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic and not far short of the $437bn at the height of the banking crisis after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers in 2008.

So are we in for a repeat of the global financial crisis of 2008?

It is too early to say at this stage, but there are reasons to be hopeful that a repeat can be avoided. First, banks are in better financial shape than they were in 2008, when many were operating with only small amounts of capital to cover the losses resulting from the meltdown in the US sub-prime mortgage market.

Second, in 2008 the entire global financial system froze up because nobody knew how big the losses were and which banks were most heavily exposed. As yet, there is no sign of that, and banks are forced to report regularly on the quality of their asset portfolios, also undergoing severe stress tests.

Finally, central banks such as the Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank have set up lines of credit designed to provide help to banks with cashflow problems. All that said, the global financial crisis, or GFC, started on a small scale and quickly escalated. What is more, it is clear banks – and other financial institutions – are nursing serious losses. One lesson from 2008 is that confidence can evaporate fast.

Why are the banks making losses?

Central banks responded to the GFC in two ways: they slashed interest rates and pumped money into the banking system through the process known as quantitative easing (QE). In effect, central banks bought bonds – mostly issued by governments – and exchanged them for cash that found its way into the economy. A further round of interest rate cuts and QE occurred at the start of the Covid pandemic.

Central banks have reversed course due to rising inflation. They have raised interest rates and started to sell bonds. Bond prices rose as a result of the QE programmes but have fallen sharply over the past year as QE has been unwound. The aggressive action by central banks has left commercial banks nursing big and unexpected losses. SVB had invested heavily in long-dated US government bonds, but as rates rose sharply the value of its bond prices fell. When customers started demanding their cash back, that forced SVB to sell bonds at a heavy loss, blowing a hole in its balance sheet.

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What happens next?

Central banks are in a bind because there is a tension between their two main functions: to keep inflation low and maintain financial stability. Raising interest rates and reversing QE are designed to slow down growth and so bring inflation down, but even though the ECB went ahead with a planned interest rate rise on Thursday the cost of doing so is that some banks are struggling to cope with the tougher conditions.

Financial markets now assume interest rates will peak sooner and at a lower level than they did before the crisis at SVB blew up, and will be waiting to see how the Fed and the Bank of England respond with interest rate decisions next week. The case for not raising borrowing costs further is that only a fraction of the effect of the higher interest rates of the past year has so far been felt, and that commercial banks are already responding to the problems at SVB and elsewhere by reducing their lending. Risks of recession have markedly increased in the past week.

What is happening in financial markets and could there be a global crisis? (2024)

FAQs

What happens when there is a global financial crisis? ›

In a financial crisis, asset prices see a steep decline in value, businesses and consumers are unable to pay their debts, and financial institutions experience liquidity shortages.

Are we heading for a financial crisis? ›

We're not headed for another global financial crisis, top UBS economist says after recession warning. “I don't think we're facing the next GFC,” Jonathan Pingle, UBS chief U.S. economist told CNBC on Wednesday. Credit tightening in the U.S. has raised concerns about the state of the economy and what could happen next.

What is an example of a global financial crisis? ›

The Great Depression of 1929–39

The Depression lasted almost 10 years and resulted in massive loss of income, record unemployment rates, and output loss, especially in industrialized nations. In the United States the unemployment rate hit almost 25 percent at the peak of the crisis in 1933.

What was the main cause of the global financial crisis? ›

During the GFC, a downturn in the US housing market was a catalyst for a financial crisis that spread from the United States to the rest of the world through linkages in the global financial system. Many banks around the world incurred large losses and relied on government support to avoid bankruptcy.

What would have happened if the banks failed in 2008? ›

Originally Answered: In the 2008 recession, if we had allowed the banks to fail, then what would have actually happened? Edward Bauman is correct - the failure of the financial system would have created chaos, brought down governments, violently and nonviolently, and destroyed countless lives.

How to survive a global financial crisis? ›

  1. Have an Emergency Fund.
  2. Live Within Your Means.
  3. Have Additional Income.
  4. Invest for the Long Term.
  5. Be Real About Risk Tolerance.
  6. Diversify Your Investments.
  7. Keep Your Credit Score High.
  8. Frequently Asked Questions.

How likely is a global recession? ›

After global growth exceeded expectations in 2023, businesses' perceived probability of a global recession has fallen substantially in 2024, according to Oxford Economics data. Oxford's global risk survey in January showed a recession probability of 7.2% — less than half of what it was in October 2023.

How will the US economy be in 5 years? ›

While we do not forecast a recession in 2024, we do expect consumer spending growth to cool and for overall GDP growth to slow to under 1% over Q2 and Q3 2024. Thereafter, inflation and interest rates should gradually normalize and quarterly annualized GDP growth should converge toward its potential of near 2% in 2025.

Is the US in a recession in 2024? ›

The New York Stock exchange (NYSE) at Wall Street, Jan. 31, 2024, in New York. A forward-looking measure of the U.S. economy continued to decline in January but importantly it is no longer signaling a recession in 2024, reflecting an economy outperforming expectations.

Which country is facing a financial crisis? ›

The Sri Lankan economic crisis is an ongoing crisis in Sri Lanka that started in 2019. It is the country's worst economic crisis since its independence in 1948.

What was the worst financial crisis ever? ›

20th century
  • Depression of 1920–1921, a U.S. economic recession following the end of WW1.
  • Wall Street Crash of 1929 and Great Depression (1929–1939) the worst depression of modern history.

Who made money in the 2008 crash? ›

In the mid-2000s, Burry was famous for placing a wager against the housing market and profited handsomely from the subprime lending crisis and the collapse of numerous major financial entities in 2008.

What two things are this debt crisis threatening? ›

A debt crisis can lead to steep losses for banks, both domestic and international, potentially undermining the stability of financial systems in both the crisis-hit country and others. This can affect economic growth and create turmoil in global financial markets.

Could the 2008 financial crisis be avoided? ›

The Great Recession was a man-made storm. A special, bi-partisan government panel found the meltdown was avoidable. “The crisis was the result of human action and inaction, not of Mother Nature or computer models gone haywire,” the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission said.

How long did it take to recover from the 2008 recession? ›

Following these policies, the economy gradually recovered. Real GDP bottomed out in the second quarter of 2009 and regained its pre-recession peak in the second quarter of 2011, 3½ years after the initial onset of the official recession. Financial markets recovered as the flood of liquidity washed over Wall Street.

Will the economy get better in 2024? ›

U.S. real GDP growth on an annual average basis will be 2.3 percent in 2024, 1.5 percent in 2025, and 2.2 percent in 2026. National job growth will weaken sharply to only 35,000 monthly gains in the second half of 2024, rebounding to 115,000 job gains by late 2025 as aggressive Fed rate cuts spur investment spending.

Is the US economy declining? ›

Growth was stronger than expected a year ago.

Defying pessimistic forecasts, US economic growth has progressed at a significant pace over the course of 2023. Last December, the private consensus for real economic growth as measured by the Blue Chip Economic Forecast was negative 0.1% for the year.

Will the economy recover in 2024? ›

WASHINGTON, DC – Economic growth remains likely to decelerate and ultimately result in a mild recession in 2024, followed by a return to growth in 2025, according to the November 2023 commentary from the Fannie Mae (FNMA/OTCQB) Economic and Strategic Research (ESR) Group.

Where is the US economy headed? ›

Overall, despite an expected slowdown in the coming quarters, we expect the US economy to post real growth of 2.4% this year and 1.4% in 2025. Over the entire forecast, economic growth averages 1.8% per year, slightly higher than the long-term potential of 1.5% per year.

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