Bank
Warns of Major Canada Shock If Europe Crisis Worsens
Canada
faces a “major shock” to its financial system and economy if
Europe’s crisis worsens, the country’s central bank said.
15
June, 2012
While
Canada’s financial system has fared well and conditions in the
country remain “very stimulative,” deepening turmoil in Europe
may boost funding costs for the nation’s banks and generate losses
from assets linked to the euro zone, the Bank of Canada said today in
its semi-annual Financial System Review. Non-performing loans at
Canadian banks would also increase if growth slows.
“The
combined effect of these events could constitute a major shock for
both the Canadian financial system and the economy as a whole,” the
Ottawa-based bank said, adding sovereign debt strains in the euro
region are the “principal” threat to the country’s financial
stability. “Should the crisis worsen and spread further across
Europe, the impact on the Canadian financial system could be
significant.”
The
Canadian central bank, which is headed by Financial Stability Board
Chairman Mark Carney, said that banks in the 17- nation euro zone
need to be recapitalized with European assets, and that “firewalls”
need to be strengthened and brought into force.
Recent
steps by European governments and central banks “can only create
time” and need to be matched by efforts to create a more “robust
foundation” for the region’s financial market, such as a banking
union, the bank said in the report.
To
be sure, Canadian credit markets have remained “robust,” the bank
said, citing near historic low corporate bond yields and data that
suggest banks have been easing lending conditions.
‘Relatively
Stable’
“In
contrast to the volatility in European credit markets, markets in
Canada have been relatively stable, and Canadian banks continue to
have good access to wholesale funding markets,” according to the
report.
Canada’s
biggest domestic risk remains high household debt, the bank said in
the report, and the ratio of debt to household income is likely to
keep rising. The Bank of Canada said that while it welcomed a recent
slowdown in the pace of debt accumulation, households remain
vulnerable to shocks.
Stretched
valuations and continued building in some segments of the country’s
housing market are “of increasing concern,” the bank said.
Construction and home sales have been stronger than it had
anticipated in December, and the proportion of debt held by highly
indebted households remains above the average of the past decade, it
said.
The
Bank of Canada “judges that the risks associated with high levels
of household debt and a potential correction in the housing market
are elevated and have not diminished since December,” the report
said. “A reduction in this domestic risk requires a combination of
deleveraging by vulnerable households and a reduction in housing
market imbalances.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.