France 24, AFP, 18 November 2012
AFP - Financial regulators on Sunday issued a series of recommendations to regulate the non-bank or "shadow" financial sector, which was estimated to be worth $67 trillion (52.5 trillion euros) in 2011.
The sector
includes hedge funds and finance companies or securities entities that provide
credit or credit guarantees without being regulated like a bank.
Following
the 2008-2009 financial crisis, in which the collapse of international banks
threatened to bring down entire economies, the size and systemic risk of the
little-regulated shadow sector has also come under scrutiny.
G20
countries in 2011 therefore decided to boost oversight and regulation of the
sector, which has grown by between $5 trillion and $6 trillion from 2010 to
2011 and is now equivalent to about half of the banking system's assets.
On Sunday,
international regulatory body the Financial Stability Board (FSB) issued
recommendations including imposing minimum standards on methodologies used on
certain calculations and carrying out reviews on reporting requirements for
fund managers.
Pointing
out that certain funds may use leverage to boost their returns, the FSB said
authorities may also impose limits on the leverage used or require them to
maintain sufficient liquid assets as buffers in case their bets go awry.
The FSB
said it is "of the view that the authorities' approach to shadow banking
has to be a targeted one".
"The
objective is to ensure that shadow banking is subject to appropriate oversight
and regulation to address bank-like risks to financial stability emerging
outside the regular banking system while not inhibiting sustainable non-bank
financing models that do not pose such risks," it said.
It added
that a "resilient" shadow banking sector "would be
welcomed".
The
recommendations are open for consultation until January 14, 2013, with final
recommendations to be published next September.
The US has
the world's biggest shadow banking system, with assets of $23 trillion in 2011.
It is followed by the eurozone with $22 trillion and Britain with $9 trillion.
In some
economies, the sector is several times the size of the jurisdiction's gross
domestic product. In Hong Kong the sector is estimated at 520 percent of
output, in the Netherlands at 490 percent and Britain at 370 percent.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.