PIMCO’s latest Global Central Bank Focus article by Tony Crescenzi, Ben Emons, Andrew Bosomworth, Lupin Rahman and Isaac Meng
For decades, financial firms, captains of industry and investors who have bet against central bank actions have mostly lost. Hence the credo: Don’t Fight the Fed.
Once again, this fight-the-tide 'trade' is the topic of debate: Should you bet that the Fed’s colossal effort to reflate asset prices will end in colossal failure? What about the tidal wave of central bank activity abroad? Will it, against historical precedent, end in failure, too?
Confronted by more than 40 acts of interest rate and policy easing in six months by the world’s central banks, investors in late 2011 and early 2012 have decided not to fight, bidding up risk assets and providing a reprieve from months of drubbing.
Continue reading "To Fight or Not to Fight the World’s Central Banks" »
Going, Going, Gone? Will The UK Government Cease To Support Systemic Banks?
The question is raised and, of course, answered, by Standard & Poor's, taking as its starting point the stated desire of the UK government to avoid providing support to failing banks in the future.
In the agency's opinion, the government cannot yet walk away from systemically important banks without running the risk of wider systemic contagion.
S&P urges readers to Watch a CreditMatters video (8mins) in which Mark Button, senior director, and Giles Edwards, director, discuss the implications of a curb on governmental support to the UK.banking sector, including why Standard & Poor's continues to factor such support into the current ratings.
Additionally, they discuss the U.K.'s Banking Industry Country Risk Assessment (BICRA), which is the methodology we use to evaluate and compare global banking systems.
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