BoE to test 'shadow banking' after markets chaos
LONDON - The Bank of England will test so-called shadow banking institutions such as pension funds, that played a key role in recent UK bond market chaos.
The BoE was forced to buy UK debt in September in an emergency intervention to avert financial catastrophe after a controversial tax-slashing budget by the government caused bond yields to soar and sparked panic.
The crisis, which sparked the downfall of former Conservative prime minister Liz Truss, threw the spotlight on non-banking financial institutions (NBFIs) and their risk to stability, the BoE noted.
"There is a need to develop stress-testing approaches to understand better the resilience of NBFIs to shocks" and their links with commercial lenders and markets, it added in a report.
"The bank will run, for the first time, an exploratory scenario exercise focused on NBFI risks, to inform understanding of these risks and future policy approaches," it revealed.
September's turmoil, centred on the exposure of pension funds to UK debt market volatility, highlighted a "material risk" to stability, the BoE warned.
Some pension funds use Liability Driven Investments (LDIs), which are linked to financial derivatives and intended to help ensure that the income generated by the assets covers their long-term commitments.
However, the chaos caused the value of assets, notably government bonds, to tumble.
That forced pension funds to sell the bonds, known as gilts, to swiftly access liquidity, sending yields rocketing.