Economic news

BoE Tests Private Market Resilience to Severe Global Shock

LONDON, June 19 (Reuters) - The Bank of England on Friday set out the scenario for this year’s stress test ​of private markets, modelling a severe global shock that ‌sends equity markets down 35% and pushes inflation to 7%.

The test assumes unspecified geopolitical events disrupt supply chains, triggering a deep downturn in ​which Britain’s economy shrinks by 4% and unemployment rises.

More ​than 40 firms are taking part in the ⁠system-wide exploratory scenario (SWES), the first of its kind globally, including ​17 alternative asset managers such as Apollo Global Management, Ares, Bain ​Capital and KKR. As the BoE does not regulate asset managers, their participation is voluntary.

The exercise is designed to assess how banks and non-bank ​financial institutions active in private markets would respond to ​a severe but plausible global recession, and how their behaviour could interact to ‌amplify ⁠stress across the financial system.

Regulators globally have stepped up scrutiny of private markets. The Financial Stability Board in May said signs of underlying stress are emerging across private credit - typically non-bank ​lending to mid-sized ​companies. The BoE ⁠has previously expressed concern that opacity in private markets could exacerbate isolated failures.

The BoE said the ​scenario - like others in previous stress tests - is ​not ⁠a prediction of what it thinks is likely to happen to the world economy. It plans to share results from the first ⁠round ​of the test by year-end, before ​running a second stress early next year followed by a final report.

Reporting by ​David Milliken and Phoebe Seers; editing by William James, Kirsten Donovan

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree