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ECB sees Underpriced Geopolitical Risks, Warns against Easing Bank Rules

FRANKFURT, March 18 (Reuters) - Financial markets are underpricing geopolitical risks, increasing the potential for sudden sell-offs, European Central Bank supervisor ​Claudia Buch said on Wednesday, as she warned ‌against easing bank regulations.

The U.S. has been loosening bank rules for the past year, putting pressure on regulators elsewhere as their ​lenders could face an uneven playing field if ​they did not follow suit.

"These guardrails need to ⁠be maintained as geopolitical tensions rise," Buch said in ​the ECB's annual supervision report. "Fragmentation or any weakening of ​standards could undermine banks’ ability to withstand adverse developments."

Bank shares have sold off since the start of the U.S. and Israeli war on ​Iran but market moves have been orderly, much ​like over the past year when tariffs and wars raised uncertainty.

Lenders ‌are ⁠properly capitalised and have all the necessary buffers, but risks remain high, Buch argued.

"This uncertainty is not adequately reflected in market-based indicators of financial stress, which could lead ​to an ​abrupt repricing of ⁠risk," she said.

She argued that shocks could materialise unexpectedly and spread quickly given ​geopolitical tensions, stretched valuations in some market segments, ​growing ⁠interconnections with non-bank financial firms and the risk of sudden shifts in market sentiment.

The ECB has made strengthening lenders' ⁠resilience ​to geopolitical risks a key ​priority for this year and will stress test the largest banks in ​the coming months.

Reporting by Balazs Koranyi, editing by Andrei Khalip

Source: Reuters


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