Bank of England will release Financial Stability Report on Tuesday, which include stress tests for high-street banks such as HSBC, RBS or Barclays. Those high-street banks are expected to pass the stress tests without failing, according to the analysts.
the guardian >> Forget Black Friday. Forget Super Thursday. It’s Mark Carney’s Super Tuesday!
Super Tuesday, as some City analysts have decided to call it, brings together the Bank of England’s annual MOT of banks’ financial strength with its twice-yearly assessment of risks to the financial system. It’s not to be confused with Super Thursday – the Bank’s quarterly bombardment of economists with information on inflation and interest rates.
Central banking used to be rather a dull business, but the dry data releases and policy pronouncements are now treated almost like the announcement of Adele’s next tour. Mark Carney, the Bank’s governor, is supposedly either a rock star or a George Clooney lookalike, depending on who you talk to.
The so-called stress tests cover the high street banks – HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and Lloyds – plus Santander UK, Standard Chartered and Nationwide building society.
Analysts don’t think any of the lenders will fail the main test. The real action could be a clampdown on consumer lending after the Bank’s chief economist, Andy Haldane, said the Bank was keeping an eye on rising household debt. Maybe Tuesday won’t be all that super for the banks.
Mentioned in the guardian's articles, household debt has to be kept on eye because mortgage loan is vulnerable to the interest rate rising. Once concerns raised about if rate rising will suffer household debt, Bank of England probably hesitate to increase the interest rate. Similar story was seen in Australian mortgage a year ago.
Anyway, if expectation for upside of the interest rate wiped off, GBP could decline for a while.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.