Monthly newsletter Weekly news roundup Breaking news notification    
Banking Banana Skins 2008

Get free weekly news by e-mailThe turmoil in the financial markets has completely transformed the risk landscape, according to the latest ‘Banking Banana Skins’ survey conducted by the CSFI in association with PricewaterhouseCoopers.

The annual poll of banking risk is dominated by concerns over current market conditions, notably the liquidity shortage and the crunch in the credit and derivative markets. The fear that these strains will lead to a global recession is high.

The poll is based on the views of nearly 300 senior figures from the financial world in 38 countries, and ranks 30 risks according to their severity.

Two of the top three risks – liquidity and credit spreads – have never previously appeared in the rankings, an indication of how dramatically the risk scene has changed. The only non-financial risk in the top ten is the prospect of a regulatory over-reaction as politicians and regulators prepare to ‘fix’ the problem.

The intensity of respondents’ concerns helped drive the Banana Skins Index, which measures anxiety levels in the financial markets, to its highest point since 1998.

David Lascelles, survey editor, said: “Although some respondents thought there had been crisis over-reaction, the great majority were very pessimistic. This is the darkest banana skins survey in more than 10 years.”

The survey says that the crisis has exposed a failure of controls within banks due to many factors including the growing complexity of finance, distorted incentive structures and insufficient regard to risk management.

John Hitchins, UK banking leader, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, said:
“While current market conditions dominate the survey, there is a marked drop in confidence over the quality of bank risk management processes reversing the trend of previous surveys. Respondents clearly believe the credit crunch provides a wake-up call for the industry to reassess the effectiveness of its risk oversight.”

Among the fast-rising risks are the threat of global recession, led potentially by a downturn in the US, and a collapse in over-priced equity markets. Concerns about the macro-economic outlook were shared by all the major markets.

The most striking declining risk was over-regulation, which headed the Banana Skins polls for the last two years but fell to 8th place this year. But regulation is still seen as a major risk, particularly if there is a ‘knee jerk’ reaction to the crisis.

The poll showed that only 24 percent of respondents thought banks were well prepared for the risks they identified compared to 64 percent in the previous 2007 poll. Bankers were more positive than observers and regulators about their ability to weather the storm.

The poll showed variations in the risk outlook as seen by different classes of respondent. Bankers thought market risks posed the strongest threats, notably sharp movements in the credit, derivatives and equity markets. Non-bankers, including regulators, put more weight on weaknesses within the banks themselves, particularly poor risk management.

Geographically, industrialised and emerging market economies had a similar focus on crisis-related risks, though the major economies worried more about the threat of over-regulation, and emerging economies about the cost and availability of funding.

Banking Banana Skins 2008 is available (£25, $50, €40) from CSFI http://www.csfi.org.uk/

Banking Banana Skins 2007
http://www.continuitycentral.com/news03278.htm

Banking Banana Skins 2006
http://www.continuitycentral.com/news02642.htm

Date: 7th May 2008• Region: World •Type: Article •Topic: Operational risk
Rate this article or make a comment - click here

BC Journal




Copyright 2008 Portal Publishing LtdPrivacy policyContact usSite mapNavigation help