The Economist - USA (2022-03-12)

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The Economist March 12th 2022 Finance&economics 61

card  firm,  is  another  powerful  financial
network.  It  is  set  to  gain  marketsharein
Russia in the wake of the departuresofVisa
and  Mastercard,  which  were  announced
on March 5th. Several Russian bankshave
announced  that  they  will  move  toUnion­
Pay,  which  already  has  a  significantpres­
ence in the country. 
This  shift  will  not  come  easily,how­
ever. Within Russia, UnionPay’s networkis
small;  many  banks  have  no  existingrela­
tionship  with  the  company.  For  Russians
abroad  the  problem  is  that,  despitebeing
in more than 180 countries, UnionPayisa
fringe  service  in  America  and  Europe,ac­
cording to Jason Ekberg of Oliver Wyman,a
consultancy.
cips,  meanwhile,  will  not  be  themir­
acle  solution  Chinese  bloggers  hopedfor.
In order to protect its capital account,Chi­
na allows foreign banks to link to cipsonly
indirectly, through Chinese clearingbanks
and  using  swiftmessaging,  notesEdwin
Lai of Hong Kong University of Scienceand
Technology.  That  means  Western sanc­
tions  may  still  apply  to  any  transfersbe­
tween  swift­barred  Russian  banks and
foreign banks.
A  final  route  for  financial  assistance
will come through backchannel banksthat
dodge sanctions. China has a longhistory
of turning a blind eye to smaller banksthat
finance  trade  with  countries  targetedby
America and the un. These activitiesusu­
ally  occur  on  a  small  scale.  And  manyare
caught  in  the  act  and  hit  with  sanctions
themselves.  In  2012  Bank  of  Kunlunwas
targeted  by  America  for  doing  business
with an Iranian bank. Some smallChinese
banks  may  take  the  risk  with  Russia,but
they  will  be  unable  to  provide  thelarge­
scale assistance it needs.
All  told,  Sino­Russian  financial links
appear  weaker  than  Russia  mighthope.
The  situation  is  likely  to  raise  questions
about  the  shortcomings  in  China’sefforts
to  build  global  financial  networks. For
cips, many of the problems are clear.Inor­
der to maintain control over capitalflows,
China  has  not  linked  the  systemdirectly
with  banks  outside  mainland  China,with
the exception of Standard Chartered,a Brit­
ish  bank  with  long­establishedlinks to
China.  cips’s  indigenous  messagingsys­
tem works only with Chinese banks.Toim­
prove  it,  China  must  continue  openingit
up and granting more direct links withfor­
eign  banks.  The  lack  of  such  linksisre­
flected  in  the  system’s  transaction vol­
umes.  It  processes  just  13,000  per day,
around one­twentieth of the numberhan­
dled by America’s domestic­paymentssys­
tem, known as chips.
China’s  President  Xi  Jinping has re­
ferred  to  Mr  Putin  as  a  “best  friend”.The
Russian conflict is laying bare someofChi­
na’s  financial  vulnerabilities.  That may
make the relationship less amicable.n


Fundingconditions

Warbonds


C


reditisthefinancialsystem’soxygen
supply.Whenitflowsfreely,itdoesso
unnoticed.When itstops,soon enough
everythingelsedoesaswell.Thehypoxic
episode thatfelled theAmerican invest­
mentbankLehmanBrothersin 2008 un­
leashedchaos,turninga subprime­mort­
gagecrunchintoa globalfinancialcrisis.
Eversince,centralbanksandmarketpun­
ditshavefixeda hawk­likegazeoncredit
conditions,waryofa repeat.
Today’s scramble for safe assets was
promptednotbya financialcrashbutby
VladimirPutin’sinvasionofUkraine.Ne­
vertheless, there are similarities. Once
again,thedollarisascendantasinvestors
fleeriskiercurrencies.Hedgingcosts,par­
ticularly for the war­adjacent euro, are
spikingasvolatilityrisesandtradersbet
thata protractedconflictwillcontinueto
favourthegreenback.ArushintoAmeri­
cangovernmentdebt—thesafestassetof
all—haspushedTreasuryyieldsdowneven
asinflationexpectationshaverisen.Priz­
ingsecurityoverreturns,lendershavedri­
vencorporate­bondspreadsup.
Thisflightto safetycauses plentyof
problemsonitsown.A strongerdollar,for
instance, increases the debt burden on
countriesthatborrowinitanddentspro­
fitsforAmericancompaniesthatearna lot
oftheirrevenuesabroad.Butthegreatest
threattofinancialstabilitycomesfromthe
pressureitexertsonthemoneymarket,
wherefirmsborrow tomeettheirshort­
termfundingneeds.Thismarketseizing
upisthefinancialequivalentofa pulmo­
naryembolism,quicklyforcingotherwise
healthyfirmsupagainstthewall.Adash
fordollarsisfineifitmerelypushesex­

changeratesup.The realtroublecomes
whenit alsocreatesa shortageofthem.
That happenedin2008,asbanksbe­
cameunwillingtolendtoeachotherand
thecostofborrowingforafewmonths
jumpedwholepercentagepointsabovethe
overnightrate.Eventswererepeatedina
muchmilderfashioninMarch 2020 asthe
worldwentintocovid­inducedlockdown.
Oneverymeasureofmoney­marketstress,
from short­term commercial borrowing
coststothedemandfordollarsrelativeto
othercurrencies,theimpactofMrPutin’s
warhasbeenmilderstill(seechart).
Thereare twomain reasonsforthis.
Thefirstisthatitfollowsa floodofliquid­
ityfromcentralbanks.SinceMarch 2020
theFederalReserve,theEuropeanCentral
Bank,theBankofJapanandtheBankof
Englandhaveissued$9.1trn(11%ofglobal
gdp) innewreserves.Afterthatdeluge,
notesJonas Goltermann ofCapitalEco­
nomics,a consultancy,it isalmostsurpris­
ingthattherearestrainsonfundingatall.
Thedeeperreasonisthatmoneymar­
ketsarenowfittedwitha comprehensive
ventilationsystem.Permanentswaplines
betweentheFedandfiveotherbigcentral
banksallowthemtoexchangetheirown
currencyfordollarsthatcanbedistributed
todomesticfirmsintimesofstress.A sec­
ondfacilityallowsa biggergrouptosimply
borrowdollarsfromtheFed.
Meanwhile,banksnolongerrelyonun­
securedloansfromeachothertoplugday­
to­daycashshortfalls.Forfundingindol­
larsthereplacementistherepomarket,
where financial institutions and large
companiesborrowsome$2.5trnfromeach
othereverydayusingTreasuriesassecur­

AsFortressRussiacrumbles,Westerncreditmarketsareholdingupwell

Steady pulse

Sources:Bloomberg;ICEDataIndices *Three-monthcross-currency basis swaps

12

9

6

3

0
2020 21 22

High-yield corporate-bond spread over
sovereign debt, percentage points
0

-50

-100

-150

-200

-250
2020 21 22

Demand for US dollar relative to
other currencies*, basis points

Ye n

Euro

↓Greaterdemand
fordollars

Euro area

United States
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