金融和市場監管

Watchdogs must ‘up their game’ to prevent future bank failures, says BIS

Financial regulators need more funds to ensure lenders ‘fulfil their responsibilities’, argues Agustín Carstens

Financial watchdogs must “significantly” increase their budgets in the wake of recent banking crises, said the head of the umbrella body for central banks, arguing that more intensive day-to-day oversight was critical to preventing failures.

Global policymakers are weighing rule changes to better insulate banks from risks such as changing interest rates and a swifter flight of deposits, two factors that fuelled the biggest spate of collapses since the global financial crisis of 2007-08. Among the most high-profile failures, Silicon Valley Bank was shut down by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation in early March, while Credit Suisse was forcibly sold to Swiss rival UBS a week later.

Agustín Carstens, head of the Bank for International Settlements, said that while there was a case for making regulatory “adjustments”, the approach had its limitations because “there is simply no reasonable level of minimum capital and liquidity that can make a bank viable if it has an unsustainable business model or poor governance”.

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