ADVERTISEMENT

Davos Bank CEOs Are Worried Markets Are Complacent Like 2006

Barclays Plc, Citigroup Inc. and the Carlyle Group fret financial markets are becoming complacent.

Davos Bank CEOs Are Worried Markets Are Complacent Like 2006
A trader is reflected in a monitor while working on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Global finance executives warned of parallels between today’s soaring stock markets and the froth of the pre-crisis years as they said investors could be wrong-footed by central banks raising interest rates.

As the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting got underway in Davos, Switzerland, the leaders of Barclays Plc, Citigroup Inc. and the Carlyle Group all fretted that the strongest global economy since 2011 was leaving financial markets complacent. Equities worldwide are already up more than $3 trillion this year.

Davos Bank CEOs Are Worried Markets Are Complacent Like 2006

“There is a numbness out there, there is an ambivalence out there that’s concerning,” Citigroup Chief Executive Officer Michael Corbat said on a Davos panel hosted by Bloomberg’s Tom Keene. “When the next turn comes -- and it will come -- it’s likely to be more violent than it would otherwise be if we let some pressure off along the way.”

Jes Staley, the CEO of Barclays, said the upbeat environment reminded him of the eve of the last crisis a decade ago and that the combination of stocks at record highs and volatility near all-time lows wasn’t "sustainable" in the long term. He too said trouble could occur if central banks such as the U.S. Federal Reserve push up borrowing costs faster than investors anticipate.

Corbat and Staley said financial-services companies had learned from the last crisis and were now more resilient and less complex. Still, they warned bankers to stay alert.

Depression-era Policy

“I do feel it’s a little bit like 2006, when we were all talking whether we’ve solved the riddle of economic crises,” said Staley. “We’ve got a monetary policy that’s still in the remnants of the depression era. We’ve got very little capacity in the capital markets to deal with a real move in interest rates.”

With interest rates around the globe close to record lows, companies have binged on cheap borrowing. U.S. corporations have a record amount of debt and leverage, with many as vulnerable to default as before the crisis, according to Standard & Poor’s.

The explosion in leveraged loans -- which banks structure for already-indebted corporations and then sell on to investors -- underscores this trend. Citigroup and Barclays are among the banks to have profited from the boom. The two firms arranged a combined $168 billion of U.S. leveraged loans in 2017 and 12.5 billion euros ($15.4 billion) across the EMEA region, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Anne Richards, chief executive of M&G Investments, is also concerned about the potential for higher interest rates. “If interest rates go up meaningfully over the next 12 months, there will be a bunch of people who have borrowed money who will not be able to pay it back,” she said. “Those people are out there, and the markets are not, in aggregate, pricing that.”

Harvard University professor Kenneth Rogoff, who co-wrote the definitive history of the financial crisis, said there was already the potential for a rebound in inflation-adjusted interest rates given U.S. inflation will likely grow by 2 percent or more this year.

"If interest rates go up even modestly, halfway to their normal level, you will see a collapse in the stock market,” he said. “I don’t know how everything from art and bitcoin to stock prices will react as interest rates go up.”

Higher rates will also affect the $5 trillion burden of dollar-denominated debt held by emerging-market companies., the panelists said. Among other risks, they cited mounting government debt in China and elsewhere, rising protectionism and the potential for geopolitical shocks.

“The biggest concern I have is that most people think there’s no problem of a likely recession this year or early next year,’’ said Carlyle’s David Rubenstein, who co-founded the private-equity firm more than 30 years ago. “Generally, when people are happy and confident, something wrong happens.’’

To contact the reporters on this story: Gavin Finch in London at gfinch@bloomberg.net, Stephen Morris in London at smorris39@bloomberg.net, Donal Griffin in London at dgriffin10@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Hertling at jhertling@bloomberg.net, Keith Campbell, Paul Armstrong

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.