BIS/Caruana: Global liquidity - Where do we stand?

04 June 2013

In his speech, Caruana underscored the importance, both for market participants and for the authorities, of being prepared for eventual exit from the 'extraordinarily accommodative global monetary conditions'.

Mr Caruana started his remarks with some words on the concept of global liquidity and the reasons to monitor it. He then tried to characterise today’s global financial conditions: the stubbornly high levels of debt in the advanced economies and the still-rising levels of debt in some advanced and emerging market economies. Then he reviewed quantity and price indicators of global liquidity. Finally, he turned to the current, unprecedented levels of monetary accommodation and the challenges that the desirable interest rate normalisation could pose.

Global financial conditions show strong cross-currents and merit policymakers' attention. In countries at the centre of the global financial crisis, deleveraging has lagged. In contrast, some advanced and emerging market economies show ongoing leveraging that in some cases is posing late financial-cycle risks. Global international bank credit shows little growth, but this aggregate conceals shrinkage of bank credit in Europe and its expansion in Asia. Aggregates that include credit extended in booming bond markets, like dollar credit outside the United States and euro credit outside of the euro area, are growing at double-digit rates.

With regard to policy, he made three suggestions:

Full speech


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