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Bank Of England relaxes rules as Brexit risks ‘crystallise’

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The Bank of England on Tuesday relaxed commercial banks' capital requirements to boost lending to businesses and households, and warned that financial stability risks "have begun to crystallise" after Brexit.

The British central bank announced it has cut its so-called capital buffer rate from 0.50 percent to zero, where it will stay until at least June 2017.

The move will boost lending by up to £150 billion ($199 billion, 179 billion euros) -- and reduce banks' regulatory capital buffers by £5.7 billion, the BoE announced.

BoE governor Mark Carney pledged it would do whatever is needed to aid monetary and fiscal stability in the wake of the June 23 referendum that saw Britain vote to exit the EU.

"The bank can be expected to take whatever action is needed to promote monetary and financial stability, and as a consequence, support the real economy," Carney told reporters in central London.

Major risks outlined Tuesday by the BoE's Financial Policy Committee (FPC) included fragile financial markets, subdued global economic growth, high household debt, and the "stretched" commercial real estate market, and Britain's "large" current account deficit.

"There is evidence that some risks have begun to crystallise," the FPC said in an update after Britain last month voted to exit the European Union.

"The current outlook for UK financial stability is challenging," it added in a bi-annual report.

The FPC update was published after Britain last month voted to leave the 28-nation EU bloc in a shock referendum result that has sparked political turmoil and sent the pound plunging.

"It will take time for the United Kingdom to establish new relationships with the European Union and the rest of the word," the BoE said.

"Some market and economic volatility is to be expected as this process unfolds."

The BoE added that British commercial banks had raised more than £130 billion of capital over the last eight years following the global financial crisis.

"The FPC is supporting the real economy by ensuring that banks can use the substantial capital and liquidity buffers they have in place," Carney added on Tuesday.

Bank of England governor Mark Carney has vowed the central bank will take
Bank of England governor Mark Carney has vowed the central bank will take "whatever action is needed" to aid monetary and fiscal stability in Britain
Matt Dunham, Pool/AFP/File

The report was published after Carney last week indicated that the BoE could cut its key interest rate to a new record-low level under 0.50 percent as early as this month -- while it may decide also to pump out more cash stimulus as a result of Brexit.

- Prospect of economic slowdown -

During the referendum campaign, Carney repeatedly argued that Brexit would have a negative impact on the nation's economy and spark a possible recession.

"There is the prospect of a material slowing in the economy," he added on Tuesday.

However, the BoE chief stopped short of repeating the threat of a possible recession -- defined as two technical quarters of economic contraction.

Global markets had dived in the immediate aftermath of the surprise June 23 referendum vote.

In the wake of the markets chaos, the BoE vowed to pump at least £250 billion into money markets if needed to prevent a credit crunch amid heightened uncertainty.

The Bank of England on Tuesday relaxed commercial banks’ capital requirements to boost lending to businesses and households, and warned that financial stability risks “have begun to crystallise” after Brexit.

The British central bank announced it has cut its so-called capital buffer rate from 0.50 percent to zero, where it will stay until at least June 2017.

The move will boost lending by up to £150 billion ($199 billion, 179 billion euros) — and reduce banks’ regulatory capital buffers by £5.7 billion, the BoE announced.

BoE governor Mark Carney pledged it would do whatever is needed to aid monetary and fiscal stability in the wake of the June 23 referendum that saw Britain vote to exit the EU.

“The bank can be expected to take whatever action is needed to promote monetary and financial stability, and as a consequence, support the real economy,” Carney told reporters in central London.

Major risks outlined Tuesday by the BoE’s Financial Policy Committee (FPC) included fragile financial markets, subdued global economic growth, high household debt, and the “stretched” commercial real estate market, and Britain’s “large” current account deficit.

“There is evidence that some risks have begun to crystallise,” the FPC said in an update after Britain last month voted to exit the European Union.

“The current outlook for UK financial stability is challenging,” it added in a bi-annual report.

The FPC update was published after Britain last month voted to leave the 28-nation EU bloc in a shock referendum result that has sparked political turmoil and sent the pound plunging.

“It will take time for the United Kingdom to establish new relationships with the European Union and the rest of the word,” the BoE said.

“Some market and economic volatility is to be expected as this process unfolds.”

The BoE added that British commercial banks had raised more than £130 billion of capital over the last eight years following the global financial crisis.

“The FPC is supporting the real economy by ensuring that banks can use the substantial capital and liquidity buffers they have in place,” Carney added on Tuesday.

Bank of England governor Mark Carney has vowed the central bank will take

Bank of England governor Mark Carney has vowed the central bank will take “whatever action is needed” to aid monetary and fiscal stability in Britain
Matt Dunham, Pool/AFP/File

The report was published after Carney last week indicated that the BoE could cut its key interest rate to a new record-low level under 0.50 percent as early as this month — while it may decide also to pump out more cash stimulus as a result of Brexit.

– Prospect of economic slowdown –

During the referendum campaign, Carney repeatedly argued that Brexit would have a negative impact on the nation’s economy and spark a possible recession.

“There is the prospect of a material slowing in the economy,” he added on Tuesday.

However, the BoE chief stopped short of repeating the threat of a possible recession — defined as two technical quarters of economic contraction.

Global markets had dived in the immediate aftermath of the surprise June 23 referendum vote.

In the wake of the markets chaos, the BoE vowed to pump at least £250 billion into money markets if needed to prevent a credit crunch amid heightened uncertainty.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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