Central banks seen enhancing liquidity after SWIFT ban – Credit Suisse strategist

NEW YORK, Feb 27 (Reuters) – The banning of certain Russian banks from the SWIFT international payment system could push central banks to enhance liquidity to offset missed payments, a Credit Suisse strategist said on Sunday.

Western nations announced on Saturday a harsh set of sanctions to punish Russia for its invasion of Ukraine, including blocking some banks from the SWIFT international payments system.

Major banks were working this weekend to get to grips with the raft of new sanctions and their full implications, while markets braced for more volatility as the measures could disrupt global trade and hurt Western interests as well as Russia. read more

“Exclusions from SWIFT will lead to missed payments and giant overdrafts similar to the missed payments and giant overdrafts that we saw in March 2020”, Credit Suisse’s Zoltan Pozsar said in a note.

Back in March 2020, the U.S. Federal Reserve enhanced efforts with other major central banks to ease a global dollar-funding crunch, as part of emergency measures to stem the financial and economic fallout from the coronavirus pandemic.

“The virus froze the flow of goods and services that led to missed payments, and war has led to exclusions from SWIFT that will lead to missed payments again”, said Pozsar.

“One would assume that central banks would re-activate daily swap line operations now that the SWIFT option got invoked. Central banks should stand ready to make markets on Monday again”, he added.

To counter inflation, the Fed has announced plans to reduce its balance sheet this year, after it roughly doubled in size during the pandemic to nearly $9 trillion as it bought bonds to help keep longer-term interest rates down.

But the Fed’s balance sheet may expand again before shrinking through so-called quantitative tightening, a reversal of the Fed’s bond-buying programme, Pozsar said.

“The consequence of excluding banks from SWIFT is real, and so is the need for central banks to re-activate daily U.S. dollar funds supplying operations”, he said.

Reporting by Davide Barbuscia Editing by Shri Navaratnam

Source: https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/central-banks-seen-enhancing-liquidity-after-swift-ban-credit-suisse-strategist-2022-02-28/

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Matthew Oldford Halifax Developer Bridges Finance and Construction to Address Nova Scotia’s Growing Housing Demand

HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA — As Halifax confronts one of the most pressing housing shortages in…

4 days ago

Servair Returns to Space with ESA Astronaut Sophie Adenot and Chef Anne-Sophie Pic

PARIS, FRANCE — Servair, a member of gategroup, is once again reaching for the stars.…

5 days ago

Luxury Dubai apartment sold for AED422M

Sale hailed as major sign of confidence in city’s real estate market and security in UAE …

6 days ago

What to look for in aircraft audit and transaction management

By Daniel Welinder, Head of Aircraft Management and Sales at Jet Agent The acquisition of…

6 days ago

Biomass, Carbon Removal and Data Centres Converge at DeCarbon Copenhagen 2026

COPENHAGEN, DENMARK — DeCarbon Copenhagen 2026 will convene Europe’s biomass, carbon markets and digital infrastructure…

1 week ago

Parabellum Investments Sells BPO Leader Parseq to Paragon Group

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM — Parabellum Investments has announced the sale of business process outsourcing (BPO)…

1 week ago