Deloitte Shadow Banking Index Debuts: ‘Only’ $9.53 Trillion in Size at End of 2011Regulatory changes & new innovations anticipated to be drivers of future fluctuation in new quarterly index |
NEW YORK, May 29, 2012 — The shadow banking system in the United States might not be as large today as regulators and market participants feared, according to a new quarterly index introduced today by the Deloitte Center for Financial Services. However, with regulatory changes and financial innovation looming, the shadow banking system could creep back very quickly, the Deloitte research group cautions.
The Deloitte Shadow Banking Index shows the volatile shadow banking system totaled $9.53 trillion at the end of 2011 ‒ more than 50 percent below its peak in 2008 ‒ and a figure considerably lower than many estimates.
“With other size estimates ranging from $10 to $60 trillion, we think shadow banking is a concept continuing to look for a better definition,” said Adam Schneider, the executive director of the Deloitte Center for Financial Services.
“The purpose of the Deloitte Shadow Banking Index ‒ focused on the U.S. market only at this point – is to help define and quantify the sector over time,” continues Schneider. “We believe this will allow a better measure of size, importance, effect of market and regulatory actions, as well as a way to assess the potential impact on regulated banking markets.”
Key Index findings include:
“Regulatory headwinds against the shadow banking system will likely be the No. 1 influence in changes that affect the Deloitte Shadow Banking Index’s growth or decline,” explains Don Ogilvie, the independent chairman of the Center for Financial Services. “Given that major regulatory efforts have either been enacted or are in the works to help reduce the size of this important sector – like the Financial Stability Board’s recommendations expected later this year, which we are tracking closely – this is a conversation that the market needs to have.”
“This recent decline does not mean that the shadow banking system is unimportant,” said Schneider. “It does mean, however, that it is highly dynamic, and operates amid a backdrop of economic volatility, regulation and significant changes already in the banking system.”
The Index defines shadow banking to include more than a half-dozen components that make up a market-funded, credit intermediation system involving maturity and/or liquidity transformation through securitization and secured-funding mechanisms. It exists at least partly outside of the traditional banking system and does not have government guarantees in the form of insurance or access to the central bank.
The entities and activities included in Deloitte’s definition are: money market mutual funds, asset-backed commercial paper, asset-backed securities, non-agency mortgage-backed securities, collateralized debt obligations, repurchase agreements, securities lending and agency mortgage-backed securities.
“We expect that the components in the index will increase or decrease as new laws and regulations are adopted and as new financial products are created,” said Ogilvie.
Further information on the Index, including the methodology and comparisons to other estimates on the shadow banking sector, can be found at www.deloitte.com/us/shadowbanking.
About the Deloitte Center for Financial Services
The Deloitte Center for Financial Services provides insight and research to help improve the business performance of banks, private equity firms, hedge funds, mutual funds, insurance providers and real estate organizations operating globally.
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