Primary Country (Mandatory)

Other Country (Optional)

Set News Language for United States

Primary Language (Mandatory)
Other Language[s] (Optional)
No other language available

Set News Language for World

Primary Language (Mandatory)
Other Language(s) (Optional)

Set News Source for United States

Primary Source (Mandatory)
Other Source[s] (Optional)

Set News Source for World

Primary Source (Mandatory)
Other Source(s) (Optional)
  • Countries
    • India
    • United States
    • Qatar
    • Germany
    • China
    • Canada
    • World
  • Categories
    • National
    • International
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
    • Special
    • All Categories
  • Available Languages for United States
    • English
  • All Languages
    • English
    • Hindi
    • Arabic
    • German
    • Chinese
    • French
  • Sources
    • India
      • AajTak
      • NDTV India
      • The Hindu
      • India Today
      • Zee News
      • NDTV
      • BBC
      • The Wire
      • News18
      • News 24
      • The Quint
      • ABP News
      • Zee News
      • News 24
    • United States
      • CNN
      • Fox News
      • Al Jazeera
      • CBSN
      • NY Post
      • Voice of America
      • The New York Times
      • HuffPost
      • ABC News
      • Newsy
    • Qatar
      • Al Jazeera
      • Al Arab
      • The Peninsula
      • Gulf Times
      • Al Sharq
      • Qatar Tribune
      • Al Raya
      • Lusail
    • Germany
      • DW
      • ZDF
      • ProSieben
      • RTL
      • n-tv
      • Die Welt
      • Süddeutsche Zeitung
      • Frankfurter Rundschau
    • China
      • China Daily
      • BBC
      • The New York Times
      • Voice of America
      • Beijing Daily
      • The Epoch Times
      • Ta Kung Pao
      • Xinmin Evening News
    • Canada
      • CBC
      • Radio-Canada
      • CTV
      • TVA Nouvelles
      • Le Journal de Montréal
      • Global News
      • BNN Bloomberg
      • Métro
Why global financial turmoil continues and how it could affect you

Why global financial turmoil continues and how it could affect you

CBC
Monday, March 27, 2023 01:29:36 PM UTC

Is it possible to talk about financial contagion without perpetuating it?

Regulators and public officials are anxious to be reassuring, but for Canadians trying to understand how a series of ostensibly unconnected global bank failures could affect them, being like the meme dog in the burning kitchen that turned 10 this year may not be the best plan either.

After market turbulence last week, worries continued over the weekend. New reports on Sunday said money market funds had swollen by $286 billion US in two weeks as people withdrew deposits from banks. Also on Sunday, International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva warned a Beijing audience of the growing risk of global financial instability.

As shares in Frankfurt-based global investment banking giant Deutsche Bank fell 14 per cent in early trading on Friday and U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen held an unscheduled in-camera emergency meeting of the Financial Stability Oversight Council, it was pretty clear that what seemed like an isolated failure of one overextended California bank is still sending out ripples around the world.

Last week, Yellen told depositors that U.S. banks were safe and sound. While calming words are nice, emergency meetings are not entirely reassuring.

The phenomenon of financial contagion is not new and has been widely studied.

"Financial contagion describes the cascading effects that an initially idiosyncratic shock to a small part of a financial system can have on the entire system" sounds like a discussion of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) about two weeks ago and the events that followed, but the quote actually comes from the 2013 Handbook of Safeguarding Global Financial Stability.

And while experts know that such a cascading series of events can sometimes be hard to stop, financial experts who are themselves deeply embedded in the same financial system are, quite reasonably, anxious to explain that the problem is limited to unique causes that can be fixed.

"So far, the problems have been concentrated in U.S. regional banks and one specific weaker entity in Europe," said a report issued early Friday from the Netherlands-based ING, whose shares also fell sharply on the day. "The European issue has been more or less addressed by prompt interventions by the Swiss government and central bank.

"This makes a likelihood of a wide systemic crisis quite limited," said the report, titled Market Turmoil: Making Sure You Don't Make a Drama Out of a Crisis ... Yet.

The question that is so difficult to answer in the heat of the moment is what is causing the contagion and the correct analogy to choose. Is it just a "weaker entity" or two that will soon stabilize. Or is it like an accumulation of snow at the top of a financial mountain built up over a period of low interest rates and loose lending?

According to Jacqueline Best — a University of Ottawa political studies professor who has examined previous periods of inflation and market instability, and who is currently doing research as the Visiting Hallsworth professor at the University of Manchester in England — the fact that the correct analogy is unknown as a crisis begins perpetuates contagion.

As someone who studies financial crises, she says her feelings are torn.

"These are fascinating times, intellectually, for me, but deeply worrying personally," said Best, speaking on the phone from England as European markets were closing on Friday.

Read full story on CBC
Share this story on:-
More Related News
Ottawa approves merger of Teck and Anglo American

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly has approved a merger between Canadian natural resources company Teck Resources Ltd. and Britain's Anglo American PLC.

Canada's inflation rate stayed flat in November but grocery prices grew at fastest pace in nearly 2 years

Canada's annual inflation rate was unchanged at 2.2 per cent in November, Statistics Canada said on Monday but grocery inflation reached its highest rate in nearly two years.

Canadians under 35 are debt-stressed — and buy now, pay later ubiquity isn't helping

Mark Kalinowski has been a credit counsellor for nearly 14 years, helping people of all generations manage their debt. But this year, more than a quarter of the clients he saw in his Calgary office were under the age of 35.

A Dior calendar for $11K? Here’s how the humble advent calendar has gone bananas

Though its origins are religious, you probably know the advent calendar as a humble grocery-store product that features chocolates hidden behind 24 perforated cardboard doors.

Would Netflix buying Warner Bros. kill movies in theatres?

When Sonya Yokota William heard that Netflix was poised to buy Warner Bros. Discovery's TV and film studio — one of Hollywood's oldest and most prized assets — she couldn't help but worry that the future of the moviegoing experience itself was at risk.

U.S. businesses claim Canada is a back door for products from China

As U.S. President Donald Trump sticks with his campaign of tariffs on imports from Canada, some American industries are accusing Canadian competitors of using cheap materials from China in ways that violate free trade rules and undercut U.S. companies. 

Elon Musk's X slapped with €120M fine by EU regulator for breaching content rules

Elon Musk's social media company X was fined 120 million euros ($193.3 million Cdn) by EU tech regulators on Friday for breaching online content rules, the first sanction under landmark legislation that once again drew criticism from the U.S. government.

Chain restaurants are out. Restaurant groups are in

Picture this: you walk into a new, buzzy, chef-driven restaurant. It’s the only one of its kind, and by all appearances, it looks like an independent spot.

Pay high duties or lose U.S. shoppers? Some Canadian retailers forced to choose amid holiday sales

With no more duty-free shipping of small packages to the U.S., Canadian online retailers will have to make a tough gamble: pay pricey fees on low-value shipments, or get a holiday sales boost from American customers?

© 2008 - 2025 Webjosh  |  News Archive  |  Privacy Policy  |  Contact Us