1 / 69

Financial Stability Report 2005:2

This report provides an assessment of the financial stability of major banks, lending to the general public, sectoral breakdown, and other key financial market indicators. It analyzes the performance of stock markets, government bond yields, corporate bond spreads, credit default swap spreads, and commodity prices.

jlucille
Download Presentation

Financial Stability Report 2005:2

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Financial Stability Report 2005:2 2005-11-23

  2. Summary of the stability assessment

  3. Lending to general public in the major banks’, sectoral breakdownDecember 2004 Source: Bank reports.

  4. CHAPTER 1Financial markets

  5. Stock market indicesIndex: September 2002 = 100 Figure 1:1 Source: EcoWin.

  6. Expected profitsPercentage increase from 2004 Figure 1:2 Source: EcoWin.

  7. Implied stock-market volatilityIndex Figure 1:3 Source: Bloomberg.

  8. Ten-year government bond yieldsPer cent Figure 1:4 Sources: EcoWin.

  9. Corporate bond spreads in the USAPercentage points Figure 1:5 Sources: EcoWin, Federal Reserve Board and Merrill Lynch.

  10. Corporate bond spreads in EuropePercentage points Figure 1:6 Sources: J. P. Morgan and Merrill Lynch.

  11. Credit default swap spreadar Figure 1:7 Source: Bloomberg.

  12. Emerging market bond spreadsPercentage points Figure 1:8 Source: Bloomberg.

  13. Prices for oil and other commoditiesUSD and index: February 2000 = 100 Figure 1:9 Sources: Bloomberg and EcoWin.

  14. CHAPTER 2The Swedish banks’ borrowers

  15. Non-financial companies borrowing and bank depositsTwelve-month change, moving three-month average Figure 2:1 Source: The Riksbank.

  16. Ratio of debt to total assets in listed companiesPer cent of all listed companies Figure 2:2 Sources: Bloomberg and the Riksbank.

  17. Cover for interest expenditure and debt in small and large companiesRatio Figure 2:3 Sources: UC AB and the Riksbank.

  18. Breakdown of returns on equity in listed companiesPer cent of all listed companies Figure 2:4 Sources: Bloomberg and the Riksbank.

  19. Number of corporate defaults by company size Figure 2:5 Source: Statistics Sweden.

  20. Corporate defaults brokendown by industryPercentage 12-month change, moving 12-month average Figure 2:6 Source: Statistics Sweden.

  21. Expected default frequency (EDF) by industry for listed non-financial companiesPer cent (logarithmic scale) Figure 2:7 Sources: Moody’s KMV.

  22. Expected default frequency (EDF) for listed non-financial companiesPer cent (logarithmic scale) Figure 2:8 Sources: Moody’s KMV.

  23. Cover for interest expenditure and debt for property companiesRatio Figure 2:9 Source: The Riksbank.

  24. Expected default frequency (EDF) for listed property companiesPer cent (logarithmic scale) Figure 2:10 Source: Moody´s KMV.

  25. Real rents for office premises in central locationsIndex 1981 = 100 Figure B1 Sources: NewSec AB and the Riksbank.

  26. Vacancy rates for office premises in central locationsPer cent Figure B2 Sources: NewSec AB and the Riksbank.

  27. Average direct return required for office premises in central locationsPer cent Figure B3 Sources: Newsec AB, Jones Lang LaSalle and EcoWin.

  28. Changes in metropolitan and national employmentPer cent Figure B4 Sources: Statistics Sweden and the Riksbank.

  29. Household borrowing by type of institutionPercentage 12-month change Figure 2:11 Source: The Riksbank.

  30. Household debt and house pricesIndex 1986 = 100 Figure 2:12 Source: Statistics Sweden.

  31. Household debt and post-tax interestexpenditure as percentages of disposable incomePer cent Figure 2:13 Sources: Statistics Sweden and the Riksbank.

  32. Household wealthSEK billion Figure 2:14 Sources: Statistics Sweden and the Riksbank.

  33. Length of fixed interest periods for house mortgage loansPer cent of total stock Figure 2:15 Source: The Riksbank.

  34. CHAPTER 3Developments in the banks

  35. Implied volatility of bank equityPer cent, moving 10-day average Figure 3:1 Sources: Bloomberg and the Riksbank.

  36. Profit before loan losses and net loan losses in the major banksFour-quarter figures. SEK billion, 2005 prices Figure 3:2 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  37. Post-tax return on equity in the majorbanks and the market’s required returnPer cent Figure 3:3 Sources: Bank reports, Stockholmsbörsen and the Riksbank.

  38. Pre-tax return on equity Figure 3:4 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  39. Post-tax return on equityPer cent Figure 3:5 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  40. Net interest margin and spreads for the major banks on deposits, bank loans and mortgage loans in SwedenPer cent, moving 4-quarter average Figure 3:6 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  41. Net commission income in the majorbanks and Nordic stock-markets indexSEK million and index Figure 3:7 Sources: Bank reports, EcoWin, and the Riksbank.

  42. Cost efficiency of the major banksPer cent Figure 3:8 Sources: Bank reports, EcoWin and the Riksbank.

  43. Ratios of costs and income to assetsIndex: Handelsbanken = 100 Figure 3:9 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  44. Loan stocks in relation to GDPPer cent Figure B5 Source: The Riksbank.

  45. Potential growth of the major banks’lending in the Baltic statesPer cent Figure R6 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  46. Stock of loans to the generalpublic in Sweden and abroadIndex: 2004 Q3 = 100 Figure 3:10 Sources: Bank reports and the Riksbank.

  47. Lending by credit institutions to companies in SwedenPercentage 12-month change, moving 3-month average Figure 3:11 Source: The Riksbank.

  48. Lending by credit institutions to households in SwedenÅrlig Per centuell förändring Figure 3:12 Source: The Riksbank.

  49. Breakdown of time spent on loan screeningPer cent Figure B7 Source: The Riksbank.

  50. Types of collateral in loan portfoliosPer cent Figure B8 Source: The Riksbank.

More Related