Credit Crisis Watch: Update – Improvement in Financial Stress Index
Print This Story
May 29th, 2009 by Prieur du Plessis, Investment Postcards from Cape Town
Twitter It! | Email This Article
I have often reported on the progress that has been made on the credit front and concluded as follows in my “Credit Crisis Review” of a few days ago: “Most indications are that the credit market tide has turned on the back of the massive reflation efforts orchestrated by central banks worldwide and that the credit system has started thawing.
“However, although the convalescence process seems to be well on track, it still has a way to go before confidence in the world’s financial system returns to more ‘normal’ levels, liquidity starts to flow freely again, and the economic recovery can commence.”
Further confirmation that the various central bank liquidity facilities and capital injections are having the desired effect of unclogging credit markets comes from Goldman Sachs’s Financial Stress Index (FSI). This index includes four factors related to the degree of impairment of financial markets: counterparty risk (US dollar 3-month LIBOR-OIS), liquidity risk (MBS to treasury repo differentials), refunding risk (commercial paper outstanding) and broader risk aversion (percentage of monies held in money-market mutual funds in relation to equity market capitalization).
As shown in the graph below, the FSI is now at the lowest level on a cyclically adjusted basis since the beginning of the credit crisis in August 2007.
“… the distress premium across assets has almost completely eroded. While the recent improvement [in the FSI] is largely due to the increase in risk appetite, indicated by money-market mutual fund outflows, there has also been improvement in other metrics as well,” said the Goldman team.
Source: Goldman Sachs - Strategy Matters, May 15, 2009.
Dr. Prieur du Plessis is an investment professional with 26 years' experience in investment research and portfolio management. More than 1,200 of his articles on investment-related topics have been published in various regular newspaper, journal and Internet columns, including his blog, Investment Postcards from Cape Town. He has also published a book, Financial Basics: Investment. Prieur is Chairman and principal shareholder of South African-based Plexus Asset Management, which he founded in 1995. The group conducts investment management, investment consulting, private equity and real estate activities in South Africa and a number of foreign countries. He also serves as Honorary Consul of Slovenia for South Africa, actively developing economic, cultural and scientific relations between Slovenia and South Africa. Prieur is 54 years old and live with his wife, television producer and presenter Isabel Verwey, and two children in Cape Town, South Africa. His leisure activities include long-distance running, traveling, reading, motor-cycling and scripophily. Read more from the author/contributor here.
Related Posts
LIBOR, TED Spread, and Fed Funds
Tags: 3 Month Libor, Blog, Credit, Credit Market, Credit Markets, Currency, Desc, Economy, Fed, Fed Funds Rate, Gauge, Investment, Investment Group, Investment Strategy, Investors, Markets, Miscellaneous, Occurrence, Rapid Decline, Rapid Descent, Signs, Six Months, Stock Market, Stocks, Stress, Technical Analysis, Ted Spread, Three Months, Trading, Treasuries, Treasury, US StocksPosted in Credit Markets, Markets, US Stocks |





January 21st, 2008 at 10:53 am
a timely article and one the public will take time to digest in light of current market volatility…