
	by John O'Donnell and Douwe Miedema
	November 19, 2012
	from 
	Reuters Website
	
	 
	
	
	The shadow banking system - blamed for aggravating the financial crisis - 
	grew to a new high of $67 trillion globally last year, a top regulatory 
	group said, calling for tighter control of the sector.
	
	A report by the Financial Stability Board (FSB) 
	on Sunday appeared to confirm fears among policymakers that the so-called 
	shadow banking system of non-bank intermediaries continues to harbor risks 
	to the financial system.
	
	The FSB, a task force from the world's top 20 economies, also called for 
	greater control of shadow banking, a corner of the financial universe made 
	up of entities such as money market funds that has so far escaped the web of 
	rules that is tightening around traditional banks.
	
		
		"The FSB is of the view that the 
		authorities' approach to shadow banking has to be a targeted one," the 
		group wrote in a report, noting the current lax regulation of the 
		sector.
		
		"The objective is to ensure that shadow banking is subject to 
		appropriate oversight and regulation to address bank-like risks to 
		financial stability," it said.
	
	
	Officials at the
	
	European Commission in Brussels also see 
	closer oversight of the sector as important in preventing a repeat of the 
	financial crisis that has toppled banks over the past five years and rocked 
	the euro zone.
	
	The European Commission is expected to propose EU-wide rules for 
	
	shadow banking next year.
	
	The United States is already rolling out a framework of new rules for the 
	$2.5 trillion money market industry, which pools money from investors to put 
	in low-risk financial assets that resemble deposits in a bank.
	
	During the crisis, heavy exposure to collapsed investment bank Lehman 
	Brothers caused the net asset value of one fund - the Reserve Primary Fund - 
	to drop below $1 per share, breaking an implicit promise of a guaranteed 
	minimum value.
	
	Unlike banks, such funds are not backed up by the Federal Deposit Insurance 
	Corporation, and critics say a sudden depositor flight from the sector could 
	have equally devastating consequences as a traditional run on a bank.
	
	The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) 
	- a new body of regulators including the Securities and Exchange 
	Commission (SEC) 
	and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) 
	- said last week it would not limit itself to money market funds.
	
	It said that "regulated and unregulated or less-regulated cash management 
	products may pose risks that are similar to those posed by money market 
	funds" and that it would address any risks arising in those areas.
 
	
	 
	
	 
	
	
	AMERICA HAS LARGEST 
	SYSTEM
	
	The FSB has signaled a two-pronged approach to regulating shadow banking, 
	with tough rules such as possible capital charges and limits on the size and 
	nature of a mainstream bank's exposure to shadow banks.
	
	Other shadow banking activities which are seen as less systemically risky 
	could face greater transparency requirements.
	
	Critics of this regulatory drive say that the definition the FSB uses to 
	describe shadow banks is intentionally vague, allowing them to probe and 
	potentially regulate corners of the financial universe that are seen as 
	harmless.
	
	The FSB said shadow banking around the world more than doubled to $62 
	trillion in the five years to 2007, and had grown to $67 trillion in 2011 - 
	more than the total economic output of all the countries in the study.
	
	America had the largest shadow banking system, said the FSB, with assets of 
	$23 trillion in 2011, followed by the Euro area with $22 trillion and the 
	United Kingdom at $9 trillion.
	
	The U.S. share of the global shadow banking system has declined in recent 
	years, the FSB said, while the shares of the United Kingdom and the euro 
	area have increased.
	
	The FSB advocated better controls, but cautioned at the same time that the 
	sector can also be a source of much-needed credit for business and 
	consumers.
	
		
		"Non-bank creditors that smell, feel, and 
		sound like banks but aren't in name are clearly the problem; while 
		non-bank creditors that do not, and are not linked to the banking 
		system, surely offer us a welcome reduced dependence on banks," said 
		Pete Han from the Cass Business School in London.
	
	
	Forms of shadow banking can include 
	securitization, a method to transform bank loans into a tradable instrument 
	that can then be used to refinance credit, making it easier to lend.
	
	In the run-up to the crisis, however, banks such as
	
	Germany's IKB stored billions of Euros of 
	such instruments in off-balance sheet vehicles, which later unraveled.
	
	Another example is a repurchasing agreement, or repo, where a player such as 
	a hedge fund or a blue chip company sells securities to a bank, agreeing to 
	repurchase them later.
	
	The bank may then lend those bonds onto another hedge fund, taking a 
	position on the government debt. Such agreements are used by banks to lend 
	and borrow. 
	
	 
	
	A risk could arise if one of the parties in the 
	chain collapses.