San Francisco Chronicle

Subzero rates make insurers take risks

- By Jack Ewing

MUNICH — It was a crisp fall morning and Tom Wilson was contemplat­ing the latest sign that the world of finance had turned upside down.

Greece had just sold bonds with a negative interest rate. It was the most recent example of how policies that revived growth after the last financial crisis have forced investors to effectivel­y pay government­s to assume custody of their money.

The amount of this kind of debt has soared in recent years and now exceeds $17 trillion.

“Maybe I’m old school, but it just feels weird,” Wilson, the chief risk officer for German insurer Allianz, said in his office in Munich. “It feels bizarre to have negative interest rates.”

It is more than bizarre. A growing number of economists, regulators and former central bankers are warning that European insurance companies — traditiona­lly some of the most straitlace­d of investors — are among the market players most at risk of a meltdown because of all the negativein­terestrate debt.

Insurers make money by investing the billions they collect in policymake­rs’ premiums. As they hunt for a return, any return, some companies are venturing into everriskie­r assets.

For the people who manage these billions, said Brian Coulton, chief economist of the debt ratings firm Fitch, “there has been a need to take on more risk.”

The socalled search for yield among investors has broad implicatio­ns, creating demand and driving up prices for real estate, lowrated corporate debt and other risky assets; generating bubbles; and potentiall­y setting the stage for the next financial crisis. Europe has more of this debt than

“It feels It feels just weird. bizarre to have negative interest rates.”

Tom Wilson, Allianz

any other region.

The impact on the insurance industry is drawing increasing concern. Last year, regulators conducted tests to see what would happen if rates suddenly spiked: Six of 42 large insurers would suffer losses large enough to drain their capital below legal thresholds, the tests found.

Insurers would probably be able to manage gradual increases in rates, said Dimitris Zafeiris, the top risk expert at Europe’s insurance regulator. But “if it happens quickly,” he added, “it raises questions about the impact on financial stability.”

Typically, insurers seek to earn a modest return while keeping the money safe in case it is needed to pay claims. European insurance companies were big buyers of bonds issued by countries like Germany or Switzerlan­d that have impeccable credit histories.

But when the return on those supersafe bonds dwindled over the last decade, and then turned negative, insurers and other investors began buying riskier assets like corporate bonds rated BBB, or just above the level considered junk. A lot of money is at stake. Insurance companies in Europe collective­ly have assets of $12 trillion.

Recently regulators have become especially concerned that insurers have been loading up on a kind of investment known as collateral­ized loan obligation­s, or CLOs for short. CLOs are mortgages and other loans that have been packaged into securities. They bear ominous similariti­es to the securities that helped cause the 2008 financial crisis.

Banks, pension funds and insurers may be underestim­ating the risk of CLOs, the agencies that oversee those industries in Europe said in a joint report in August.

The Financial Stability Board, a group of central bankers and regulators from Europe, the United States, China and other countries, is also worried. The board said on Oct. 13 that it was scrutinizi­ng whether CLOs posed a risk to the global financial system.

The quandary for insurers is that fewer and fewer bonds — generally safe investment­s — pay a positive interest rate. A few weeks ago, even Greece sold shortterm bonds with negative interest. In an auction, investors bid the rate down to negative 0.02%.

The bond sale was extraordin­ary considerin­g that, less than a decade ago, investors in Greek government bonds were forced to take losses of 50% as part of a bailout plan.

Low and negative interest rates are no accident. They are the deliberate result of policies by the European Central Bank to deal with a debt crisis and chronic slow growth. The bank has bought bonds on the open market to push down interest rates. And as a further inducement to lend, the central bank charges a negative interest rate on deposits that commercial banks stash in the central bank’s coffers.

There is a growing backlash against these stimulus measures.

Low and negative interest rates have rippled through “the entire financial sector,” a group of former central bankers said in a letter to the European Central Bank in October. The scramble for higher rates has pushed up the price of riskier investment­s and “ultimately threatens to result in an abrupt market correction or even in a deep crisis.”

Whether to continue to encourage negative rates will probably be the key question confrontin­g Christine Lagarde, who succeeded Mario Draghi as president of the European Central Bank bank on Nov. 1.

Draghi said last month that negative interest rates had “been a very positive experience,” stimulatin­g growth and helping reduce unemployme­nt. “The improvemen­ts in the economy have more than offset negative side effects from low rates,” he said.

Regulators fear that a deep recession or other shock could force ratings agencies to downgrade BBB bonds en masse. That could cause a panic, because insurers or other institutio­nal investors that are barred from holding debt less than investment grade would be forced to sell at firesale prices.

Wilson said Allianz’s holdings were diversifie­d enough that it could cope with a rash of downgrades. He argued that insurance companies, despite their enormous presence in financial markets, were unlikely to be the cause of the next financial crisis. They are less interconne­cted than banks, he said, meaning that the problems of one insurance company would be unlikely to spread like a pandemic through the financial system.

And unlike banks, insurance companies are not dependent on a continuous supply of shortterm credit, which can dry up suddenly if banks lose trust in one another. That is what happened in the 2008 financial crisis.

Others are not so sure insurance companies are benign, pointing out that a troubled insurer could create turmoil in bond markets that could easily spread to banks and create a broader crisis.

Some insurers “are as systemic as banks,” said Christoph Kaserer, a professor at the Technical University of Munich who has written about the industry.

The pressure on insurers to buy riskier assets is growing the longer interest rates stay low. Bonds that the companies bought years ago, when rates were higher, are continuall­y maturing. The insurers must try to reinvest the proceeds in a way that earns a similar return.

“The longer the low interest rate environmen­t prevails, the higher the impact of the reinvestme­nt risk,” said Zafeiris, head of the risks and financial stability department at the European Insurance and Occupation­al Pensions Authority, Europe’s main insurance industry regulator.

Zafeiris said in an interview that, as a group, European insurers are healthy. But he added, “There are always outliers.” (Confidenti­ality rules do not allow him to name names.)

The big question is what will happen if there is some kind of shock to the financial system that causes government and corporate debt to abruptly lose value. Wilson said he worries about that, too.

“I think the probabilit­y has gone up,” he said, citing risks such as trade war, conflicts in the Middle East or rising populism. “The number of triggers is manifold and increasing.”

 ?? Yarek Waszul / New York Times ??
Yarek Waszul / New York Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States