Certain sectors may be susceptible to corrections due to inflation/interest rates and focus on fairness and competition.
There is a large amount of debt and leverage in some sectors of the financial system, coupled with historically elevated valuations for almost all asset classes (from corporate equities to real estate to cryptocurrencies). These areas may be susceptible to correction if rising inflation sends interest rates sharply higher; even relatively small pullbacks could have outsized impacts on asset values in market segments with concentrated or leveraged exposure. Regulatory focus on principles of fairness and competition could separately impose impacts on valuations.
Cessation of LIBOR use…will be one of the highest priorities of…bank supervisors.
Randall Quarles
"Goodbye to All That: The End of LIBOR,”, FRB, October 2021
Explore here insights from the KPMG report Ten key regulatory challenges of 2022.
As financial risks from the pandemic dissipate, regulators are looking to medium- and longer-term vulnerabilities, which can manifest through direct, indirect, concentrated, or leveraged exposures. Regulators are taking note of “exuberance” in asset classes such as residential real estate and financial markets (including corporate equities and “riskier assets” such as cryptocurrencies) as well as the potential for abrupt or steep valuation adjustments based on a variety of factors that may present individually or in concert.
Examples include:
Asset valuations will also be affected by shifting market demand based on consumer preferences and corporate commitments to climate change. The FRB has set initial expectations relative to climate risk modelling (scenario analysis and stress testing) noting the process will be iterative, marked by data limitations, and evolving metrics.
Federal and state financial regulators have cited the LIBOR transition as a key supervisory priority for 2022. To properly mitigate operational, compliance, legal, and reputational risks, as well as to prevent balance sheet destabilization and adverse financial impacts.
Regulators expect financial services companies to:
Digital adoption, technology modernization, competition from technology-driven services companies, reach for scale, market consolidation, and, most recently, ESG considerations are driving financial services companies to pursue a variety of M&A transactions as well as partnerships, and/or alliances.
Regulatory factors that may affect potential transactions include:
The quantification and measurement of credit risk across market sectors has posed challenges in the pandemic era due to the varying degree of oversight in government policies or programs supporting sector performance.
Going into 2022, regulators will now be looking at:
The year 2022 brings high levels of risk and regulatory supervision and enforcement. Regulatory “perimeters” continue to expand, and regulatory expectations are rapidly increasing. All financial services companies should expect high levels of supervision and enforcement activity across ten key challenge areas. Read the full report to learn more.
Ten Key Regulatory Challenges of 2022
Download PDFWashington Report 360
A weekly newsletter covering legislative and regulatory developments affecting financial services firms—in 360 words or less.
Points of View
Insights and analyses of emerging regulatory issues and their impact.
KPMG Regulatory Insights is the thought leader hub for timely insight on risk and regulatory developments.