The Fed Is Trying to Pull a Fast One

 | Feb 24, 2023 05:55

The Fed has recently released the hypothetical scenarios for its 2023 supervisory stress test. This test is conducted annually to show how the banks are likely to perform in a recessionary environment. The results of this test under the "supervisory severely adverse scenario" are used to set capital requirements for large banks.

In this article, we will take a look at the assumptions for the 2023 stress test and also discuss which crucial areas of the U.S. banks are still being overlooked and are not being tested by the Fed. In our view, the current stress tests conducted by the regulator do not reflect the actual financial conditions of the U.S. banks under a sharp recession scenario.

First, it is important to note that the new assumptions are not that different relative to the previous year if we look at general trends.

Under the 2023 severely adverse scenario, the U.S. unemployment rate rises to a peak of 10% in the 3Q24, which implies an increase of 6.5 percentage points compared to the level of the 4Q22. Last year, the Fed assumed a 5.75 percentage points increase in the unemployment rate; however, the peak was the same 10%.

The 2023 scenario also features a significantly higher starting level of interest rates, given that they increased last year.

In the 2023 scenario, house prices fall by 38% (compared to 28.5% in the 2022 scenario), while commercial real estate prices decline by 40% (unchanged relative to the previous year’s scenario). A sharper decline in house prices is also due to a higher starting point, as house prices posted growth in 2022. So, while this may seem like a change, it really is not.

Notably, the key assumptions for asset markets, such as equity prices and an increase in corporate bond spreads, are now less severe. Under the 2023 scenario, the spread between yields on BBB-rated bonds and yields on 10-year Treasury securities widens to 5.75% in 3Q23, implying an increase of 3.5 percentage points relative to 4Q22. From 4Q22 to 4Q23, equity prices fell by 45%. By comparison, the 2022 scenario featured a 4.75 percentage points increase in corporate bond spreads and a 55% decline in equity prices. While new assumptions for asset markets are also due to the new starting points, we note that the 2023 scenario for this area looks less severe compared to 2022.