A tale of inflation, solvency & regulatory jeopardy

The deflation that followed rapid Chinese industrialisation has kept interest rates on a declining and ultimately stagnant path for decades since the 1990s. In recent years, interest rate and government bond markets could have been politely described as being as dull as ditch water.
However, as with all things in the market, the trend is your friend, until it isn’t…
UK Treasury 2050, 0 5/8% Bond Price – theoretically one of the safest investments…
Source: London Stock Exchange
Supply chain and booming inflation
Supply chain issues stemming from Covid, compounded by the emergence of China as a new superpower with massive domestic consumption and to a lesser extent Brexit saw the price of the long dated UK Gilt (above) dip from around 100 (or par) into the 80s in February 2021. This c.20% fall in value accelerated as war broke out in Ukraine in February 2022 resulting in a dramatic jump in global inflation, with central banks increasing official interest rates in an attempt to ensure that this inflation is transitory. The downward trajectory in UK bond prices troughed with the fallout from the misguided September UK mini-budget on 8 October 2022 when the price hit 36.40 – a fall of 64% in the 2050 Gilt price from its high to low.
Rates markets have become sexy again
Higher interest rates, volatility, differing views on inflation expectations all of a sudden bring bond markets, money markets and securities financing markets back into sharp focus. While this may be to the delight of rates traders, it will have been highly unwelcome by the pensions industry as the value of many of their key ‘low risk’ assets are needed to service pensioners of the future evaporated. The moves were so dramatic, some pension funds’ solvency was called into question, resulting in intervention by the Bank of England to support the Gilt market in October.
What does all this mean for regulatory reporting?
Central banks and regulators will be on heightened alert to identify large interest rate exposures, the effective transmission of official central bank interest rates, solvency issues, credit default risk and the potential for contagion. Trade and transaction reporting regimes are among their principle means of performing this supervisory oversight and analysis. This will encompass everything from MiFID, SFTR, EMIR, MMSR, SMMD, CFTC, FinfraG, SESTA and many more besides. When faced with something of a crisis or an emergency situation, there is a risk that regulators need to react quickly with punitive measures if their investigative work is thwarted by reporting data quality issues.
Enforcement has been notable in its absence for a number of years, just don’t be too surprised if this now goes the way of the bond market.
If you would like a conversation with one of our regulatory specialists or assistance in ensuring your firm is compliant with any of the regulatory reporting regimes listed above, please contact us.