FSB: NBFI growth double that of banks in 2023

  • Annual monitoring exercise shows the non-bank financial intermediation (NBFI) sector grew at more than double the pace of the banking sector in 2023, led by investor inflows and higher asset valuations.
  • Most vulnerability metrics of NBFI entities involved in credit intermediation activities that may pose bank-like financial stability risks remained stable.
  • FSB report also includes data on non-bank fintech lending for the first time. The outstanding amounts reported by 10 jurisdictions totaled around $42 billion.

The Financial Stability Board (FSB) published its annual Global Monitoring Report on Non-Bank Financial Intermediation. The report describes broad trends in financial intermediation in 2023 across 29 jurisdictions that account for around 88% of global GDP, before narrowing its focus to the subset of NBFI activities that may be more likely to give rise to vulnerabilities.

Source: FSB

The main findings from this year’s monitoring exercise include:

  • In 2023, the NBFI sector grew 8.5%, more than double the pace of banking sector growth (3.3%), raising the NBFI share of total global financial assets to almost 50% (roughly $250 trillion). This growth was largely attributed to higher asset valuations, which rebounded after a decrease in 2022. Investor inflows to NBFI entities also contributed to the increase.
  • All NBFI subsectors grew at rates of around two times their five-year average. The assets of other financial intermediaries (OFIs) – a subset of the NBFI sector that includes money market funds, hedge funds, other investment funds, central counterparties, and structured finance vehicles (SFVs) – increased by almost 10% over the year, to just under $160 trillion. Insurance corporation and pension fund assets also grew strongly.
  • The narrow measure of the NBFI sector – which consists of entities that authorities have assessed as being involved in credit intermediation activities that may pose bank-like financial stability risks – increased by almost 10% to reach $70 trillion, the highest level ever recorded in this exercise.
  • Most vulnerability metrics of NBFI entities – measuring credit intermediation, maturity transformation, liquidity transformation, and leverage – remained stable. Metrics for liquidity transformation in fixed income and mixed funds, as well as for leverage in finance companies, broker-dealers and SFVs, were relatively high.

The report also includes data on non-bank fintech lending for the first time, in response to a recommendation in the third phase of the G20 Data Gaps Initiative to close data gaps related to this activity. 10 jurisdictions reported total non-bank fintech lending of around $40 billion, or 1% of the total loan assets held by their OFIs.

Read the full report

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