United States: Central banks have taken action on a worldwide scale to maintain the flow of credit after a time of uncertainty in the US banking industry and the Credit Suisse merger.
The Bank of England was one of six central banks that declared they would increase the flow of US dollars throughout the international financial system. UBS acquired the struggling Credit Suisse in a deal supported by the Swiss government.
The coordinated initiative to increase the provision of liquidity was announced by the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, the Bank of Canada, the European Central Bank, the US Federal Reserve, and the Swiss National Bank. According to the statement, it acted as an essential backstop to reduce strains in global financial markets and to mitigate its effects on the availability of credit to individuals and enterprises.
British banks will have the option of borrowing directly from the Bank of England, which will borrow money from the US Federal Reserve, rather than the open market. The same will apply to banks in the US, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and the Eurozone.
This financing will be available to banks every day. The agreement, which was made during the COVID epidemic and the 2008 financial crisis, will begin on Monday and last “at least through the end of April,” the Bank of England said. With the failure of Silicon Valley Bank, global banking stocks fell, despite President Mr. Joe Biden’s assurances that the US will take whatever measures are necessary to safeguard the financial system.
Rising interest rates on the money that banks lend to one another are of special concern since they might quickly affect the economy and have a very substantial effect.