Credit Suisse is stressed but not the new Lehman
Speculation about the future of Credit Suisse was rampant over the past week. Swiss central bankers said they were monitoring the situation.
On Oct. 7, Credit Suisse responded with a debt buyback to reassure the markets while it plans a major overhaul.
As the chart below shows, this year, the bank’s credit-default swaps (CDS) have spiked along with the European Central Bank’s Composite Indicator of Systematic Stress (CISS). It’s worth noting that the two stress measures moved more or less in tandem until about 2013, before and during the global financial crisis and the subsequent European debt crisis. Perceived risk for European banks generally stayed higher thereafter.
Capital requirements for banks are much higher than before the GFC, and policy makers are very unlikely to allow another “Lehman moment” where a financial institution gets into trouble and contagion spreads to the others. It’s worth noting that banks were relatively unscathed by the pandemic as central banks provided markets with an enormous amount of liquidity.