By Pete Schroeder
WASHINGTON, May 8 (Reuters) – The ongoing war with Iran and its shock to oil prices and supplies have rocketed to the top of the list of concerns for financial stability, according to a semi-annual Federal Reserve report released on āFriday.
The U.S. central bank’s Financial Stability Report found geopolitical risks and the oil shock were the top worries of survey respondents, āwhile artificial intelligence and private credit have risen to also become prominent concerns. Three-quarters of respondents cited geopolitical risks as a top concern, making it the most cited worry, with āthe oil shock stemming from the war cited by 70%. AI and private credit were both flagged as potential threats to financial stability by half of the survey respondents.
Specifically, the report warned that a prolonged conflict in the Middle East, particularly if combined with shortages of commodities and impaired supply chains, could drive up inflation and slow economic growth in the U.S. and elsewhere. And sharp price movements in energy markets and related financial products could ālead to market strains.
Several respondents also noted that inflationary ā pressure from the energy shock could force central banks to tighten monetary policy, even in the face of weaker economic growth.
“Higher interest rates and inflation could have significant financial and economic effects, including declines in asset prices,” the ā report warned.
The concerns evident in the survey about the rise in oil prices and the inflation it has rekindled largely echo what many U.S. monetary policymakers have voiced in recent weeks. The Fed left interest rates unchanged after its policy meeting last week, and more central bank officials in the days since then āhave āsaid they cannot rule out potential rate hikes if inflation continues to rise and ābroaden out.
The global benchmark crude oil price has shot āup by more than 50% since the U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran began on February 28 and it remains above $100 a barrel amid conflicting reports about whether a peace deal is near. An “oil shock” appeared as the No. 2 concern in the latest Fed survey after not getting a single mention in the previous report last fall.
U.S. gasoline prices have climbed to their highest levels since July 2022 and have led to a resurgence in inflation, now roughly a percentage point above the Fed’s 2% target. Many U.S. central bank officials worry that the longer those prices remain elevated, āthe greater the risk they spread beyond the energy complex and into a wider āarray of goods and services.
AI, PRIVATE CREDIT CONCERNS FLAGGED
Survey respondents said there are concerns āthat AI investment is “increasingly funded” by debt, which boosts broader leverage ālevels and increases fragility, and that the technology, if widely adopted, “may contribute to labor market weakness.”
The survey painted a āmixed picture in the private credit sphere. It noted that āthe sector has grappled with negative āsentiment and increasing redemption requests, but that so far the risks appear to be manageable. For the 10 largest perpetual business development companies in the sector, which account for roughly 80% of private credit assets, there is enough bank credit and cash to cover āat least three-quarters of redemptions, assuming they hold at āa 5% level, the report said.
The Fed said the risks to financial stability from private credit appear “limited and manageable,” but noted āthat continued redemptions and negative sentiment could reduce credit availability for some borrowers, particularly those with higher credit risk.
(Reporting by āPete Schroeder, Michael S. Derby and Dan Burns; editing by Paul Simao)
