BoE warns of ‘sharp correction’ risk if AI boom or Fed trust falters

Bank of England says US market valuations echo dotcom-era highs, with global spillover risks deemed ‘material’

Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey. Picture: HENRY NICHOLLS/REUTERS
Bank of England governor Andrew Bailey. Picture: HENRY NICHOLLS/REUTERS

London — Global financial markets could tumble if investors’ mood sours on the prospects for artificial intelligence or the independence of the US Federal Reserve, the Bank of England warned on Wednesday.

The BoE said share price valuations on US stock markets were similar to those seen near the peak of the dotcom bubble on some measures and noted that US government bonds were vulnerable to any weakening in the Fed’s credibility.

“The risk of a sharp market correction has increased,” the BoE’s financial policy committee said in a quarterly update, in its sharpest warning to date of the dangers of an AI-triggered market slump, adding that the risk of spillovers to Britain’s financial system from such a shock was “material”.

The risk of a sharp market correction has increased.

—  BoE’s financial policy committee

The FPC is chaired by BoE governor Andrew Bailey and focuses on financial stability risks. Bailey told Britain’s parliament last month that he was “very concerned” about threats to Fed independence.

President Donald Trump has repeatedly urged the US central bank to slash interest rates and has sought to fire one of its policymakers, Lisa Cook.

“A sudden or significant change in perceptions of Federal Reserve credibility could result in a sharp repricing of US dollar assets, including in US sovereign debt markets, with the potential for increased volatility, risk premia and global spillovers,” the BoE said.

British government borrowing costs are closely correlated with US Treasury yields, and a fall in US bond prices would probably push up the cost of servicing new British public debt.

Thirty-year gilt yields hit their highest since 1998 last month, and yields for shorter maturities — where most British borrowing is concentrated — have risen too.

The BoE said this increase reflected concerns about the difficulty of reining in high borrowing across advanced economies, amplified by political uncertainty in France and Japan.

Top five stocks now 30% of S&P 500

On AI, the BoE said that 30% of the US S&P 500’s valuation was made up by the five largest companies, the greatest concentration in 50 years.

Chipmakers Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Google parent Alphabet, Amazon and Facebook parent Meta have all bet heavily on AI.

Share valuations based on past earnings were the most stretched since the dotcom bubble 25 years ago, though they looked less so based on investors’ expectations for future profits.

“This, when combined with increasing concentration within market indices, leaves markets particularly exposed should expectations around the effect of AI become less optimistic,” the BoE said.

Last month Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg said he would rather misspend a couple of hundred billion dollars than risk being late to the AI expansion.

In August, almost half of fund managers polled by Bank of America judged that owning the seven largest US tech stocks was the most crowded trade in the industry.

Despite these concerns, the S&P 500 hit a record high on Tuesday, up 14% year to date.

The central bank saw little change in domestic financial stability risks, as households and businesses continued to cope with rising inflation — which it forecasts to hit 4% in September — and with increased borrowing costs compared with past years.

Risk managers surveyed by the BoE were more confident in the stability of the British financial system than six months ago and viewed the main dangers as coming from cyberattacks and geopolitical factors.

The BoE left unchanged its main tools for regulating banks. It kept the countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) steady at 2% and, after an annual review, left the minimum leverage ratio at 3.25%.

Reuters

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