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Commercial & Industrial loans from banks are on the decline, and lending to Main Street and consumers from non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) is on the rise. But here’s the paradox: traditional banks are fuelling this rise of NBFIs by lending capital to what were once their competitors.
While this systemic shift plays out among lenders, there are questions about whether post-global financial crash regulations – such as stress testing and liquidity requirements – are keeping pace with this market as it grows. Could further growth in this $1 trillion market threaten the stability of the wider banking system?
In Episodio 73 of The Flip Side podcast, our Global Head of Research Brad Rogoff and Senior High Grade Financials Analyst Pete Troisi debate whether the risks outweigh the opportunities in this evolving market.
Clients of Barclays Banco de Inversión can read further analysis of these topics in Risks and opportunities of NBFI lending on Barclays Live.
Brad Rogoff: Welcome to The Flip Side. I'm
Brad Rogoff, Head of Research at Barclays,
and I'm joined today by Pete Troisi, our
financials analyst in investment grade
research.
Pete Troisi: Thanks for having me on,
Brad.
Brad Rogoff: Good to have you here, Pete.
There's a lot we can talk about when it
comes to financials right now. I know you've
spent probably the last week or so talking
about what banks will do with respect to
adding more safe assets, potentially as a
result of the changes The Fed is proposing
with respect to SLR. It's made a lot of
press, but for those who haven't seen it,
supplementary leverage ratio is what I'm
referring to there. And those changes are
really just some post-GFC era banking rules
that should help free up demand for namely,
treasuries probably. But what I want to talk
about is something that's been the result of
other changes to capital rules that also
came out of the financial crisis.
Pete Troisi: I think you mean your favorite
topic these days, Brad. The rise of non-bank
financial institutions, or NBFIs, as we
often call them.
Brad Rogoff: Absolutely. And it sounds cool,
“the rise”. So these days, I don't actually
get to do much writing of Research. So I was
very pleased when you let me contribute to
your work on this particular topic.
Pete Troisi: Yeah. And I feel like the topic
in financial markets that's really the most
intriguing these days is, of course, private
credit, and your expertise there was really
helpful with this report. The common
narrative here is that private credit is
equal to disintermediation of banks, and of
course, there's competitive tension between
the two. But as it turns out, this isn't a
zero-sum game. Banks can provide capacity to
help the private market grow and actually
earn a pretty good return on their capital
by doing it. The category of loans in the
banking system is now what is commonly
referred to as NBFI lending, in which
non-bank financial institutions, not banks,
provide loans to borrowers such as main
street businesses and consumers.
Brad Rogoff: And this is what I would call
the paradox of NBFI lending. So banks are
effectively helping their competitors by
providing them with funding. For someone
working in a bank, that sounds a little
weird to say, but NBFIs then use the cash to
extend loans to companies that historically
have borrowed from banks. It doesn't sound
like a sustainable strategy. To me, it
sounds more like risky regulatory arbitrage.
If that's done on a small scale, at least I
don't think it's problematic, but I would
get worried as it grows. How much are banks
getting displaced by non-bank lenders
now?
Pete Troisi: Look, there's no question that
regulations have contributed to the decline
in traditional forms of bank lending, such
as commercial and industrial loans, which we
refer to as C&I lending for many years.
And this has pushed some lending activity
outside of the banking system. Now, this
trend has grown the stock of NBFI loans
outstanding to over $1 trillion, exceeding
10% of total loans in the US banking system
as of the end of March. So in a sense,
indirect lending is replacing direct lending
where NBFIs are better able to compete.
Brad Rogoff: So a lot of the $1 trillion you
referred to is in the private credit area
that you also mentioned earlier. NBFIs, in
my opinion, have a lot of advantages over
banks when it comes to lending in this
arena. And I want to talk through those. So
first, there's linkages to private equity
sponsors, which give many NBFIs preferred
access to loan origination pipelines.
Increasingly, this is replacing the credit
opportunities generated by banks through
their branch networks. In addition,
structural shifts in the credit market have
worked to the advantage of NBFIs.
So innovations such as portfolio trading
have reduced the need for liquidity premiums
in public securities and have made private
illiquid credit more attractive for
buy-and-hold investors. Example being
insurers. This is what we refer to, at least
here at Barclays, as the equitification of
credit, and it's contributed large part to
the growth of NBFIs. Now, obviously, I don't
need to remind avid listeners of The Flip
Side about the trend since they all remember
Zornitsa Todorova's thoughts on the debate,
which she clearly won based on the trends
we've seen since then in Episode 63 last
summer.
Pete Troisi: Of course, and as an avid
listener and Barclay's employee, I do
remember that episode. But I want to come
back to the trends you just mentioned. It
sounds like you're admitting it's not just
pure regulatory arbitrage that's leading to
these changes.
Brad Rogoff: It's never that simple, Pete,
but it is a huge factor. Think about it from
the borrower's perspective. NBFIs may be
able to offer them more flexibility on
terms, structures, and leverage. Regulations
post-GFC have become much stricter with how
much leverage banks can provide to their
customers. NBFIs don't face these
constraints or other such side effects of
prudential regulation.
Pete Troisi: Okay. So you've made the point
that non-banks have some advantages over
banks in making these direct loans, but the
financial system has evolved. And NBFI
lending is a way that banks are changing
with it. They're no longer the only major
participants in credit origination. NBFIs
like private credit funds, business
development companies, or BDCs, even
insurance companies they've all stepped in
to meet growing demand. Rather than
competing head-on, banks have adopted by
lending to these institutions.
This isn't a retreat. It's really a
strategic pivot. By lending to NBFIs, banks
can maintain exposure to credit markets
while improving capital efficiency. These
loans are often structured as senior
exposures, meaning the bank is protected by
a layer of subordinated capital that reduces
risk and regulatory requirements, boosting
return on equity. Frankly, it's a smart way
to stay profitable in a competitive
environment.
Brad Rogoff: We're not going to debate the
logic behind this. Actually, totally
understand the logic, but I think it's a
dicey strategy. When banks lend to NBFIs,
they're adding a layer of separation between
themselves and the ultimate borrower. That
distance makes it harder to assess the true
risk in the system. Sure, loans may be
senior, maybe collateralized, but if the
underlying borrower's default en masse, even
senior tranches can suffer. I made the point
that NBFIs aren't subject to the same
regulatory scrutiny as banks. They're likely
providing more leverage into the system than
banks, and some of it's through payment in
kind or PIK interest, where the borrower can
issue more debt instead of paying cash
interest. These are macro risks that banks
are indirectly enabling by funding
NBFIs.
Pete Troisi: That's a fair concern, but I
think it might be underestimating how
carefully these deals are structured. Banks
aren't just handing out money and hoping for
the best. They apply haircuts to the
collateral that they're lending against.
They impose covenants. They also limit
exposure to riskier assets such as the PIK
loans that you mentioned, Brad. Plus, NBFI
loans are often diversified across multiple
borrowers, and that reduces idiosyncratic
risk. And let's not forget the economics
here. Banks can earn higher spreads on these
loans compared with traditional C&I
lending while holding less capital against
them. That's obviously a powerful
combination, especially because competition
is high and regulatory capital is
expensive.
Brad Rogoff: You've referred to capital
efficiency of NBFI lending a few times now.
To me, that sounds a bit like fancy language
that really makes my point about regulatory
arbitrage.
Pete Troisi: Well, I think about this as a
term that I'm going to use air quotes for
"equal capital for equal risk. "
Banks are required to risk-weight assets
when they calculate their capital
requirements. Now, in the US, most
commercial loans get 100% risk weight.
However, NBFI loans are eligible for much
lower risk weights as low as 20%.
Brad Rogoff: That doesn't sound fair.
Pete Troisi: Understandable comment, Brad.
And so let me just clarify. The lower
risk-weight asset density of NBFI lending
reflects a number of factors, including the
higher collateral requirements that I've
been mentioning. Now, this allows banks to
take senior exposure to a relatively
diversified pool of assets with a defined
amount of equity beneath them to absorb
loss. As a result, the loan-to-value
associated with NBFI lending is relatively
low and that attracts lower capital. Now,
that's the denominator effect on ROE, but
the numerator matters too. Through NBFI
loans, banks provide leverage to non-banks
that help them meet their return hurdles and
can charge for it accordingly. Given these
dynamics, the ROE on NBFI loans can be three
times the return on a standard commercial
loan.
Brad Rogoff: So it's numbers like that that
actually concern me. The pursuit of higher
returns with lower capital charges eerily
reminiscent to the pre-2008 era, which I
remember all too well. Back then, banks
loaded up on senior tranches of
mortgage-backed securities convinced they
were safe because of their structure and
ratings. We all know how that turned out.
The problem isn't just the structure. It's
the systemic risk that builds up when
everyone's doing the same thing. If NBFIs
face liquidity crunch or a wave of defaults,
the banks that lent to them could be hit
hard. And because these exposures were often
opaque, concentrated among a few large
counterparties, the contagion risk is also
real. It's not just about individual loan
losses. It's about the potential for a
broader financial shock.
Pete Troisi: I hear you. But I think the
comparison to 2008 is a bit overstated. The
underlying assets today are different.
Secured corporate loans, not sub-prime
mortgages and the regulatory environment is
much stronger. Banks hold more capital. They
conduct regular stress tests and have better
risk management tools. Also, senior
exposures banks take on today are often
protected by substantial equity cushions,
sometimes 40% or more on loans to NBFIs.
That's close to the attachment points on
triple A CLO tranches, which performed well
even during the financial crisis. So while
there's always risk, Brad, I'd argue that
the current structures are far more
resilient than what we saw in the past.
Brad Rogoff: Resilient maybe, but
non-immune. And the bigger issue is the
growing interconnectedness between banks and
NBFIs. As banks lend more to those
institutions, they become more exposed to
the health of the non-bank sector. If a few
large NBFIs stumble, the effect could ripple
through the banking system. That's
especially worrisome given how concentrated
some of these relationships are. Banks may
be diversifying across asset classes, but
they're still relying on a relatively small
number of counterparties. And if those
counterparties are under-regulated and
contributing to over-leverage, that's a
recipe for trouble.
Pete Troisi: So you mentioned
interconnectedness. I do think, though, that
the systemic risk of NBFI lending is
relatively contained despite the significant
growth of the asset class in the banking
system. The Fed actually acknowledged this
as well by adding exploratory analysis on
top of its usual stress tests this year with
respect to NBFI lending. It concluded that
large banks are generally well-positioned to
withstand significant credit and liquidity
stresses to major categories of NBFI lending
exposures.
The model generated about a 7% overall loss
rate on NBFI loans at the subject banks and
through the nine-quarter projection of the
stress model, total loan losses from NBFI
exposures were about $490 billion. Now, I
appreciate that sounds like a large number,
but that's actually fairly modest from the
perspective of an extreme stressed scenario
in the model considering the current capital
ratios of banks.
Brad Rogoff: My concerns, though, are less
about the current systemic risk of NBFI
lending. At this stage, they very well may
be small, but they will grow with the size
of that lending. Loans to NBFIs are
increasing the amount of leverage in the
financial system. More overall leverage
means that less severe shocks can cause
greater losses. Increased use of the
leverage provided by NBFIs could eventually
increase the probability of a shock large
enough that causes correlated losses and
thus affects banks to a point where the
capital backing those loans is no longer
sufficient.
Pete Troisi: I don't think I'm being too
complacent with the structure of NBFI
lending and overstating the benefit of
over-collateralization, banks are getting on
the loans
Brad Rogoff: Overall, I agree, but we need
to think about what it would take to get
into the part of the tale where NBFI lending
becomes a problem. I mentioned PIK loans
earlier. Often, these PIK features are used
to avoid or delay default. As more of the
pool picks, the volatility of the realized
losses increases, given the potential for
lower recoveries. This shift from
potentially lower defaults to lower
recoveries raises the probability that the
banks could take losses on their second loss
piece.
Even then, I do understand your point on
corporate lending having a long history and
the better performance of things like CLOs
versus mortgages, but banks are already
showing signs of venturing further afield.
And here's where my concerns get a lot
larger, and SRTs are a prime example of
that.
Pete Troisi: Okay. So now, you've decided
we're going to get into full alphabet soup
in this debate.
Brad Rogoff: There's no way I can leave that
stone unturned. So SRT, that stands for
significant risk transfer. It's a concept
similar to what we have been talking about
with respect to banks lending to NBFIs,
where they maintain the senior portion of
the loan, and others take the riskiest part.
Except this time, the banks have made the
loan and are now trying to offload some of
the risk. Once again, regulatory factors are
at play here. I bring this up because SRT
transactions are not just about corporate
loans. The underlying are often consumer
loans.
Pete Troisi: So here's another acronym,
Brad. SRTs are a way to translate RWAs or
risk-weighted assets into something that
attracts less capital. So in the US, we
first saw banks using SRTs primarily with
consumer loans. So I'll use that just as an
example. Let's say a bank originates a pool
of auto loans in the US. Those banks get
100% risk weight, but by transferring the
first loss exposure to those loans to the
SRT investor, the RWA associated with the
loans drops dramatically by as much as 60%
to 75%, depending on the attachment point of
the SRT.
Brad Rogoff: Now, this is starting to get
closer to those mortgage loans, which you
admitted cause problems in the financial
crisis. Also, it doesn't stop at consumer
loans. There have even been transactions
where loans to NBFIs are included in SRTs as
the concentration of those risk increases
for banks. So I guess it's a positive for
banks that they can lay off these risks, but
I'm starting to lose track because it sounds
like that's leverage on top of leverage, on
top of leverage. Not my favorite recipe in
markets.
Pete Troisi: Definitely fair comment, Brad,
but I just want to talk about both sides of
this. There's no question that referencing
NBFI loans in SRTs creates circular risk
because the biggest investors in SRTs tend
to be non-banks. But consider the motivation
for such a transaction from the perspective
of the bank. I have argued that NBFI loans
can be both lower risk and higher ROE for
the banking system. So it seems
counterintuitive that banks would offload
exposures that offer those benefits into the
SRT market.
Well, one reason why they might do that is
to create balance sheet capacity to do more
NBFI lending. And one question we've been
asking ourselves is, given how quickly NBFI
lending is growing, at what point will banks
have too much exposure to the asset class in
absolute or relative terms? Now, that's
probably a debate for a separate podcast,
but safe to say, with outlets such as SRT
still available to banks, that could help
them continue to grow NBFI portfolios as
they replenish their capacity.
Brad Rogoff: I agree. We've probably bit off
enough for this podcast. Financial
innovation often outpaces regulation, and
we've seen time and again how that can lead
to unintended consequences. I'm not saying
banks should avoid NBFI lending, but they
need to be cautious, transparent, and
proactive in managing the risks. Stronger
oversight, unlikely to come from regulators
anytime soon. So it'll require a willingness
to pull back if the risks start to outweigh
the rewards, as this lending migrates to
asset classes without the robust history of
corporate loans.
Thanks for listening to this episode of The
Flip Side. Please don't forget to subscribe
if you like what you hear, and clients of
Barclays can learn more about the topic by
reading our recent research, Risk and
Opportunities of NBFI Lending.
Sobre los expertos
Brad Rogoff
Global Head of Research at Barclays
Peter Troisi
Managing Director in the US Credit Research group
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