RD ESMA Risk Dashboard 11 November 2020
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 2
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 © European Securities and Markets Authority, Paris, 2020. All rights reserved. Brief excerpts may be reproduced or translated provided the source is cited adequately. The reporting period for this Risk Dashboard is 1 July 2020 to 30 September 2020, unless otherwise indicated. Legal reference for this Report: Regulation (EU) No 1095/2010 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 24 November 2010 establishing a European Supervisory Authority (European Securities and Markets Authority), amending Decision No 716/2009/EC and repealing Commission Decision 2009/77/EC, Article 32 “Assessment of market developments”, 1. “The Authority shall monitor and assess market developments in the area of its competence and, where necessary, inform the European Supervisory Authority (European Banking Authority), and the European Supervisory Authority (European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority), the ESRB and the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission about the relevant micro-prudential trends, potential risks and vulnerabilities. The Authority shall include in its assessments an economic analysis of the markets in which financial market participants operate, and an assessment of the impact of potential market developments on such financial market participants.” The information contained in this publication, including text, charts and data, exclusively serves analytical purposes. It does not provide forecasts or investment advice, nor does it prejudice, preclude or influence in any way past, existing or future regulatory or supervisory obligations by market participants. The charts and analyses in this report are, fully or in part, based on data not proprietary to ESMA, including from commercial data providers and public authorities. ESMA uses these data in good faith and does not take responsibility for their accuracy or completeness. ESMA is committed to constantly improving its data sources and reserves the right to alter data sources at any time. The third-party data used in this publication may be subject to provider-specific disclaimers, especially regarding their ownership, their reuse by non-customers and, in particular, their accuracy, completeness or timeliness, and the provider’s liability related thereto. Please consult the websites of the individual data providers, whose names are given throughout this report, for more details on these disclaimers. Where third-party data are used to create a chart or table or to undertake an analysis, the third party is identified and credited as the source. In each case, ESMA is cited by default as a source, reflecting any data management or cleaning, processing, matching, analytical, editorial or other adjustments to raw data undertaken. ISBN 978-92-95202-19-1, DOI 10.2856/824070, ISSN 25998749, EK-AC-18-001-EN-N European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) Risk Analysis and Economics Department 201-203 rue de Bercy FR–75012 Paris [email protected]
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 3
ESMA risk assessment Risk summary
EU financial markets continued their recovery in 3Q20 but remain highly sensitive as the recent volatility spikes around COVID-19 developments and uncertainties around the US election outcomes show. Equity market valuations edged up further, and increasingly show strong geographical and sectorial differentiation. Fixed income markets saw large-scale valuation increases across various segments during 3Q20 with valuations in EM, IG and HY debt indices now higher than pre-crisis. Credit rating downgrades have been slowing in 3Q20 and investment funds recorded inflows across asset classes, especially for bond funds. Taken together, these developments highlight the ongoing risk of decoupling between asset valuations and economic fundamentals. Hence the potential for a sudden reversal in investor’s risk assessment is the key risk we see for EU financial markets currently and we thus maintain our risk assessment. Going forward, we see a prolonged period of risk to institutional and retail investors of further – possibly significant – market corrections and see very high risks across the whole of the ESMA remit. The extent to which these risks will further materialise will critically depend on three drivers: the economic impact of the pandemic, market expectations on monetary and fiscal support measures, and any occurrence of additional external events in an already fragile global environment.
ESMA remit Risk categories Risk drivers
Level Outlook Level Outlook
Outlook
Overall ESMA remit Liquidity
Macroeconomic environment
Securities markets Market
Interest-rate environment
Infrastructures and services Contagion
Sovereign and private debt markets
Asset management Credit
Infrastructure disruptions
Consumers Operational
Political and event risks Note: Assessment of the main risks by risk segments for markets under ESMA’s remit since the last assessment, and outlook for the forthcoming quarter. Assessment of the main risks by risk categories and sources for markets under ESMA’s remit since the last assessment, and outlook for the forthcoming quarter. Risk assessment based on categorisation of the European Supervisory Authorities (ESA) Joint Committee. Colours indicate current risk intensity. Coding: green=potential risk, yellow=elevated risk, orange=high risk, red=very high risk. Upward arrows indicate an increase in risk intensities, downward arrows a decrease and horizontal arrows no change. Change is measured with respect to the previous quarter; the outlook refers to the forthcoming quarter. ESMA risk assessment based on quantitative indicators and analyst judgement.
Market assessment Overall ESMA remit: Markets continued their recovery 3Q20, albeit at a slower pace in equity markets, recovering most if not all losses incurred in 1Q20. These developments highlight the ongoing risk of decoupling between asset valuations and economic fundamentals. ESMA assesses the risks in its overall remit, securities markets, infrastructures and in asset management as remaining very high. The same applies to liquidity and market risks, and put a negative outlook on operational, credit, contagion and consumer risks as well as on sovereign and private debt markets. Given the critical role public support measures, in particular by monetary and fiscal authorities, have played in cushioning the economic impact of the pandemic, market perceptions on the sufficiency and sustainability of these measures are set to be important drivers of investment behaviour.
Securities markets: Equity market recovery in the EU slowed in 3Q20, with EU equity prices oscillating around end 2Q20 levels (+ 0.5% during 3Q20). Market developments show strong geographic and sectorial differentiation. Overall, the Eurostoxx is now around 17% below its mid-February levels with significant variation in market performance across member states, ranging from -7% in DE to-32% in ES. Equity market recovery in other jurisdictions continued in 3Q20, with e.g. valuations in the US around pre-crisis levels. At the end of 3Q20, the S&P 500
stood 0.5% below mid-February levels, amid strong 3Q20 performance (+8.5%). Sectorial performance differences are pointing to potential structural shifts in the economy (technology vs. travel sector); performance of cyclical stocks (e.g. construction, auto, retail) has been picking up whereas performance of financial sector shares remains weak. Bond markets saw a large-scale valuation increase across segments during 3Q20 with valuations of bond indices now above pre-crisis levels for EM (+4.5% since mid-February), IG (+12%) and HY (+16%).
Infrastructures and services: Trading volumes have come down from levels during the COVID-19 crisis while still remaining slightly above pre COVID-19 crisis levels. The trend of increasing lit market trading on equity markets observed during the crisis continued, with no major incident occurring, and a decrease in the number of circuit breakers triggered on EU trading venues. The central clearing environment also remained steady with initial margins remaining above pre-crisis levels, and despite the default of a non-systemic entity in the gas market at one EU CCP. The March-April market volatilities are now part of the historical data used for margin setting and most EU CCPs updated their modelling parameters to reflect the unprecedented market movements. The level of settlement fails at EU CSDs is at pre-crisis levels for corporate and sovereign bonds and also trending back to lower levels for equities. This is despite a spike in September amid increased volumes on EU equity
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 4
markets (R.7). Brexit remains a source of risk although third-country recognitions have been granted to UK CCPs allowing them to continue providing clearing services in the EU.
Asset management: The asset management industry continued to experience inflows post COVID-19 across asset classes, with bond funds standing out. Following price developments for the underlying assets, fund performance also turned positive again across asset classes. Return volatilities receded back to lower levels, although remaining above pre-crisis values. Fund leverage returned to pre-crisis levels in 3Q20 after its peak in April 2020. The use of liquidity management tools (LMTs) declined overall, with redemption restrictions remaining in place for some real estate funds. The suspension of eight funds managed by H2O Asset Management on 28 August 2020 illustrates the importance of valuation issues for illiquid assets and subsequent liquidity risk for investors1.
Retail investors: The impact of Covid-19 related market movements was visible on the level of complaints in 2Q20 with an increase in complaints related to funds (R.26, R.27). the most common MiFID service associated with complaints in 2Q20 was the execution of orders (74%). The shift from actively to passively managed funds continued, with market shares of passive equity UCITS and ETFs continuing to grow. Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG)-oriented assets such as benchmark equity indices and funds have outperformed their non-ESG peers again during the COVID-19 crisis and after.
Risk drivers Macroeconomic environment: EU GDP is set to fall by -13.5% in 2Q20 quarter-to-quarter, and by -8.75% for all 2020 with significant variation across Member States2. 2020 GDP forecasts have become slightly less pessimistic at the end of the reporting period; however central scenarios point to GDP levels remaining below pre-crisis levels into 2022.3 Timing and size of economic recovery depend on containment or worsening of the pandemic and associated policy responses. The resulting uncertainty is likely to continue weighing heavily on the economy and on financial markets.
Interest-rate environment: Monetary policy remains accommodative, aiming directly at supporting the economy. However, the resulting prolonged low for long interest rate environment
can continue to result in search for yield behaviour and has in this context been cited as a source for the current decoupling of financial asset prices from their fundamentals.4 The low-for-long interest rate environment is also expected to weigh on the profitability and solvency of banks and insurers.5
Sovereign and private debt markets: Sovereign debt issuance continued to be steady in the first half of 2020 amid rising public financing need light of the COVID-19 fiscal policy responses (R.19), and amid deteriorating credit quality (R.48). Rating downgrades overall have been slowing in 3Q20. However, downgrades and negative outlooks are still dominating with no discernable cross-country differences (R.51, R.52.) On corporate bond markets, yields went down markedly across ratings, however more significantly for lower rated bonds, again indicating decoupling risk. IG and HY bond valuations ended the reporting period 14% and 16% above their pre-crisis levels respectively. Our outlook for sovereign and private debt markets is thus deteriorating.
Infrastructure disruptions: EU infrastructures experienced no major disruption in 3Q20. Amid lower market volatility, circuit breaker (CB) usage declined in 3Q20, averaging 81 CB triggered per week over the quarter, against 155 in 2Q20 (R.54). As digitalisation of financial services accelerated as a consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic, operational resilience continues to be a key concern for corporations and consumers. Cyber-attack risks such as business disruptions or data breaches remain among the most widely cited risk sources in the financial industry. Our outlook for operational risk deteriorates, also in the context of Brexit.
Political and event risk: As the likelihood of a trade deal being agreed before the end of the year is limited, the EU and UK are again facing significant potential disruptions towards the end of the year. Nevertheless, the risk of a cliff edge effect in the financial sector is low as market participants should have put in place the necessary contingency plans where their business is affected by the UK leaving the single market at the end of the year. In the area of centralised clearing, UK CCPs will be recognised as third country CCPs (TC-CCPs) eligible to provide their services in the EU, after the end of the transition period. Geopolitical tensions outside and within the EU are still present with a continued potential impact on investors and financial stability going forward.
1 A side pocket was created for each of the seven UCITS fund concerned, holding the “private” assets facing valuation uncertainties and remaining suspended. Other assets were transferred to mirror funds that reopened on 13 October. 2 European Commission, European Economic Forecast. Summer 2020.
3 OECD Interim Economic Outlook. 4“The Disconnect between Financial Markets and the Real Economy”, IMF Special Notes Series on COVID-19, August 26, 2020. 5 Joint Committee Autumn Risk Report.
https://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/economy-finance/ip132_en.pdfhttps://ec.europa.eu/info/sites/info/files/economy-finance/ip132_en.pdfhttp://www.oecd.org/economic-outlook?utm_source=Adestra&utm_medium=email&utm_content=CTA%3A%20Full%20Report&utm_campaign=ecooutlooksep2020&utm_term=ecohttps://www.imf.org/~/media/Files/Publications/covid19-special-notes/en-special-series-on-covid-19-the-disconnect-between-financial-markets-and-the-real-economy.ashx?la=enhttps://www.imf.org/~/media/Files/Publications/covid19-special-notes/en-special-series-on-covid-19-the-disconnect-between-financial-markets-and-the-real-economy.ashx?la=enhttps://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/library/jc_2020_67_trv_report.pdf
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 5
Key indicators
Markets Securities markets
R.1 R.2
Market performance Market volatilities
Back to end-19 levels for EQ and bonds Volatilities back to pre-crisis levels
R.3 R.4
Corporate bond yields by ratings Equity prices
Reduced yields across ratings Stable in 3Q except banks and insurers
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
120
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Equities Commodities
Corporate bonds Sovereign bondsNote: Return indices on EU28 equities (Datastream regional index), globalcommodities (S&P GSCI) converted to EUR, EA corporate and sovereign bonds(iBoxx EUR, all maturities). 01/09/2018=100.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Equities Commodities
Corporate bonds Sovereign bonds
Note: Annualised 40-day volatility of return indices on EU28 equities (Datastreamregional index), global commodities (S&P GSCI) converted to EUR, EA corporateand sovereign bonds (iBoxx EUR, all maturities), in %.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20AAA AA A
BBB 1Y-MANote: : ICE BofAML EA corporate bond redemption yields by rating, in %. 1Y-MA=one-year moving average of all indices.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
120
130
140
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20Non-financials Banks
Insurance Financial services
Note: STOXX Europe 600 equity total return indices. 01/09/2018=100.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 6
R.5 R.6
Sovereign 10Y yields Price earning ratios
Reduced yields and spreads Valuations above long-term averages
Markets Infrastructures and services
R.7 R.8
Settlement fails €STR rate and volumes
Still high level for EQ, with peak in September Continuing smooth transition
-1
0
1
2
3
4
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20BE DE ES
FR IT SE
Note: Yields on 10Y sovereign bonds, selected countries, in %. 1Y-MA=one-year moving average of EA 10Y bond indices computed byDatastream.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
Aug-18 Dec-18 Apr-19 Aug-19 Dec-19 Apr-20 Aug-20
EA US10Y-AVG EA 10Y-AVG US
Note: Price-earning ratios based on average inflation-adjusted earnings fromthe previous 10 years (cyclically-adjusted price-earning ratios). Averagescomputed from the most recent data pointup to 10 years before.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Corporate bonds 6M-MA corp
Equities 6M-MA equities
Government bonds 6M-MA gov
Note: Share of failed settlement instructions in the EU27, in % of value, one-week moving averages. Jump in December 2018 due to a single transaction ofEUR 500 bn instructed on 10 December with settlement requested on thesame day, which was finally cancelled on 18 December.Sources: National Competent Authorities, ESMA.
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
-0.7
-0.6
-0.5
-0.4
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0.0
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Total volume (rhs) ESTR rateRate at 25th percentile Rate at 75th percentile
Note: €STR rates at 25th, 50th and 75th percentile of volume, in %, and monthlyvolumes, EUR tn. Pre-€STR rates and volumes prior to 01/10/2019.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 7
R.9 R.10
IRS referencing EONIA and Euribor by maturity Initial Margins held at EU CCPs
Still significant amounts outstanding Decrease, but higher than pre-crisis levels
R.11
CCP Margin breaches
Driven by 1Q20 COVID-19 market stress
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
EONIA EURIBOR
Tri
llio
ns
Before end-2021 After end-2021
Note: Gross notional amount of IRD outstanding refercing EONIA andEURIBOR, as of 4 September 2020.Sources: TRs, ESMA.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
4Q17 2Q18 4Q18 2Q19 4Q19 2Q20
margin required additional margins
Note: Initial mar gin required as w ell as addi tional margin pos ted by EU CCP, inEUR bn.Sources: Clarus Financial Technology, CPMI-IOSCO PQD, ESMA.
0.0%
0.2%
0.4%
0.6%
0.8%
1.0%
1.2%
1.4%
1.6%
0.0%
0.1%
0.2%
0.3%
0.4%
0.5%
breaches of ini tia l margin -average uncovered exposure
breaches of ini tia l margin -peak uncovered exposure (rhs)
Note: Average and maximum margi n breach size over the past 12 month atselected EU CCPs, as a percentage of the total margin held, as of 30 June2020.
Sources: Clarus Financial Technology, PQD, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 8
Markets Asset management
R.12 R.13
Global investment funds Fund performance
Outflows across types and regional focus Positive for EQ
R.14 R.15
Assets by fund type Rate of return volatilities by fund type
Growth trend resumed across fund industry Still relatively high for EQ and CO
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Europe BF Europe EF
Emerging markets BF Emerging markets EF
North America BF North America EF
cNote: Cumulative net flows into bond and equity funds (BF and EF) overtime since 2004 by regional investment focus, EUR bn.Sources: REFINITIV Lipper, ESMA
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Alternatives Equity
Bond Commodity
Mixed Assets Real Estate
Note: EU-domiciled investment funds' annual average monthly returns, assetweighted, in %.Sources: Thomson Reuters Lipper, ESMA.
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
Jul-18 Nov-18 Mar-19 Jul-19 Nov-19 Mar-20 Jul-20Alternative Bond Equity
Mixed Other Real estate
Note: AuM of EA funds by fund type, EUR tn.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Alternative Equity Bond
Commodity Mixed Real EstateNote: Annualised 40D historical return vol atility of EU domiciled mutualfunds, in %.Sources: Thomson Reuters Lipper, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 9
R.16 R.17
Leverage by fund type EU bond fund net flows
Increased leverage during crisis Net inflows for all types of bond funds
R.18 R.19
Bond funds credit risks Bond funds’ maturity and liquidity profile
Better credit quality for HY in 3Q20 Stable maturity and liquidity profiles
R.20 R.21
MMF assets and leverage MMF liquidity and maturity
Increasing size, but lower leverage in 2Q20 Increasing MMF liquidity
1.00
1.05
1.10
1.15
1.20
1.25
1.30
1.35
1.40
1.45
Jul-18 Nov-18 Mar-19 Jul-19 Nov-19 Mar-20 Jul-20Alternative Bond Equity
Mixed Other Real estate
Note: Leverage of EA investment funds by fund type computed as theAuM/NAV ratio.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
-80
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
Sep-18 Mar-19 Sep-19 Mar-20 Sep-20
Government Emerging HY
Corporate MixedBonds Other
Note: Two-month cumulative net flows for bond funds, EUR bn. Fundsinvesting in corporate and government bonds that qualify for anothercategory are only reported once e.g. funds investing in emerginggovernment bonds reported as Emerging; funds investing in HY corporatebonds reported as HY).Sources: Thomson Reuters Lipper,ESMA.
2
3
4
5
6
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
BF HY
Note: Average credit quality (S&P ratings; 1= AAA; 4= BBB; 10 = D).Sources: Thomson Reuters Lipper,ESMA.
BBB
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
500
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Sep-15 Jul-16 May-17 Mar-18 Jan-19 Nov-19 Sep-20
BF maturity
HY maturity
BF liquidity ratio (rhs)
HY liquidity ratio (rhs)
Note: Effective average maturity of fund assets in years; ESMA liquidityratio (rhs, in reverse order).Sources: Thomson Reuters Lipper, ESMA.
1.00
1.01
1.02
1.03
1.04
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
2Q15 2Q16 2Q17 2Q18 2Q19 2Q20AuM NAV
Leverage (rhs) 5Y-MA (rhs)
Note: NAV and AuM of EA MMFs, EUR tn. Leverage computed as theAuM/NAV ratio. 5Y-MA=five-year moving average of the leverage ratio.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
Jun-18 Oct-18 Feb-19 Jun-19 Oct-19 Feb-20 Jun-20
Weekly liquidity WAM
Note: Weighted average maturity (WAM) of EU prime MMFs, in days.Aggregation carried out by weighting individual MMFs' WAM by AuM. Weeklyliquidity includes all assets maturing overnight and shares by AAA MMFs,securities issued by highly rated sovereigns with a maturity of less than oneyear, in % of total assets. Aggregation carried out using individual MMF dataweighted by AuMSources: Fitch Ratings, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 10
R.22 R.23
ETF NAV by asset type ETF net flows by domicile
NAV increasing for all types of ETFs Inflows in EU and US
Markets Consumers
R.24 R.25
EA households’ net acquisition of financial assets Investor sentiment
Increased acquisition of financial assets in 2Q Still low but with higher expectations
0
200
400
600
800
1000
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Mixed Assets Alternatives Money Market
Commodity Other Bond
Note: NAV of EU ETFs by asset type, EUR bn.Sources: Refinitiv Lipper, ESMA.
-4
-3
-2
-1
0
1
2
3
4
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
EU US
Note: ETF net flows by domicile, in % of NAV.Sources: Refinitiv Lipper, ESMA.
-5
0
5
10
15
2Q15 2Q16 2Q17 2Q18 2Q19 2Q20Currency and deposits Debt securitiesOther financial assets Equity and IF sharesNet financial liabilities Net financial flows
Note: Net acquisition of financial assets and net incurrence of liabilities for EAhouseholds as a share of their gross disposable income adjusted for changes inpension entitlements, based on a one-year rolling period, in %. IFshares=investment fund shares. Other financial assets=Insurance technicalreserves, financial derivatives, loans granted and other accounts receivable. Netfinancial flows=Net household lending (positive values) or borrowing (negativevalues) to/from sectoral financial accounts. Liabilities multiplied by -1 to presentas outflows.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
-80
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
EA institutional current EA retail current
EA institutional future EA retail future
Note: Sentix Sentiment Indicators for the EA retail and institutional investors on aten-year horizon. The zero benchmark is a risk-neutral position.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 11
R.26 R.27
Complaints by cause Complaints by financial instruments
increase in complaints after Covid Increase in complaints related to funds
Risk categories Liquidity risk
R.28 R.29
Composite equity liquidity index Sovereign bond liquidity dispersion
Spike in July, return to low levels after Liquidity improved, although still high dispersion
0
400
800
1,200
1,600
2,000
0
20
40
60
80
100
2Q18 4Q18 2Q19 4Q19 2Q20Investment advice
Portfolio management
Execution of orders
Total with MiFID service reported
Note: Share of com plaints for quarterly-reporting NCAs (n=14) receiveddirect from consumers and via firms recorded as associated with a givenMiFID service, excludi ng com plaints with no such category recorded, all
reporting channels, %. 'Total with MiFID service reported'=Totalcomplaints received via these reporting channels recorded as associatedwith a MiFID service.
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
0
20
40
60
80
100
2Q18 4Q18 2Q19 4Q19 2Q20Equities CFDsOptions/futures/swaps UCIT S/AIF sStruc tured securit ies Debt securit iesTotal with instrument cited
Note: Share of complaints from quarterly-reporting NCAs (n=14) receiveddirect from consumer and via firms by type of financial instrument, wher enone of the i nstruments listed was reported. 'Total with ins trument
cited'=number of complai nts via these reporting channels excl uding thosewith instrument type not reported or reported as 'other' or 'N/A'. 'Totalcomplaints'=num ber of com plaints via these reporting channel whether ornot further categorisation possible. 'CFDs''=Contracts for Differences.Sources: ESMA complaints database
0.10
0.12
0.14
0.16
0.18
0.20
0.22
0.24
0.26
0.28
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Illiquidity index 2Y-MA
Note: Composite indicator of illiquidity in the equity market for the current STOXXEurope Large 200 constituents, computed by applying the principal componentmethodology to six input liquidity measures (Amihud illiquidity coefficient, bid-askspread, Hui-Heubel ratio, turnover value, inverse turnover ratio and marketefficiency coefficient). The indicator range is between 0 (higher liquidity) and 1(lower liquidity).Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Aug-18 Dec-18 Apr-19 Aug-19 Dec-19 Apr-20 Aug-20
Top 25% Core 50% Bottom 25% Median
Note: Dispersion of liquidity measured as median across countries of the bid-askyields difference for 10Y sovereign bonds, in bps. 20 EU27 countries areincluded.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 12
R.30 R.31
Corporate bond liquidity Bond futures liquidity
Bid-ask spreads remaining high Liquidity improving to pre-crisis levels
R.32 R.33
Sovereign repo volumes Repo market specialness
Slight increase in July Multi-year lows in specialness
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
Aug-18 Dec-18 Apr-19 Aug-19 Dec-19 Apr-20 Aug-20
Bid-ask 1Y-MA Amihud (rhs)
Note: Markit iBoxx EUR Corporate bond index bid-ask spread, in %, computedas a one-month moving average of the iBoxx components in the currentcomposition. 1Y-MA=one-year moving average of the bid-ask spread. Amihudliquidity coefficient index between 0 and 1. Highest value indicates lessliquidity.Sources: IHS Markit, ESMA.
0.0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
1.2
1.4
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
DE FR ITNote: One-month moving averages of the Hui-Heubel illiquidity indicator forselected 10Y sovereign bond futures, in %.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Volume 1M-MA 5Y-MA
Note: Repo transaction volumes executed through CCPs in 7 sovereign EArepo markets (AT, BE, DE, FI, FR, IT and NL), EUR bn.Sources: RepoFunds Rate, ESMA.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Median 75th perc 90th perc
Note: Median, 75th and 90th percentile of weekly specialness, measured asthe difference between general collateral and special collateral repo rates ongovernment bonds in selected countries.Sources: RepoFunds Rate, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 13
Risk categories Market risk
R.34 R.35
Economic policy uncertainty Financial instrument volatilities
Still high level of uncertainty Still above pre-crisis levels
R.36 R.37
Exchange rates Exchange rate volatilities
EUR appreciating against UDS, JPY, EM Spike for EUR-GBP
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
0
75
150
225
300
375
450
525
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Europe US Global VSTOXX (rhs)
Note: Economic Policy Uncertainty Index (EPU), developed by Baker et al.(www.policyuncertainty.com), based on the frequency of articles in Europeannewspapers that contain the following triple: "economic" or "economy","uncertain" or "uncertainty" and one or more policy-relevant terms. Globalaggregation based on PPP-adjusted GDP weights. Implied volatility of EUROSTOXX 50 (VSTOXX), monthlyaverage, on the right-hand side.Sources: Baker, Bloom,and Davis 2015; Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
25
50
75
100
125
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20VSTOXX 1M VSTOXX 3M
VSTOXX 12M VSTOXX 24M
Note: EURO STOXX 50 implied volatilities,measured as price indices, in %.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
85
90
95
100
105
110
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
USD JPYGBP CHFEmerging 1Y-MA USD
Note: Spot exchange rates to Euro. Emerging is a weighted average (2016GDP) of spot exchange rates for CNY, BRL, RUB, INR, MXN, IDR and TRY.01/09/2018=100. Increases in value represent an appreciation of EUR. 1Y-MAUSD=one-year moving average of the USD exchange rate.Sources: ECB, IMF, ESMA.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20EUR-USD EUR-GBP
1Y-MA USD 1Y-MA GBP
Note: Implied volatilities for 3M options on exchange rates, in %. 1Y-MA USD(resp. 1Y-MA GBP) is the one-year moving average of the implied volatility for3M options on EUR-USD (resp. EUR-GBP) exchange rate.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 14
Risk categories Contagion risk
R.38 R.39
Composite systemic stress indicator Sectoral equity indices correlation
Decrease, but remaining above pre-crisis level Differentiation across sectors
R.40 R.41
Equity market concentration Dispersion in sovereign yield correlation
Decreased concentration High co-movement across countries
-0.4
-0.1
0.2
0.5
Sep-16 Sep-17 Sep-18 Sep-19 Sep-20
Equity market contributionBond market contributionMoney market contributionESMA CISSCorrela tion contribution
Note: ESMA version of the ECB-CISS indicator measuring systemic s tressin securities m arkets. I t focuses on three financi al market segments: equity,bond and money markets, aggregated through standard portfolio theory. It
is based on securities market indicators such as vol atilities and riskspreads.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20Banks Financial services
Insurance Non-financial corporation
Note: Correlations between daily returns of the STOXX Europe 600 andSTOXX Europe 600 sectoral indices. Calculated over 60D rolling windows.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Top 25% Core 50%
Bottom 25% Median
Note: Concentration of notional value of equity trading by national indicescomputed as a 1M-MA of the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index, in %. Cboe indicesincluded are AT 20, BE 20, DE 30, DK 25, ES 35, FI 25, FR 40, IE 20, IT 40,NL 25, PT 20, SE 30 and UK 100.Sources: Cboe, ESMA.
-1.0
-0.5
0.0
0.5
1.0
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Top 25% Core 50%Bottom 25% Median
Note: Dispersion of correlations between 10Y DE Bunds and other EU27countries' sovereign bond redemption yields over 60-day rolling windows.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 15
R.42
Financial market interconnectedness
Back at end-19 levels, drop for MMFs
Risk categories Credit risk
R.43 R.44
Sovereign risk premia Sovereign CDS spreads
Low risk premia Continued decline in 3Q20
62
64
66
68
70
72
0
5
10
15
20
25
2Q15 2Q16 2Q17 2Q18 2Q19 2Q20Alternative funds Bond funds
Total funds MMF (rhs)Note: EA loan and debt securities vis-à-vis MFI counterparts, as a share oftotal asset, investment funds and MMFs, in %. Total funds includes: bondfunds, equity funds, mixed funds, real estate funds, hedge funds, MMFs andother non-MMF investment funds.Sources: ECB, ESMA.
0
1
2
3
4
5
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
PT IE IT ES GR
Note: Selected 10Y EA sovereign bond risk premia (vs. DE Bunds), in %.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20Europe JP
US 1Y-MA Europe
Note: Datastream CDS sovereign indices (5 years, mid-spread), in bps.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 16
R.45 R.46
Corporate bond spreads Covered bond spreads
Back to more compressed levels Decline to pre-crisis levels
R.47 R.48
Long term corporate debt outstanding Long term sovereign debt outstanding
Increasing share of BBB and lower Lowering share of AAA
R.49 R.50
Net sovereign debt issuance Debt redemption profile
Positive net sovereign issuance Current financing need for financials
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20AAA AA A
BBB 1Y-MA
Note: ICE BofAML EA corporate bond option-adjusted spreads by rating, inbps. 1Y-MA=one-year moving average of all indices.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
25
50
75
100
125
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
AAA AA A 1Y-MA
Note: iBoxx EUR covered bond option-adjusted spreads by rating, in bps. 1Y-MA=one-year moving average of all indices.Sources: Refinitiv Datastream, ESMA.
0
20
40
60
80
100
3Q15 3Q16 3Q17 3Q18 3Q19 3Q20
AAA AA A BBB BB and lower
Note: Outstanding amount of corporate bonds in the EEA30 as of issuancedate by rating category, in% of the total.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, ESMA.
0
20
40
60
80
100
2Q15 2Q16 2Q17 2Q18 2Q19 2Q20
AAA AA A BBB BB and lower
Note: Outstanding amount of sovereign bonds in the EEA30 as of issuancedate by rating category, in % of the total.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, ESMA.
-150
-75
0
75
150
225
-50
-25
0
25
50
75
AT
BE
BG
CY
CZ
DE
DK
EE
ES
FI
FR
GR
HR
HU
IE IS IT LTL
UL
VM
TN
LN
OP
LP
TR
OS
ES
IS
KE
EA
30
1Y high 1Y low 2Q20
Note: Quarterly net issuance of EEA30 sovereign debt by country, EUR bn.Net issuance calculated as the difference between new issuance over thequarter and outstanding debt maturing over the quarter. Highest and lowestquarterly net issuance in the past year are reported. EEA30 total on right-handscale.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, ESMA.
-100
-75
-50
-25
0
25
50
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
3Q20 3Q21 3Q22 3Q23 3Q24 3Q25
Non-financials Financials
1Y-change fin (rhs) 1Y-change non-fin (rhs)Note: Quarterly redemptions over 5Y-horizon by EEA30 private financial andnon-financial corporates, EUR bn. 1Y-change=difference between the sum ofthis year's (four last quarters) and last year's (8th to 5th last quarters)redemptions.Sources: Refinitiv EIKON, ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 17
R.51 R.52
Corporate issuer downgrades Ratings outlook by rating
Downgrades still dominating Corporate ratings’ outlook negatively skewed
Risk categories Operational risk
R.53 R.54
Circuit-breaker trigger events by sector Circuit-breaker trigger events by market capitalisation
High share of basic mat. and health care Back to pre-crisis levels
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
0
50
100
150
200
250
06
-Ja
n-2
0
20
-Ja
n-2
0
03
-Fe
b-2
0
17
-Fe
b-2
0
02
-Ma
r-2
0
16
-Ma
r-2
0
30
-Ma
r-2
0
13
-Apr-
20
27
-Apr-
20
11
-Ma
y-2
0
25
-Ma
y-2
0
08
-Ju
n-2
0
22
-Ju
n-2
0
13
-Ju
l-2
0
27
-Ju
l-2
0
10
-Aug
-20
24
-Aug
-20
07
-Sep
-20
21
-Sep
-20
Unique issuers downgraded
Downgrades: share of rating changes (rhs)Note: Number of EU27+UK corporate issuers with at least one bonddowngraded, and ratio dowgraded corporate issues over upgrades anddowngrades (rhs)Sources:ESMA, RADAR
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
AA A BBB BB B CCC
Evolving Outlook Negative Outlook
Positive Outlook Stable Outlook
Note: Corporate non financial instruments (ISINs) with outlook rated by theBig 5 (Fitch, Moody's, S&P, Scope and DBRS) by category value over the totalratings per category valueSources: RADAR, ESMA. Cut-off date: 08/10/2020.
0
25
50
75
100
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20Basic materials, industrials and energyFinancialsHealthcare, consumer cyclicals and non-cyclicalsTechnology, utilities and telecommunications services
Note: Percentage of circuit-breaker trigger events by economic sector registeredon 34 EEA31 trading venues for all constituents of the STOXX EuropeLarge/Mid/Small 200 and a large sample of ETFs tracking these indices or someof their subindices. Results displayed as weekly aggregates.Sources: Morningstar Real-Time Data,ESMA.
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
3,000
3,500
4,000
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20Large caps Mid caps Small caps ETFs
Note: Number of daily circuit-breaker trigger events by type of financialinstrument and by market cap registered on 34 EEA31 trading venues for allconstituents of the STOXX Europe Large/Mid/Small 200 and a large sample ofETFs tracking these indices or some of their subindices. Results displayed asweekly aggregates.Sources: Morningstar Real-Time Data,ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 18
R.55
Trading system capacity proxy
Back to lower trading volumes, spike in July
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Sep-18 Jan-19 May-19 Sep-19 Jan-20 May-20 Sep-20
Trading volume 3M-MA Volume
Capacity (rhs) All-time high (rhs)
Note: Daily and 3M-MA of trading volumes of 34 EEA31 trading venues for allconstituents of the STOXX Europe Large/Mid/Small 200 and a large sample ofETFs tracking these indices or some of their subindices, in EUR bn. Capacitycomputed as the average across trading venues of the ratio of daily tradingvolume over maximum volume observed since 31/03/2016, in %.Sources: Morningstar Real-Time Data,ESMA.
ESMA Risk Dashboard No. 2, 2020 19