Fast-growing crypto-currency assets could pose a danger to the established financial system, a senior Bank of England official has told the BBC.
Although not much of UK households’ wealth is currently held in assets such as Bitcoin, they are becoming more mainstream, said deputy Bank governor Sir Jon Cunliffe.
If their value fell sharply, it could have a knock-on effect, he said.
The Bank needed to be ready to contain those risks, he added.
Speaking to the BBC’s Today programme, Sir Jon said that at present, about 0.1% of UK households’ wealth was in crypto-currencies.
About 2.3 million people were estimated to hold them, with an average amount per person of about £300.
However, he stressed that crypto-currencies had been “growing very fast”, with people such as fund managers wanting to know whether they should hold part of their portfolios in crypto-currencies.
“Their price can vary quite considerably and they could theoretically or practically drop to zero,” he said.
“The point, I think, at which one worries is when it becomes integrated into the financial system, when a big price correction could really affect other markets and affect established financial market players.
“It’s not there yet, but it takes time to design standards and regulations.”
He added: “We really need to roll our sleeves up and get on with it, so that by the time this becomes a much bigger issue, we’ve actually got the regulatory framework to contain the risks.”
Sir Jon was speaking the day after the Bank published its latest Financial Stability Report, which examined the health of the UK’s financial system.
The report said UK households had remained “resilient” despite the end of the furlough scheme and other Covid support measures.
However, it added that uncertainty over health risks and the economic outlook remained.
Covid could still have “a greater impact” on the economy, especially in light of new variants, it said.
The report comes as Bank policymakers prepare to announce their next interest rate decision on Thursday.
The cost of living rose by 4.2% in October, its highest rate in almost 10 years. This surge in inflation has led analysts to predict an increase in interest rates from their current record low of 0.1%. But doubts have recently set in because of the spread of the Omicron variant.
“The UK and global economies have continued to recover from the effects of the pandemic. But uncertainty over risks to public health and the economic outlook remains,” said the Bank.
“For example, there are near-term pressures on supply and inflation, and there could be a greater impact from Covid on activity, especially given uncertainties about whether new variants of the virus reduce vaccine efficacy.”
The Bank of England’s financial stability committee said the risks to the financial system had returned to their levels before the pandemic began.
“Major UK banks are strong enough to keep supporting households and businesses, even in severe scenarios,” the Bank said.
It is consulting on lifting emergency measures introduced to give banks more room for manoeuvre at the start of last year.
Banks will now once again have to build up an extra buffer of capital to guard against future shocks, worth 1% of all their loans (known as a counter-cyclical capital buffer). That will rise to 2% next year.
The Bank is also consulting on loosening affordability limits on mortgages.
It is examining whether to drop a requirement that lenders should test whether borrowers could still afford repayments if interest rates rose by 3% above the standard variable rate.
It added in its report that getting funds together for a deposit is still the most significant barrier to home-ownership.(BBC)