Synchronised housing market downturn triggers nerve pains
As real estate markets worldwide move in tandem by showing clear signs of a downturn, two major international financial bodies this week have reiterated their concerns over the housing market’s potential impact on financial stability. Both the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund have raised a red flag. Investment Officer looks for answers to some key questions a moment that mortgage rates are at their highest since 2006.
IMF: illiquid funds risk adding to volatility, market shocks
Investment funds that hold illiquid, hard-to-sell assets and that calculate their net asset value on a daily basis can trigger volatility and add to the impact of shocks in financial markets, especially in turbulent times, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) said in a policy note addressed to the financial community.
IMF warns of ‘permanent fragmentation’
The International Monetary Fund has warned of a more permanent fragmentation of the world economy into geopolitical blocks with distinct technology standards, cross-border payment systems, and reserve currencies. The fund has lowered its growth outlook for the global economy and warned that inflation in many countries is threatening to undermine future growth. “Inflation has become a clear and present danger in many countries,” the IMF said.
In Flux: a bubbling housing market, Reifs and rising rates
If there is one economic lesson my father, a construction engineer, taught me, it’s that mortgage rates in Europe always follow what’s happening in the United States. When rates go up across the Atlantic, they’re bound to do the same in our part of the world. So when it comes to locking in a good mortgage rate, look west.
Ukraine war reverberates across the globe, says IMF
Beyond the suffering and humanitarian crisis from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the entire global economy will feel the effects of slower growth and faster inflation, the International Monetary Fund said on Wednesday.
“We live in a more shock-prone world,” IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva (pictured) recently said at a press briefing in Washington. “And we need the strength of the collective to deal with shocks to come.”
IMF concerned over rising house prices in Luxembourg
Luxembourg’s financial system has weathered the pandemic well, but the Russia-Ukraine conflict poses new risks to Luxembourg’s economy while the surge in housing prices from recent years threatens the attractiveness of the Grand Duchy, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) has concluded after a two-week mission.
Impact of OECD “structured formal garden” for tax rules
The new corporate taxation rules from the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) join earlier reforms that collectively pose economic and fiscal risks to the Luxembourg economy, according to the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Tax experts say it is possible that some non-financial multinationals located here might decide to leave because of the new OECD rules.
EM debt a paradise for active investors
“The world needs to be prepared for a debt crisis in emerging markets. Rising interest rates will draw capital away from vulnerable countries”, warned Kristalina Georgieva, director of the IMF. For the time being, not everyone feels moved by this warning, “emerging market debt is a paradise for active investors”, according to Wouter van Overfelt, senior portfolio manager EM debt at Vontobel, in an interview with Fondsnieuws, Investment Officer Luxembourg’s Dutch sister publication.