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This Article is From Mar 16, 2020

$54 Billion Manager Says He Now Fears a Global Credit Crunch

(Bloomberg) --

One of the biggest Nordic fund managers says he's worried that credit might stop flowing across the globe if governments don't step up their game.

Reima Rytsola, chief investment officer at the Varma Mutual Pension Insurance Co. in Helsinki, says he can see clear signs that financial conditions have tightened despite efforts by central bankers to provide emergency liquidity.

If the world sinks into a credit crunch, it “would draw out the recession significantly,” Rytsola said in an interview on Saturday. He's now waiting for indications, especially in the euro area, that governments are ready to add substantial fiscal stimulus, given that “the ECB is out of ammunition.”

Germany, the biggest economy in the euro area, said on Friday it may drop its long-standing balanced-budget policy to help pay for measures to stem the fallout of the coronavirus. The U.S. has passed a bipartisan economic relief plan.

Rytsola said that the U.S. package “creates faith that they're able to operate also on the fiscal side,” but he fears that the measures announced so far “are not yet enough, until we find out the magnitude and duration of the coming shut down.”

In Europe, Rytsola said the main concern is the lack of fiscal coordination across the region, which he worries will hamper efforts to deliver effective measures despite action by individual governments. And while the latest signals from Germany are encouraging, it's not yet obvious they'll be adequate, he said.

Europe has become the new epicenter of the pandemic, with governments imposing travel bans and closing borders as millions stay home to avoid contagion.

For investors, buying hedges against so-called “tail risks” might look like the “obvious answer,” Rytsola said. But anyone adopting that strategy would already have lost money, he said.

“If you had hedged against such a market reaction through this historical bull run, you wouldn't still be in the money with that strategy,” Rytsola said.

Read More:
What Central Banks Did This Week as the Virus Hit Global Markets
Germany Ready to Ditch Balanced Budget to Combat Coronavirus
House Passes Trump-Backed Virus Plan That Provides Free Testing
Coronavirus Tally May Be Tip of Iceberg as Sick Go Untested

To contact the reporter on this story: Kati Pohjanpalo in Helsinki at kpohjanpalo@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Tasneem Hanfi Brögger at tbrogger@bloomberg.net

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.

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