
Form 4 Comfort Systems USA Inc For: 5 March
Form 4 Comfort Systems USA Inc For: 5 March
Why Ciena Sank Today | The Motley Fool
Shares of Ciena (CIEN 15.07%) plummeted 18.6% on Thursday as of 1:05 p.m. EDT.
As a leader in optical networking hardware and software platforms, Ciena’s share price has skyrocketed with the advent of generative AI and the associated infrastructure build-out. The stock, even with today’s sell-off, is up a whopping 271% over the past year alone.
That may be why Ciena’s fiscal first-quarter earnings report, which showed both a strong revenue and earnings beat, didn’t lead to a positive outcome for the stock.
Today’s Change
(-15.07%) $-51.76
Current Price
$291.79
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$49B
Day’s Range
$278.39 – $315.24
52wk Range
$49.21 – $365.90
Volume
237K
Avg Vol
3.3M
Gross Margin
39.31%
Ciena’s growth accelerates, but it’s not enough for its now-lofty valuation
In the fiscal first quarter ending at the end of January, Ciena saw growth rise 33.1% to $1.43 billion, while adjusted (non-GAAP) earnings per share rallied 111%. Both figures handily beat analyst expectations. Management also raised full-year guidance to a range of $5.9 billion to $6.3 billion, up from a prior range of $5.7 billion to $6.1 billion, and above the consensus estimates of $5.96 billion. Ciena also raised its gross margin guidance to 44% at the midpoint, up from prior guidance of 43%.
CEO Gary Smith noted in the release:
Our record fiscal fourth-quarter and full-year performance reinforce our position as the global leader in high-speed connectivity, with an expanding role in the AI ecosystem… Looking ahead, we are confident in our growth trajectory over the coming years, driven by durable demand from our cloud and service provider customers and a growing set of opportunities inside and around the data center.
Image source: Getty Images.
Ciena investors are selling the good news
To be honest, it’s really hard to come away with any negatives in this earnings release. It should be noted that many AI and semiconductor-related stocks were down on Thursday amid fears over supply chain disruptions from the U.S.-Iran war, which caused a pullback in the sector.
Still, Ciena was down by even more. That likely means investors might have been hoping for an even bigger guidance raise. Of note, the full-year outlook would imply a 28% growth rate over fiscal 2025, which would mark a deceleration from first-quarter results and second-quarter guidance of 33% growth. The guidance therefore implies a significant deceleration in the back half of the year. So despite the guidance raise, investors might have been looking for even more, given the strong first quarter.
Yet that may also be management playing things conservatively. Ciena has a recent history of regularly beating guidance, so it may be the case that management is merely managing expectations. Shares came into the day trading at 77 times this year’s earnings estimates, so investors may merely be locking in substantial gains, with the stock price already reflecting much good news.
MortgageDepot Now Offers Fannie Mae Multifamily Loans Up To $100 Million
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aggregate and firm-level evidence – Bank Underground
Eduardo Maqui, Nicholas Vause and Márcia Silva-Pereira
In recent decades, the corporate bond market has grown from a relatively niche source of finance for UK corporations to a central pillar alongside bank loans. This transition raises an important question: as with bank credit conditions, have supply conditions in the corporate bond market come to significantly affect UK economic activity? Our recent research suggests the answer is a resounding yes. We show that a measure of corporate bond financing conditions − the Excess Bond Premium (EBP) − not only anticipates macroeconomic outturns in the UK, but also influences investment by UK firms, especially those that are highly leveraged and more reliant on bond finance.
The rise of bond financing
To motivate our analysis, Chart 1 shows how the composition of UK corporate debt has changed over the past 35 years. A key feature is the rising share of debt securities (mainly corporate bonds), which increased from just 15% in the early 1990s to over 40% by the mid-2020s. Indeed, UK corporations now raise as much finance from bonds as bank loans.
Chart 1: Composition of UK corporate debt

Notes: Non-bank loans includes finance leasing and peer-to-peer lending as well as direct and syndicated loans from non-bank financial institutions. Debt securities is mainly (>90%) corporate bonds but also includes commercial paper.
Source: Bank of England calculations.
Measuring bond financing conditions: the excess bond premium
To study how financing conditions in the corporate bond market affect economic activity, we first require a summary measure of those conditions. Thus, we follow Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012) by decomposing corporate bond spreads − the additional compensation required by investors to buy corporate bonds rather than government bonds − into two components. One component reflects ‘fundamentals’ relating to the riskiness of the borrowers or the specific bonds. The residual component is known as the EBP and reflects risk appetite of investors. Specifically, when the EBP rises, it signals that investors require more compensation to hold corporate bonds, over and above what is justified by borrower default risk or bond-specific risks such as illiquidity.
We compute the EBP for the UK by identifying the bond obligations of individual UK firms over time, taking into account mergers and acquisitions. We then combine various sources of data on these matched firms and bonds in order to regress corporate bond spreads on measures of obligor-specific default risk (in particular the distance to default) and bond-specific market and liquidity risks (such as modified duration and size of issue). We retain the residuals from this regression and aggregate them across firms to form the EBP.
Chart 2 shows our results. Investor willingness to invest in UK corporate bonds at lower rates of compensation generated a negative EBP for much of the decade preceding the 2007−08 global financial crisis (GFC) − a period of low macroeconomic uncertainty (The Great Moderation). The EBP then swung sharply positive during the GFC, when investors required substantially more compensation to invest in bonds than suggested by fundamentals. The EBP was also distinctly positive in other periods of financial stress or economic uncertainty, in particular following the dot-com crash (2000−01), during the euro-area sovereign debt crisis (2010−12), ahead of the Brexit referendum (2016), at the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic (2020), and following the Russian invasion of Ukraine (2022).
Chart 2: Decomposition of UK corporate bond spreads

Notes: The chart shows an index of corporate bond spreads constructed from 1,680 bonds issued by 149 UK private non-financial corporations (black line) and how it decomposes into a component explained by borrower and bond-specific fundamentals (dark blue) and the excess bond premium (light blue).
Source: Authors calculations. Based on Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012).
What happens when bond financing conditions tighten?
Equipped with our measure of bond financing conditions, we first study the consequences of changes in conditions for macroeconomic indicators, including GDP, investment and the unemployment rate. We take two approaches. First, we employ local projections, regressing changes in the macroeconomic indicators from 1 to 16 quarters ahead on contemporary changes in the EBP. In these regressions, we include the policy interest rate and the term spread, as well as several other control variables, to isolate changes in the macroeconomic indicators already anticipated by these other predictors. As shown in Chart 3, a one standard deviation increase in the EBP (of 53 basis points) is associated with a decline in GDP of as much as 2 percentage points, a reduction in investment of as much as 4 percentage points, and an increase in the unemployment rate of as much as 0.5 percentage points. These peak effects all occur about 1.5 years after the shock.
Chart 3: Impulse response of macroeconomic outcomes to an EBP shock

Notes: The panels show estimates of the effects of a one standard deviation EBP shock on macroeconomic outcomes up to four years after the shock. The solid lines show the expected effects, while the darker and lighter shaded areas respectively show ranges in which we are 90% and 95% confident that the effects lie. Refer to the staff working paper for details of the methodology. Investment is gross fixed capital formation.
Source: Authors calculations. Based on Gilchrist and Zakrajšek (2012).
While these effects are sizeable, note that the estimates come with a significant range of uncertainty (blue-shaded areas of the chart). They also depend on our assumption of being able to infer shocks to bond financing conditions from changes in the EBP, which may to an extent be confounded by other macroeconomic drivers. As a sensitivity check, we compute impulse response functions based on a vector auto-regression model and find weaker responses, of around half the magnitudes reported above (refer to Appendix D in the paper), although these effects remain economically significant. Potential limitations to our identification should bite less at the firm level, which we explore below, since firm-level outcomes are less likely to be correlated with confounding aggregate dynamics.
Digging into these aggregate economic responses with similar analyses at sector level, we find that the impact of changes in the EBP is not uniform across different parts of the economy. Notably, investment in capital-intensive assets − like machinery, equipment, and buildings − declines much more than investment in intellectual property. Similarly, investment in manufacturing and production industries is hit harder than investment in services. Interestingly, public-sector investment tends to move countercyclically, increasing when private investment falls, which helps to stabilise capital formation in aggregate.
Firm-level effects: who gets hit hardest?
Finally, we study the effects of shocks to bond financing conditions, as captured by changes in the EBP, on individual firms. Here, we allow for different responses depending on both the level and composition of firms’ debt. Specifically, we allow for different responses for firms in each of the four groups shown in Table A. We estimate these responses through separate local projections for each group, where we regress firm-level outturns − such as growth in investment, assets, sales and profits − over various future horizons on contemporaneous changes in the EBP.
Table A: Firm groups by leverage and share of bond financing
| Group | Leverage (long-term debt/total assets) |
Bond share (bond debt/long-term debt) |
| Low leverage and low bond share (LL) | Below median | Below median |
| Low leverage and high bond share (LH) | Below median | Above median |
| High leverage and low bond share (HL) | Above median | Below median |
| High leverage and high bond share (HH) | Above median | Above median |
Chart 4 shows the results for investment, which is one of our key findings. While the first three panels show no statistically significant response of investment − as measured by capital expenditure − by LL, LH or HL firms to changes in the EBP; the final panel shows that HH firms cut investment aggressively, with a peak decline in investment of almost 10 percentage points around 1.5 years after a one standard deviation shock. Hence, it appears to be the behaviour of these firms − which are not only highly leveraged but have a high share of bonds in their debt − that drives the response of aggregate investment (shown in Chart 3).
Chart 4: Impulse response of firm-level investment to an EBP shock

Notes: The panels show estimates of the effects of a one standard deviation EBP shock on the capital expenditure of UK firms up to four years after the shock for firms with low leverage and low bond share (LL), high leverage and low bond share (HL), low leverage and high bond share (LH) and high leverage and high bond share (HH). The solid lines show the expected effects, while the darker and lighter shaded areas respectively show ranges in which we are 90% and 95% confident that the effects lie. Refer to the staff working paper for details of the methodology.
Source: Authors calculations.
This evidence is consistent with a financial accelerator mechanism in which highly leveraged firms cut investment especially sharply when the cost of finance increases, thereby amplifying the sensitivity of aggregate investment to changes in EBP compared to an economy with a more-even distribution of debt. Our results add a new dimension to this mechanism, as we show the amplification of the investment response to changes in the EBP depends not only on a firm’s leverage but also on the share of bonds in its debt. The results therefore characterise a specifically market‑based finance propagation channel, in which the structure of corporate debt shapes the transmission of financing shocks to real economic activity.
Why does this matter for policy?
Our findings have several important implications. First, the EBP provides a timely signal of changes in bond financing conditions that can foreshadow changes in economic activity. Hence, it may serve policymakers as a useful complement to other business-cycle indicators. Second, the amplified response to changes in the EBP for highly leveraged, bond-reliant firms highlights the importance of diversified funding sources for economic resilience. Third, having shown how changes in bond financing conditions ripple through investment, employment and growth, future research on what in turn determines these conditions seems particularly valuable.
Eduardo Maqui works in the Bank’s RegTech, Data and Innovation Division, Nicholas Vause works in the Bank’s Market-Based Finance Division and Márcia Silva-Pereira is an Economist at Banco de Portugal.
If you want to get in touch, please email us at bankunderground@bankofengland.co.uk or leave a comment below.
Comments will only appear once approved by a moderator, and are only published where a full name is supplied. Bank Underground is a blog for Bank of England staff to share views that challenge – or support – prevailing policy orthodoxies. The views expressed here are those of the authors, and are not necessarily those of the Bank of England, or its policy committees.
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[Posted Today] 250X Avios or 190X Wyndham Points on Kate Spade Purchases
250X Avios on Kate Spade Purchases
🔃 Update (Mar 05, 2026) – 🥳🍾🎉 Avios posted today. Enjoy your fancy bags and those first class flights!
🔃 Update (Jan 30, 2026) – Well this is promising. Avios are now showing as pending at 250X rate. Check your accounts.
➡️ Original article (Jan 02, 2026) – The British Airways Club’s shopping portal is offering 250X Avios on Kate Spade New York purchases. That’s a great way to get cheap Avios if this really tracks. You’re buying them for 0.4 cents each.
I would look for items that you can return in case this doesn’t work out.
I bought me a purse, so good luck to us all!
Some other portals are also offering increased rates of 100X+
HT: OMAAT
Top 10 Investment Companies By Assets In 2026
The largest investment companies in the world own trillions in assets.
When you first start investing, figuring out which brokerage to pick can be a challenge. Before you open an account, it’s worth looking at the biggest brokerage companies and identifying what makes these companies unique.
The following companies have more than $1 trillion in assets under management. With so much money at these brokerages, most seem to be doing something right.
Keep in mind that not all of these companies are discount brokerages. Some specialize in workplace retirement plans and others are full-service brokerages that charge high fees. These are the top 10 brokerages based on their assets under management and/or assets under advisement.
Related: Top Brokerages To Invest Your Money In 2026
1. Fidelity
Fidelity famously became the first company to offer a no-fee index fund to accompany its already no-commission trading fees, and other services that investors love. With its myriad of low and no-cost products, Fidelity manages to offer a great website, offering services like a Robo-advisor and socially oriented investments.
Thanks to its focus on low fees and customer service, Fidelity has more than $17.5 trillion in assets under administration, with $6.8 trillion directly under management..
2. BlackRock
BlackRock is the country’s largest brokerage firm specifically assets under management – having $14.04 trillion in assets under management at the end of 2025. BlackRock is famous for its iShares funds (also called SPDR funds) which are some of the lowest-cost ETFs available on the market. Robo Advisors rely heavily on BlackRock funds due to the quality of index tracking and the company’s low costs.
While you can buy iShares through most brokerage companies, BlackRock also allows you to open retirement accounts, brokerage accounts, and 529 accounts. It supports a range of investment options with commission-free trades and low costs on ETFs and mutual funds.
Related: Why Do People Say BlackRock Owns Everything?
3. Vanguard
Vanguard was founded by John Bogle, who championed low-cost investing philosophies. Bogle was a pioneer of low-cost index funds, which is a portfolio of stocks or bonds, which gives you a more diverse way to invest than if you were buying individual stocks. Vanguard offers both actively managed and passive index funds.
The company, which is headquartered in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania is now managing over $12 trillion in assets under management (as of November 30, 2025).
4. Charles Schwab
With $11.9 trillion in assets under management at the end of 2025, Charles Schwab is a consistent leader for “retail investors.” This is the group that may want access to low-cost funds, some trading capabilities, insights from leading investors, and great investing technology.
The company offers automated investing through Intelligent Portfolios, socially responsible investment options, and all manner of retirement, education, and brokerage accounts.
5. Morgan Stanley (E*TRADE)
Morgan Stanley was another company known for its high-fee, high-touch service, but the company made a bid at the discount market by acquiring E*TRADE in late 2020. E*TRADE is best known for its low and no-cost trading platform. It gives users the ability to open multiple accounts including education accounts, retirement accounts, and regular brokerage accounts.
The E*TRADE solo 401(k) account is consistently ranked as a favorite due to the ease of opening, funding, and transacting in the account.
With the acquisition of E*TRADE, Morgan Stanley now has $9.3 trillion in client assets with $1.8 trillion in assets under management.
6. UBS Global Wealth Management
UBS Global Wealth Management is one of the world’s largest wealth manager, serving primarily high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth investors.
The firm oversees roughly $7 trillion in invested assets across its wealth management business and offers portfolio management, estate planning, lending, and alternative investments.
UBS expanded its presence in the United States through its acquisition of Credit Suisse, which added clients and advisors to its already large global network.
7. JP Morgan Chase
A favorite amongst the personal finance community, Chase is known for its above average credit card rewards and lucrative checking sign-up bonuses.
The company holds $7.1 trillion in client assets and has more than $4.8 trillion in assets under management for its clients. While most of J.P. Morgan Chase’s products are targeted to high net worth individuals, the company’s self-directed investment option offers commission-free trade, retirement accounts, fractional shares, and other perks for investors.
8. Goldman Sachs
Founded in 1869, Goldman Sachs is the world’s second largest investment bank by revenue. The company specializes in advisory services for mergers and acquisitions and restructuring, personal wealth and investment management, and more.
Goldman Sachs has a total of 3.61 trillion in assets under supervision at the end of 2025. According to Goldman Sachs, assets under supervision “includes assets under management and other client assets for which Goldman Sachs does not have full discretion.”
9. Edward Jones
With more than $2.5 trillion in assets under management, Edward Jones Investments is the first company on this list that doesn’t have a discount component. Investors who choose Edward Jones primarily work through the company’s financial advisors who guide investors toward the right mix of investments.
Compared to most companies listed here, Edward Jones has high fees, and the service you receive varies depending on the quality of your financial advisor. If you’re happy with your Edward Jones investment advisor, it may be worth keeping your investments at the company despite the high fees. However, investors who are less satisfied may want to consider a new financial advisor through Empower or Wealthfront Advisory Services.
10. Bank of America
Bank of America’s Global Wealth and Investment Management (GWIM) division includes both Merrill and the Bank of America Private Bank. Together, these businesses oversee more than $2.2 trillion in client balances, offering advisory services, brokerage accounts, and financial planning.
Merrill provides investment tools and advisor-led portfolios for individuals with a wide range of assets, while the Private Bank focuses on ultra-high-net-worth households and institutions. Through its connection with Bank of America’s broader banking platform, clients can access integrated lending, banking, and investment services in one place.
Are Bigger Brokerages Better?
In general, we don’t recommend apps or brokerages with less than $1 billion in assets, because the companies are too likely to be acquired. Mergers and acquisitions tend to lead to decreased quality of customer service, at least during the transition. So that’s why we believe the size of the brokerage matters.
For brokerages that are growing, once it reaches a certain size, the company can serve the most common investment needs, and provide a differentiated experience based on its strengths. Most of the brokerages on this list offer a mix of high and low-cost products and they serve a variety of clientele.
Why Some Of Our Favorite Brokerages Didn’t Make The List
Some of our favorite investment companies (such as Wealthfront and M1Finance) just didn’t quite make the cut. Both of these companies have less than $50 billion in assets under management. Despite their relatively small scale (at least compared to companies with trillions under management), we respect these contenders in the space.
If you’re interested in finding the best free investing apps, check out this article. It includes several companies that manage billions rather than trillions in assets.
These companies manage to scale using technology which keeps costs low for investors and provides a great investment experience too.
To compile our ranking of the largest investment companies by assets, we started by sourcing financial data from ADV Ratings and Wikipedia. Then, we went directly to the company websites to find the most up to date results based on their annual reports (as of December 31, 2025) Note that these numbers and rankings will change over time, and while we will strive to update our content regularly, it may not be current.
Editor: Robert Farrington
Reviewed by: Colin Graves
The post Top 10 Investment Companies By Assets In 2026 appeared first on The College Investor.
Spotify says it paid out $213M to Australian music rightsholders in 2025, up 7% YoY
Spotify reports that it paid out AUD $330 million (approx. USD $212.7M) to Australian music rightsholders last year, up 7% YoY.
Globally, Spotify says that it paid out more than $11 billion to the music industry in 2025, as revealed in late January.
Spotify’s Australian-specific data showed that more than 370 artists based in the market now earn over AUD $100,000 ($64,500) annually from Spotify alone, double the count from 2017.
The newly published data for the Australian market also revealed that local fans streamed Australian artists 223 million more times on Spotify in 2025 than the year before.
Australian artists were also discovered by first-time listeners 2.7 billion times globally last year, according to Spotify.
The company said nearly half of all Australians use the platform, and it described the country’s user base as among its “most engaged listeners globally.” As of June 2025, Australia’s population was at 27.6 million, according to government data.
Spotify revealed the figures as it announced a new AUD $200,000 ($128,900) multi-year partnership between its Turn Up Aus initiative and The Push, aimed at developing emerging artists in Australia.
“We’ll help The Push—Australia’s leading youth music organization—create pathways for local artists and industry leaders, investing not only in today’s talent but also in the future of the country’s creative economy.”
Spotify
“We’ll help The Push—Australia’s leading youth music organization—create pathways for local artists and industry leaders, investing not only in today’s talent but also in the future of the country’s creative economy,” Spotify said Tuesday (March 3).
Spotify said its partnership with The Push is part of its efforts to support Australian music that also includes its RADAR and EQUAL programs. The platform also invests in an editorial team that curates local playlists such as Hot Hits Australia, Turn Up Aus, New Music Friday, Heaps Country, A1, and more.
In November, Spotify entered a three-year partnership with the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) as the official presenting partner of the ARIA Awards starting in 2025.
Beyond streaming revenue, Spotify also highlighted its role in driving merch sales, marketing support, ticket sales and live music discovery for Australian artists. The company also highlighted its ongoing efforts to combat what it called “AI slop” and abuse.
“[W]e’re working all the angles to deepen the connection between fans and Australian artists, on and off platform,” said Spotify.
Australia ranked as the world’s eleventh-largest recorded music market in 2024, having been overtaken by Mexico, which climbed to tenth, according to IFPI data. The country’s recorded music revenues grew by 6.1% YoY in 2024.
All AUD-to-USD conversions are made using the annual average exchange rate as published by the IRS.
Music Business Worldwide
Fed rate cuts: Iran war and jobs data lower odds of 2026 interest cut
In the entirely likely event that Kevin Warsh’s nomination for Fed chairman makes it through Senate hearings, he’ll be keen to leave his first Federal Open Market Committee meeting (FOMC) this summer with a base rate cut in-hand.
After all, in order to land the nomination to succeed Jerome Powell the directive from the Oval Office was explicit: The candidate would have to be more dovish than Powell. Warsh, a former Fed Governor, fits the bill: He’s bullish on the U.S. economy, thanks in large part to the promise of AI, and is advocating for relative economic tightening on the Fed’s balance sheet to offset lower rates.
Trump’s campaign against Powell’s central bank has been intense—he literally brought it to the doorstep of the Fed. Any incoming Fed chairman would be keen to set the tone early on, and deliver the much-requested rate cut the president has been lobbying for.
But to deliver that cut would be no mean feat. Trump’s military escapades with Israel in Iran are only likely to push an already skittish FOMC into a more hawkish stance, analysts believe. That’s because the biggest economic fallout from the conflict (notwithstanding the humanitarian toll) is the impact on energy supplies from the Gulf region.
Iran borders the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway in the Persian Gulf through which exports from UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, and Iraq all flow. Shipmasters are now nervous to sail through it. The White House has suggested its military will offer escorts to ships along the strait in order to keep the route open, though whether that actually happens remains to be seen.
The knock-on effect for oil and gas prices is the key concern for economists. The Fed is tasked with keeping inflation at 2%, and consumer prices are already above-target on this metric. Lower the base rate would be adding fuel to that inflationary fire, by stoking consumption and borrowing.
Compounding the issue is the latest jobs data, which shows the labor market continuing to strengthen. Payroll provider ADP reported that private employers added 66,000 roles in February, well above the 50,000 expected. That doesn’t help the argument for a cut. The second part of the Fed’s mandate—steady employment—is already taking care of itself with little intervention.
Regional Fed Presidents, whose vote holds equal weight to that of the chairman, are already indicating that their wait-and-see stance is further warranted by the conflict. Cleveland’s president, Beth Hammack, said rates could be held for “quite some time,” with Iran presenting a new inflationary risk. Likewise, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said this week he was growing less confident about his previous estimation of a 25bps cut this year, explaining: “With the geopolitical events, we need to get a lot more data in.”
Global bank hawks
Central bankers are approaching the Iran war as “hawks,” Macquarie’s Thierry Wizman said in a note to clients yesterday. As well as U.S. bankers, Wizman pointed to the fact that representatives from the Bank of Japan, Bank of England, the Bank of Canada, and the European Central Bank have also signalled they’re watching carefully for any inflationary hints.
“The prospect that the Fed may be ‘on hold’ instead of cutting rates this year may be why the USD has gotten an extra fillip of appreciation (beyond the haven-seeking impulse) during the war,” Wizman added. “With the OIS market previously projecting more than two cuts from the Fed in 2026 (as of last week) it is the U.S.’s rate outlook that is seen to have the greatest ‘potential’ to be overturned by another burst of global inflation in 2026, if energy supplies become constrained.”
The strong data meant investors are pricing out the likelihood of a cut in the first half of this year, noted Deutsche Bank’s Jim Reid this morning: “The probability of a cut by the June meeting (which would be the first with a new Chair) fell to just 39% by the close, the lowest so far this year. So clearly there’s growing scepticism that a new Chair can start cutting straight away, particularly with the data as strong as it is right now.”
Monetary policy, state-dependent bank capital requirements and the role of non-bank financial intermediaries – Bank Underground
Manuel Gloria and Chiara Punzo
The expansion of non-bank financial institutions (NBFIs) is transforming the financial landscape and introducing fresh challenges for financial stability and oversight at the same time as creating opportunities. Using a dynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) model, we find that while NBFIs may enhance long-term welfare for households and entrepreneurs in normal conditions, their greater role also heightens vulnerabilities to severe shocks in the financial system. Greater NBFI activity boosts competition in the financial sector, leading to more efficient resource allocation. A working paper detailing these results was recently published.
The global financial landscape has undergone significant transformation in recent years with NBFIs becoming increasingly prominent in credit provision. Their expanded activities have contributed to a more intricate system, presenting new challenges for macroprudential policy and supervision (Buchak et al (2018)).
While some studies highlight the risks posed by NBFIs, particularly due to their limited regulatory oversight and potential to amplify systemic vulnerabilities (Plantin (2014), Gennaioli et al (2013)), others point to their role in improving market efficiency and diversifying funding sources (Ordoñez (2018)). The ultimate impact of NBFIs on financial stability and welfare remains an open question, especially during periods of economic stress. Our paper contributes to this debate by examining how NBFIs influence the economy’s vulnerability to severe downturns − those rare but impactful episodes that can pose outsized risks to financial stability − and the transmission of monetary policy.
To explore these dynamics, we develop a structural model that reflects the interactions between traditional banks, NBFIs, and monetary policy. This framework allows us to assess how financial structures affect the economy’s response to shocks. By focusing on episodes of heightened financial fragility, our aim is to provide insights that can help policymakers balance the goals of stability and efficiency in an evolving financial landscape.
Methodology
We develop a microfounded DSGE model that places state-dependent capital requirements for commercial banks at the heart of the financial system. Unlike traditional models that assume banks face symmetric capital adjustment costs (Gerali et al (2010)), our framework introduces a crucial non-linearity: capital adjustment costs only activate when a bank’s capital ratio dips below a regulatory threshold, otherwise remaining inactive. This asymmetry means that when banks are well-capitalised, they face no penalty, but as soon as their capital falls short, loan-deposit spreads rise, reflecting heightened funding costs.
While our methodology enables the analysis of state-dependent dynamics, it still retains some of the simplifying features of Gerali et al (2010): it does not account for risk and uncertainty, and the way banks are required to hold extra capital relies on simplified assumptions.
The financial sector in our model explicitly distinguishes between two types of lenders: regulated commercial banks, subject to capital requirements and protected by resolution regimes and deposits insurance; and NBFIs, which are not directly regulated. NBFIs depend on market discipline to maintain investor trust, operating under an incentive compatibility constraint that ensures their actions remain credible in the eyes of savers and investors. Within this competitive landscape, commercial banks possess some market power when setting interest rates, whereas NBFIs operate in perfectly competitive markets (Gebauer and Mazelis (2023)). In our framework, banks and NBFIs compete but do not interact directly; we therefore abstract from potential interlinkages such as banks’ exposure to NBFIs through activities like prime brokerage.
We utilise this model to examine how the economy reacts to monetary policy shocks in both the short and long term. Specifically, we distinguish the effects of asymmetric capital requirements, as opposed to symmetric ones, on the consequences of a rise in the policy rate, and we assess the specific role that NBFIs play in the transmission mechanism compared to a scenario in which only banks act as financial intermediaries.
Beyond average outcomes, we focus on how these factors shape the economy during severe downturns − what economists call the ‘left tail’ of the GDP distribution, meaning situations where GDP falls to very low levels. To capture these rare but costly events, we simulate the model under a wide range of economic conditions and focus on extreme scenarios such as deep recessions or financial stress. This approach allows us to evaluate how the inclusion of NBFIs affects the likelihood and severity of rare but costly events.
We also account for the zero lower bound on interest rates, given its relevance in recent stress episodes. Finally, we complement our analysis with a welfare analysis, where welfare is defined as the weighted sum of the individual welfare of savers in the economy and the entrepreneur. This approach enables us to compare long-term outcomes with and without NBFIs, thereby assessing their broader contribution to financial stability and economic efficiency.
Findings
Chart 1 illustrates impulse response functions following a 1% monetary policy shock, contrasting two versions of the model: one featuring only banks (red lines) and the other incorporating NBFIs (blue lines). Each subplot reports percentage deviations from steady state (except for the policy rate, which is shown as absolute deviations) and the x-axis represents quarters, extending up to 10 years ahead). The Chart shows that NBFIs significantly amplify the contractionary effects of monetary policy, due to their exposure to bond prices. When bond prices decline, NBFIs cannot offset the reduction in bank credit, meaning they cannot fully fill the gap left by banks. This limitation outweighs the competitive lending channel identified by Gebauer and Mazelis (2023), where NBFIs might otherwise step in to increase credit supply when banks retrench. In our analysis, the balance sheet channel dominates, so the ability of NBFIs to act as a ‘spare tyre’ is significantly curtailed during periods of falling bond prices.
Chart 1: NBFIs amplify the negative effect of higher interest rates on GDP

Importantly, if we run a large number of simulations with randomly drawn shocks to characterise the full distribution of outcomes, we find that this amplification is most pronounced in the left tail of the GDP distribution. To clarify, these charts illustrate the impact of introducing NBFIs on GDP in extreme scenarios. The median value falling by 0.01 percentage points suggests that, on average across all simulations, the effect on GDP is minimal. However, the shift of the fifth percentile by -0.81 percentage points indicates that in the worst 5% of simulated outcomes, GDP is significantly lower − that is, deep downturns become noticeably more severe when NBFIs play a larger role. This heightened vulnerability persists even when interest rates are constrained at the zero lower bound, meaning that the risk of sharper contractions in GDP remains present under stressed conditions.
Table A: Median and 5th percentile values of the distribution of GDP deviations from steady state across 1,000 simulations
| GDP | No NBFI | NBFI | Diff |
| Median | -0.17% | -0.18% | -0.01% |
| 5th percentile | -9.17% | -9.98% | -0.81% |
| Median (zlb) | -0.36% | -0.39% | -0.03% |
| 5th percentile (zlb) | -9.07% | -9.87% | -0.80% |
In contrast, our long-term analysis indicates that greater involvement of NBFIs supports higher overall welfare. Chart 2 illustrates how aggregate welfare changes as the proportion of NBFI credit rises − in particular, as the NBFIs share increases from 0 to 0.3 and the banks share drops correspondingly. We observe a clear trend: welfare tends to increase as the proportion of NBFI lending rises, with the most pronounced gains occurring when NBFIs are first introduced to an economy − specifically between a share of 0 and 0.1. By facilitating a broader spectrum of lending channels, an increased share of NBFI activity supports a more diverse and adaptable financial system, which can enhance the allocation of resources without relying solely on the regulatory mechanisms applied to commercial banks.
Chart 2: Aggregate welfare as a function of NBFI share of total lending

Policy implications
These findings highlight that while NBFIs may enhance long-term welfare by expanding credit channels and supporting economic efficiency in normal circumstances, their growing presence also renders the financial system more susceptible to severe downturns. In other words, the improvement in welfare during typical economic conditions comes at the cost of increased vulnerability to extreme shocks.
Policymakers must therefore strike a thoughtful balance between stability and efficiency. Adaptive oversight is crucial, because effective macroprudential policies must address risks arising from every part of the financial system − not only by evaluating banks and non-bank institutions individually, but by understanding their interactions and the combined effects these have on the broader economy. This requires a dynamic regulatory framework that considers the evolving interplay between regulation, monetary policy, and the diverse spectrum of financial intermediaries.
In summary, understanding these complex dynamics equips policymakers to better prepare for future shocks and enhance financial system stability and welfare.
Manuel Gloria and Chiara Punzo work in the Bank’s Macroprudential Strategy and Support Division.
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