Liz Marshall, Sabrina Pellerin, and John Walter of the Richmond Fed estimate that in December 2014, 61% of financial sector liabilities in the US were protected by explicit (35%) or implicit (26%) government guarantees.
Tag Archives: Financial stability
Riksbank Review
In the FT, Richard Milne reports about Marvin Goodfriend and Mervin King’s “Review of the Riksbank’s Monetary Policy 2010–2015.” The report criticizes monetary policy decisions after but not before 2011. It recommends a core inflation target, organizational changes and the possibility to suspend the inflation target.
Government Debt Management
In his FT blog, Larry Summers argues for a “quite radical” change in government debt-management. He proposes several lessons:
- “Debt management is too important to leave to Federal debt managers and certainly to leave to the dealer community. … when interest rates are near zero, it has direct implications for monetary and fiscal policy and economic performance … and … financial stability.”
- “… it is fairly crazy for the Fed and Treasury, which are supposed to serve the national interest, to pursue diametrically opposed debt-management policies. This is what has happened in recent years, with the Fed seeking to shorten outstanding maturities and the Treasury seeking to term them out.”
- “Standard discussions of quantitative easing … are intellectually incoherent. It is the total impact of government activities on the stock of debt that the public must hold that should impact on financial markets.”
- In the US, “the quantity of long-term debt that the markets had to absorb in recent years was well above, rather than below, normal. This suggests that if QE was important in reducing rates or raising asset values it was because of signalling effects … not because of the direct effect of Fed purchases.”
- “The standard mantra that federal debt-management policies should seek to minimise government borrowing costs is … wrong and incomplete. … it is risk-adjusted expected costs that should be considered. … it is hard to see why the effects of debt policies on levels of demand and on financial stability should be ignored.”
- “The tax-smoothing aspect, which is central to academic theories of debt policy, is of trivial significance.”
- Rather than providing opportunities for carry trade, “[t]reasury should reverse the trend towards terming out the debt. Issuing shorter term debt would also help meet private demands for liquid short-term instruments without encouraging risky structures such as banks engaged in maturity transformation.”
- “Institutional mechanisms should be found to insure that in the future the Fed and Treasury are not pushing debt durations in opposite directions.”
Segregated Balance Accounts
In a Federal Reserve Bank of New York staff report, Rodney Garratt, Antoine Martin, James McAndrews and Ed Nosal argue in favor of “Segregated Balance Accounts” (SBAs):
SBAs are accounts that a bank or depository institution (DI) could establish at its Federal Reserve Bank using funds borrowed from a lender. … the funds deposited in an SBA would be fully segregated from the other assets of the bank … only the lender of the funds could initiate a transfer out of an SBA; consequently, the borrowing bank could not use the reserves that fund an SBA for any purpose other than paying back the lender. … the loan made by the lender to the bank would be collateralized by the reserve balances in the SBA account.
The authors argue that SBAs could foster competition in money markets and
help strengthen the floor on overnight interest rates that is created by the payment of interest on excess reserves.
The proposal is related to topics I discussed in previous blog posts:
- Narrow banking proposals.
- Reserves for Everyone—Towards a New Monetary Regime.
- Reserves for Everyone—Towards a New Monetary Regime, Vox.
- Notenbankgeld für Alle?, NZZ.
- Sovereign Money in Iceland?
- Reserves for All.
Costs of Negative Interest Rates
James McAndrews of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York doubts the merits of negative interest rates. He lists the following types of complications:
- Avoidance
- Legal and operational frictions
- Economic frictions
- Pass-through to market rates, and retail v. wholesale
- Effects of negative rates on the health of financial intermediaries
- Signal of deflation
- Public acceptance
“Financial Market Infrastructure”
In the eleventh chapter of “Across the Great Divide: New Perspectives on the Financial Crisis,” Darrell Duffie argues that central clearing parties administering tri-party repurchase agreements cannot be resolved under current bankruptcy law, including recent provisions under the Dodd-Frank act. He argues that
a financial institution should not operate key financial market infrastructure backed by the same capital that supports much more discretionary forms of risk-taking, such as speculative trading or general lending.
“How Is the System Safer? What More Is Needed?”
In the ninth chapter of “Across the Great Divide: New Perspectives on the Financial Crisis,” Martin Baily and Douglas Elliott argue that significant progress has been made in safeguarding financial stability:
- Due to higher bank capital requirements, the FDIC can intervene before equity is wiped out.
- Liquidity requirements work in the same direction and render fire sales less likely.
- Easier resolution of distressed financial institutions helps to shield taxpayers when a bank fails.
- Better macro prudential oversight helps to manage systemic risks.
The authors discuss these dimensions in much detail.
“Mistakes Made and Lessons (Being) Learned”
In the seventh chapter of “Across the Great Divide: New Perspectives on the Financial Crisis,” Peter Fisher argues that the Fed’s mandate should be reviewed:
- The Fed did not address leverage early enough. In the future, monetary policy should weigh financial stability objectives more strongly—at the cost of employment and inflation objectives.
- Moral hazard should be addressed before, not during the crisis.
- “Since the end of the financial crisis, the Fed is making the mistake of conceiving of its mandate over too short—and too narrow—a horizon. This permits the Fed to avoid articulating the difficult intertemporal trade-offs that it is making.”
- The Fed’s mandate is not crystal clear and has been interpreted differently over the years. In light of the new experiences, it should be clarified or adjusted.
Perspectives on the Financial Crisis
A Hoover Press book edited by Martin Baily and John Taylor collects articles about the financial crisis. The contributions in “Across the Great Divide: New Perspectives on the Financial Crisis” include (with links to PDF files):
- Introduction, Martin Neil Baily and John B. Taylor
- Chapter 1: How Efforts to Avoid Past Mistakes Created New Ones: Some Lessons from the Causes and Consequences of the Recent Financial Crisis, Sheila C. Bair and Ricardo R. Delfin
- Chapter 2: Low Equilibrium, Real Rates, Financial Crisis, and Secular Stagnation, Lawrence H. Summers
- Chapter 3: Causes of the Financial Crisis and the Slow Recovery: A Ten-Year Perspective, John B. Taylor
- Chapter 4: Rethinking Macro: Reassessing Micro-foundations, Kevin M. Warsh
- Chapter 5: The Federal Reserve Policy, Before, During, and After the Fall, Alan S. Blinder
- Chapter 6: The Federal Reserve’s Role: Actions Before, During, and After the 2008 Panic in the Historical Context of the Great Contraction, Michael D. Bordo
- Chapter 7: Mistakes Made and Lesson (Being) Learned: Implications for the Fed’s Mandate, Peter R. Fisher
- Chapter 8: A Slow Recovery with Low Inflation, Allan H. Meltzer
- Chapter 9: How Is the System Safer? What More Is Needed?, Martin Neil Baily and Douglas J. Elliot
- Chapter 10: Toward a Run-free Financial System, John H. Cochrane
- Chapter 11: Financial Market Infrastructure: Too Important to Fail, Darrell Duffie
- Chapter 12: “Too Big to Fail” from an Economic Perspective, Steve Strongin
- Chapter 13: Framing the TBTF Problem: The Path to a Solution, Randall D. Guynn
- Chapter 14: Designing a Better Bankruptcy Resolution, Kenneth E. Scott
- Chapter 15: Single Point of Entry and the Bankruptcy Alternative, David A. Skeel Jr.
- Chapter 16: We Need Chapter 14—And We Need Title II, Michael S. Helfer
- Remarks on Key Issues Facing Financial Institutions, Paul Saltzman
- Concluding Remarks, George P. Shultz
- Summary of the Commentary, Simon Hilpert
Secular Stagnation
Larry Summers explains his secular stagnation hypothesis in Vox: If the full employment real rate of interest (FERIR) is low and so is inflation, full employment may be out of reach. Price rigidities may amplify the effect if they induce expectations of falling prices. In addition, low interest rates tend to undermine financial stability, by fostering an aggressive search for yield and Ponzi schemes. Several factors suggest that the FERIR has been falling. Summers proposes to operate under a higher inflation rate target and to spend more on public investment.
Large Banks Promise not to Terminate Distressed Derivatives Contracts
Philip Stafford and Tracy Alloway report in the FT that under the stewardship of the International Swaps and Derivatives Association, large banks
have agreed to give up their rights to immediately end derivatives contracts with crisis-hit rivals after global regulators pressed for an industry cross-border agreement to stop counterparties terminating deals with troubled institutions.
The agreement covers 90% of the OTC derivatives market. Incentives to live up to it are weak; not amending one’s contracts with counter parties amounts to the dominant strategy in a prisoners’ dilemma situation. Moreover, institutional investors may have fiduciary duties to end their contracts if a counter party defaults so attaining the cooperative equilibrium may not be possible without legal changes.
DN: But if the initiative succeeds, could it undermine the effective seniority status of derivatives?
Conference on “Law and Economics” with Focus Session on “Bank Resolution” at the Study Center Gerzensee
Joint with CEPR, the Study Center Gerzensee organised a conference on law and economics. The program can be viewed here and papers can be downloaded from CEPR’s website. The focus session on bank resolution featured contributions by
- Patrick Bolton and Jeffrey Gordon (paper)
- Martin Hellwig (paper, slides)
- Mathias Dewatripont (slides)
- Gerard Hertig
- Wolf-Georg Ringe (paper)
- Paul Tucker (paper)
In his talk, Jeff Gordon explained how Dodd-Frank extends the FDIC’s resolution technology from the 1930s to “non-banks” that engage in banking business. Dodd-Frank establishes an “Orderly Liquidation Authority” and in title II a “Single Point of Entry” by putting a holding company (topco) into receivership. The objective is to minimise disruption costs for large institutions, to preserve the going-concern value of the company and to avoid collateral damage. Single point of entry also helps resolve cross-border issues. No comparable institutional framework is available in the EU. In the crisis, US authorities implemented ad-hoc alternatives to bankruptcy: Mergers (which require the approval of shareholders and therefore make it hard to wipe out the target’s shareholders) worked for Bear Stearns (JPMorgan Chase, Maiden Lane, Fed) but not for Lehman Brothers (Barclays, Fed) because the UK authorities refused to waive Barclays shareholder approval, fearing fiscal implications. Recapitalisation with third party funds (Fed) in the case of AIG also required shareholder approval and protected creditors and counter-party claims.
Patrick Bolton cautioned that the rules for the topco are still not clear and discussed alternatives to Dodd-Frank in the bankruptcy code. He emphasised the role of qualified financial contracts and debtor-in-possession interventions.
Martin Hellwig argued that the government rescue of Hypo Real Estate reflected the political will to help influential creditors rather than systemic importance. He questioned the viability of single-point-of-entry arrangements in cross-border resolution, pointing to lack of trust among national regulators. He questioned whether internationally active banks can ever be resolved in an efficient manner and asked whether, in that light, they are socially valuable.
Mathias Dewatripont warned that excessive emphasis on bail-in arrangements can undermine financial stability, for example by having the expectation of a small haircut applied to senior debt tranches trigger a run on all senior debt. To avoid such an outcome, he favoured a clearly identified seniority structure with a significant balance-sheet share of “bail-inable” liabilities. He questioned the usefulness of higher capital requirements, arguing that “prompt corrective action” is politically infeasible unless the equity ratio has fallen below a very low value, 2 percent say.
Wolf-Georg Ringe favoured holding-company structures with sufficient “bail-inable” debt.
Paul Tucker discussed potential problems with the holding-company/single-point-of-entry strategy, related to centralised operations (IT). He raised the issue of accountability and the potential lack thereof if companies are resolved by regulators rather than judges, and he wondered whether national regulators can commit to collaborate across borders if need be. He favoured “bail-inable” debt over equity because the former gives incentives to monitor without the incentive to speculate on the upside.
Gerard Hertig warned that regulatory incentives lead to bank mergers rather than resolution, in particular because authorities tend to be more lenient in crisis times. He argued that because of deposit insurance, resolution worked well in Japan until recently.
Patrick Bolton argued that cocos are badly designed as their triggers are too low and they refer to accounting equity. Instead, he favoured reverse convertible bonds that can be converted by the issuer.
Oliver Hart argued that resolution has the advantage over cocos that the management gets replaced.
Many panelists voiced scepticism towards narrow banking proposals. They feared that control over the money supply might turn into control over credit, referring to the discussion in the US during the 1930s.
“Vollgeld, Liquidität und Stabilität (100% Money, Liquidity and Stability),” NZZ, 2014
Neue Zürcher Zeitung, May 12, 2014. PDF. Extended version in Ökonomenstimme, May 13, 2014. HTML.
- A 100% money regime reduces the risk of credit bubbles, but requires more and better fine-tuning by the central bank.
- Central banks can already implement higher reserve requirements. If the fact that they don’t reflects policy failure, then the 100% money proposal risks handing more power to one source of the problem.
- A 100% money regime increases financial stability, at least temporarily, but it forces banks to find new sources of funding and lowers the interest rate for depositors, which is fine.
- If lender of last resort support by the central bank occurs at too low interest rates then seignorage revenues are privatised and costs socialised under the current regime. Moving to a 100% money regime would help but so would simple Pigouvian taxation.
- How can a 100% money regime be enforced if market participants end up coordinating to use other securities than deposits as means of payment?
- More stable deposits in a 100% money regime do not imply a more stable banking system unless other regulation is imposed that completely prevents “maturity transformation.”
- Aggregate liquidity cannot be created out of nothing, with or without deposit insurance.
- Societies have to take a stand on whether they want to guarantee broader monetary aggregates than base money. If so, the cost of the guarantee should be privatised. Problems arise if societies pretend not to provide such guarantees but central banks nevertheless feel obliged to step in ex post and market participants are aware of that fact ex ante; bad, self-fulfilling equilibria are the consequence.
- Commitment on the part of policy makers is key; it requires independent central bankers and regulators.
Newsletter of the Study Center Gerzensee
The new edition features an interview with Jeremy Stein on “Financial Crises and Financial Stability.” PDF.
