speeches · September 16, 1998
Regional President Speech
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. · President
For Release on Delivery
7:30 a.m. EDT
September 17, 1998
THE BANK MERGER WAVE: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES
Remarks by
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Before the
Henrico Business Council
Richmond, Virginia
September 17, 1998
I'm delighted to be here today to talk with you about the wave of bank mergers
that is sweeping across our country-our hometown included. While Richmond had
experienced some sizable ripples earlier, as we all know, the really big wave last year
and earlier this year left very few local institutions in its wake. Many Richmonders are
still adjusting to the loss of their banks and to the new, North Carolina-based, financial
landscape. Residents of other U.S. cities—including large, proud cities like Philadelphia
and San Francisco—are experiencing similar adjustments and emotions due to bank
consolidations.
Turn back the calendar 28 years to see how times have changed. In 1970, the
year I began working at the Richmond Fed, the largest bank in the country—the Bank of
America with assets of $27 billion—was located in California, and Charlotte, North
Carolina, was a not particularly well known Southern city on the opposite coast. How
many of us imagined then that Charlotte would later be headquarters to one of the
world's largest banking companies, with assets of almost $600 billion? By virtue of being
home to NationsBank and First Union, Charlotte has become a focal point of the rapid
banking consolidation that is now extending across the whole of the United States.
Banking consolidation is big news these days, with a new megamerger
announced almost monthly. The proposed Citicorp-Travelers union could break new
ground on banking-insurance combinations, and the NationsBank-BankAmerica merger
will produce a huge, truly national banking franchise. With change of this magnitude,
however, come concerns, and people are concerned about a lot of things regarding
these developments. They are concerned about higher fees and lower levels of service.
They are concerned about credit availability and disrupted banking relationships. In my
remarks this morning I want to address some of these concerns and what I believe are
some of the major forces behind these events.
Historical Context
To understand the developments I have just described, it is helpful to review
briefly a bit of the history of American banking—particularly the history of restrictions on
bank branching. Turn back the calendar once again. In the early years of the post-World
War II period, strict and quite limiting branching restrictions were common throughout the
United States. Obviously, consolidation in banking could not occur until these restrictions
were removed. The restrictions had two sources. The first was a powerful sentiment that
can be traced to the earliest years of our nation's history: a deep-seated distrust of large,
centralized organizations—large financial institutions in particular. Subsequently, efforts
to shield smaller banks by limiting competition from branches of larger banks became a
factor as well.
As you will recall from your American history courses, the fear of concentrated
financial structures became dramatically apparent during the early 19th century debates
over whether to renew the charters of the First and Second Banks of the United States.
Many were afraid that these large federal institutions would concentrate financial power
and be used to benefit their owners at the expense of the broader public. As a result,
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neither charter was renewed and, after the demise of the Second Bank in 1837, no
comparable replacement was chartered.
Despite these apprehensions, branching was not uncommon in the South before
the Civil War, and several Midwest banks had branches as well. But there was little
interest in establishing new branches following the war, since the technology that would
allow inexpensive long-distance communication had yet to appear. Seeking approval
from distant headquarters for local lending decisions would have been prohibitively
costly before the widespread availability of the telephone. These communications costs
argued for small, locally run banks. As a consequence—and this will be a surprising
statistic for many of you—while there were approximately 13,000 banks in the U.S. at
the turn of the century, there were only 119 bank branches in the entire country. In the
last few years of the 19th century, advances in communications technology stimulated
new interest in branching. But with increased interest came strong opposition, much of it
from smaller banks and much of it successful, which ultimately produced widespread
branching restrictions at both the federal and state levels.
One impediment to branching was the general belief that the National Banking
Act passed during the Civil War prohibited it. To remedy the situation, legislative
proposals were offered in the late 1890s that would have allowed national banks to
branch, but these proposals met with fatal opposition from several congressmen and the
Comptroller of the Currency, who regulates national banks, on the grounds that they
would concentrate banking power. As an alternative to branches, an act was passed in
1900 that lowered the minimum capital necessary to form a new national bank in a small
town. In response, the number of banks almost doubled in the next ten years. The
newcomers were primarily small unit banks: that is, single-office banks. These banks
formed an anti-branching fraternity that slowed the spread of branch banking for
decades.
From 1900 until the early 1920s, the Comptroller prohibited national bank
branching with few exceptions, and unit bankers lobbied successfully to contain the
spread of branching by state-chartered banks. At the annual convention of the American
Bankers Association in 1922, unit banks argued that "branch banking concentrates the
credits of the Nation and the power of money in the hands of a few." During the 1920s, a
number of states, including Virginia, imposed significant restrictions on the branching
powers of state-chartered banks. Importantly though, a handful of states bucked the
trend and passed fairly liberal branching laws, among them notably—I could say
prophetically—North Carolina.
For all of the strength of anti-branching sentiment in this period, the high failure
rate of unit banks throughout the 1920s and in the early years of the Great Depression
revealed quite starkly a significant downside to branching restrictions: namely, the
susceptibility of unit banks to runs generated by shocks to their local, usually relatively
undiversified loan portfolios. Failure rates for the branching banks that existed were
generally much lower, motivating some policymakers to call for liberalized branching as
a means of diversifying individual bank portfolios and strengthening the banking system.
A number of states did liberalize their branching laws between 1929 and 1939.
Further, in 1932 Senator Carter Glass, who as you know was one of the founding fathers
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of the Federal Reserve, proposed enhanced branching powers for national banks to
allow both statewide and limited interstate branching. The momentum of this trend,
however, was largely undercut early on by the passage of national deposit insurance in
1933, which guaranteed the stability of the banking system via an alternative route.
Insurance allowed branching restrictions to continue with relatively marginal changes
from the end of the Depression until the 1980s. During that 50-year period, the number
of bank mergers was relatively modest: generally between 75 and 150 per year.
Since 1981, however, merger activity has exploded, with close to 600 mergers
occurring in 1997 alone. Over this same period the opposition to branching that was so
robust in the preceding 100-plus years eroded, and restrictions on branching collapsed
in three steps. First, during the 1980s, 20 states, including Virginia, liberalized in-state
branching laws. By 1990, 36 states authorized statewide branching and only two
prohibited it. Second, in the early 1980s, states began passing laws allowing bank
holding companies from other states to purchase banks within their borders. North
Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia did so in 1985 and 1986. By 1990, all but four
states allowed at least some cross-border purchases. With this change, bank holding
companies gained the ability to purchase banks outside of their headquarters states,
although they were required to operate these interstate acquisitions as separate banks—
so interstate branching, for the most part, was still not possible. These two steps
broadened in-state and interstate expansion opportunities markedly, and sizable banking
companies began to form. As you will recall, it was during this period that NCNB in North
Carolina began to grow rapidly, purchasing banks throughout the Southeast and Texas,
and ultimately renaming itself NationsBank.
In short, the consolidation of the banking industry was well under way when the
third step was taken: passage of the Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking Act of 1994, which
finally eliminated interstate banking restrictions. This historic legislation gave banks the
right to have branches nationwide and set the stage for the dramatic acceleration in
merger activity here and elsewhere during the past two years.
Explaining the Merger Wave
Certainly the current merger wave would have been impossible without the
elimination of branching restrictions, and at one level it is tempting to conclude that their
removal explains the large number of consolidations. But state legislatures and the U.S.
Congress were simply responding to pressures from banks wishing to pursue mergers.
Consequently, rather than telling us what is driving the mergers, the easing of branching
restrictions—while an essential precondition—simply begs the question.
One popular hypothesis is that individual banks merge in order to increase their
market power, and it is true that national market shares have been steadily increasing in
banking. The top ten banking firms increased their aggregate share from 22 percent in
1980 to 34 percent in 1997, while the five largest banks have almost doubled their share.
But banking is still relatively fragmented nationally, and is much less concentrated than
many other major industries. Consider, for example, the soft drink and automobile
industries. Both are far more concentrated than the banking industry, with the top two
soft drink firms holding 74 percent of the market, and the top three auto makers
controlling 71 percent. Yet most would agree that there is intense competition in these
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two industries.
More importantly, banking is still predominantly a local service, and measures of
concentration at the local level have been virtually constant for the last two decades,
even as the industry has consolidated nationally. The reason is that mergers have
generally occurred across local markets rather than within them—no accident, given that
federal bank regulators scrutinize every bank merger for its effects on local
concentration. Additionally, as long as new bank entry into particular local markets is
largely unrestricted, competition should prevent abuses of market power and ensure
consumer choice. In the last five years almost 670 new banks have been chartered
throughout the U.S., which has intensified competition in many markets. Closer to home,
in North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia, 50 such banks have formed. In these
circumstances it seems unlikely that the recent spate of bank mergers has been
motivated in any material way by expectations of enhanced, exploitable market power.
So what is driving the merger wave? In brief it seems to me that the extraordinary
advance in communications and data processing technology over the last two decades
is the single most important underlying force—hardly an original insight but a powerful
one. A prime example is the database-management software for mainframe computers
that automated the record-keeping that is the core of the banking business. The
development of personal computers and the software that manages networks made it
possible for banks to provide widespread access to their records at branches and
ATMs. Cost savings came as these advances were exploited to manage
information databases far less expensively and more efficiently. A key point here is that
these cost savings accrue most significantly in the management of very large databases:
in sharing information among a large number of users and over wide distances. In other
words, the benefits of the technology revolution accrue most fully to very large-scale
banks. The ability to share customer and product information via computer networks has
greatly lowered the cost of maintaining far-flung branches and of operating centralized
call centers. All this has increased the relative advantage of being a big bank. More
narrowly—but also on a technology note—some recent mergers may have been
motivated in part by the desire of some banks to share the costs of Year 2000
compliance.
It seems clear then that technology is the fundamental force driving the merger
wave. At first glance, this force and the consolidation that has resulted from it appears to
have picked winners and losers rather arbitrarily. Charlotte becomes a major national
banking center while Richmond loses most of its larger independent financial institutions.
As I noted a minute ago, however, North Carolina permitted statewide branching well
before most other states, and it seems clear in retrospect that this circumstance played
at least some role in the emergence of the state as a banking center. Beyond the direct
effect of consolidation on particular states and cities, however, keep in mind that the
technological advances I have just described in conjunction with the demise of branching
restrictions has greatly increased potential banking competition—and the benefits that
result from it—in all local markets, including Richmond. It is now not only legally
permissible but operationally feasible for any bank in the U.S. to establish a presence in
Richmond, or, for that matter, Charlottesville, Farmville, or Lexington. Local competition
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should increase even while the national banking industry consolidates.
Responding to Anxieties
While technological progress and heightened competition are typically thought to
be good for consumers, the banking merger trend has been greeted with anxiety by
many if not most Americans. Recent attention has focused on three such fears:
diminished service, higher fees, and decreased credit availability—particularly for small
businesses.
Diminished Service
When a bank is taken over, its customers often complain that the quality of
service is not what they had come to expect from their old bank. And this may well be
true for at least two reasons. First, the mix and pricing of products is likely to change with
the merger, so customers preferring the old product mix will be less satisfied. The
economies of scale that make large banks cost-effective depend on the standardization
of products and service. Without standardization the information sharing that drives
mergers would be inefficient at best. And cost savings would be lost if, with each merger,
the acquirer added a new set of products or different versions of the same product. But
this standardization can be a significant minus to customers who are accustomed to
tailored services and want them to continue.
Second, as firms grow in size there occurs a natural numbing effect on service
quality and initiative. A big-box retailer cannot offer the individualized service of the small
retailer. Because the larger store's employees are responsible for a much broader line of
products, they likely do not have the intimate knowledge of each product that is often
found in smaller, more specialized shops. As banks merge into larger companies there
are similar results.
In today's more competitive market, however, many banks are eager to provide
the antidote to standardized banking. New community banks are forming at an
increasing rate here and elsewhere. Many of these banks enter a market precisely to
capitalize on the shortage of "high-touch" banking created by recent consolidations, and
aggressively pursue the dissatisfied customers of merged institutions. These smaller
banks can tailor products and service levels specifically to the demands of these
customers.
Before the current merger wave, banks were relatively protected from
competition and set service levels to appeal to the average customer. But today's open
competition is forcing banks to differentiate themselves by service level. Large banks
exploit the economies of large-scale production of standardized, "low-touch" banking.
High-touch community banks focus on high-quality tailored services.
The additional choices in the new environment will almost certainly improve
consumer well-being. Consumers will have more options from which to choose: high-
touch community banks, on the one hand, and, on the other, large megabanks that offer
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less tailored services but a wide array of cost-effective products in a wide variety of
locations. Although the number of banking organizations has declined by 42 percent
since 1980, the number of banking offices has increased by 35 percent. This means that
even after accounting for population growth, the number of banking offices per capita
has increased by almost 15 percent. In the aggregate the banking industry has been
expanding services even while consolidating.
Having said all this, it is certainly true that in the transition to the new banking
structure some customers will be adversely affected by the disruption of established
banking relationships. Suppose, for example, that you are a 70-year-old, high-balance
customer or a small business, accustomed to a high-service banking relationship
focused specifically on your needs. When a large bank with a very different approach to
customer service buys the smaller bank you have dealt with for years, your initial
reaction very likely will be dissatisfaction with the merger results. In the worst-case
scenario, you may face the costs and inconvenience of switching your account to a bank
that offers more personalized or company-specific services. Such costs are regrettable.
The bright side is that they should prove to be temporary stumbling blocks in the
transition to more robustly competitive banking markets.
High fees
Attention has also been directed at the new or higher fees some customers must
now pay for some banking services, which has led many to believe that the new merged
banks charge unreasonably high fees. Clearly, banks have become more aggressive in
their assessment of service charges and fees over the last decade, and big banks have
moved to increase these charges sooner than smaller banks. Service charges on
deposits as a percentage of deposits have risen by 42 percent for all banks, and by 67
percent for the largest.
But I'm suspicious of the notion that banks in today's highly competitive banking
environment can get away with charging fees significantly out of line with costs. My
guess is that many of the fees have resulted from an unbundling of services: that is,
charging explicitly for particular services rather than providing a bundle of services to all
customers at one price. Customers who are more costly to serve are now charged
higher fees, which allows lower-cost customers to be charged lower fees than would
otherwise be possible. In the less competitive banking market of the past, banks covered
most of their costs via their interest margin rather than by charging fees. They paid
below-market rates of interest for deposits, but invested them at market rates. They
compensated depositors for the low deposit rates by offering them a largely
undifferentiated bundle of free services. Before the early 1980s, ceilings on deposit
interest rates reinforced this arrangement. But equal service levels for all customers
meant that high-balance customers were often subsidizing low-balance customers.
This comfortable world of cross-subsidies and minimal fees is no longer
sustainable. Competition between banks intensified in the early 1980s as interest rate
ceilings were removed and branching restrictions fell. Competition between banks and
other financial institutions also intensified as non-banks like Merrill Lynch offered market
interest rates to attract depositors traditionally served by banks, especially higher-
balance customers. Banks were forced to begin differentiating among customers,
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charging fees and varying interest rates according to customer balances and activity.
Over time, this shift to matching interest payments and fees more closely to the costs of
serving customers should result in a more efficient and equitable banking system. It will
reduce cross-subsidies and encourage the industry to devote more resources to
producing the most highly valued services. In many respects the greater incidence of
fees so widely attributed to mergers is merely an acceleration of this already well-
established trend.
Of all the new bank fees, none has received more attention than ATM fees,
which some critics have called "unconscionable" and "outrageous." In fact, though, ATM
fees, like other bank fees, appear to be an example of unbundling. Users are now
required to pay for the convenience of this costly service. When a bank charges no
specific fees for ATM use, customers who make little or no use of the machines
subsidize other customers who are frequent users. Similarly, if customers of other banks
pay smaller fees or no fees for ATM use, then customers of banks with extensive ATM
networks subsidize non-customers. Arguments like these are of little interest to ATM
users who are accustomed to inexpensive or free access, and Senate Banking
Committee Chairman D'Amato has introduced legislation that would ban certain fees.
Most observers expect the fees to remain in place, however, which will encourage the
installation of additional machines and promote the added customer convenience that
accompanies them.
Unbundling, however, has also produced fallout beyond the dissatisfaction with
ATM fees. When banking was less competitive, it had a public utility aspect—offering
wide payments system access to all customers at the same price, while inevitably
subsidizing some customers at the expense of others. As heavy competition eliminates
the cross-subsidies and rationalizes pricing, low-balance customers, including in
particular low-income individuals and households, are experiencing price increases. A
backlash has developed and produced calls for federal legislation requiring the provision
of low-fee accounts to small-balance depositors. No such action has been taken to date,
but this issue is likely to receive further attention in the period ahead.
Credit availability
Finally on the list of anxieties produced by the merger wave, some observers
worry that the trend could adversely affect the availability of credit, particularly for small
businesses. Smaller banks are a primary source of small-business credit. As large banks
absorb small banks, who will make small-business loans?
Again, technology and competition are forcing banks to specialize in the way they
serve customers, including small-business borrowers. Large banks, for the most part,
are not abandoning small business. Rather, they are now offering small businesses a
menu of standardized, quick-turnaround loan products. Because of the cost advantage
in offering homogeneous products, large banks are likely to dominate such lending.
These plain-vanilla loans have features that will suit many small businesses quite well.
They offer speed: credit-scoring software accelerates creditworthiness decisions and
loans can be approved within 24 hours. They offer convenience: loan applications can
be made over the phone or, in some cases, over the Web, representing the ultimate in
"low-touch" lending. They offer low interest rates: because these providers must
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compete with other large lenders offering similar products, rates are low. And finally they
are amenable to comparison-shopping: standardized loan products vary little and are
offered by many banks, so comparisons are easy to make.
Notwithstanding these attributes, standardized loans obviously are less suitable
for small-business borrowers that require financial products tailored to their unique
circumstances. Community banks retain an advantage over large banks in serving these
customers, since smaller banks enjoy short lines of communication between lending
officers and borrowing company owners and managers. This close communication
permits community banks to customize products and employ borrower information in
ways that large bank reporting and monitoring systems cannot easily accommodate.
Three types of small-business borrowers can be expected to gravitate toward the
community banks: (1) those lacking complete financial histories because of the newness
of their operations or the uniqueness of their product; (2) those for whom the information
needed to determine their creditworthiness is hard to summarize numerically for
automated evaluation and requires face-to-face meetings to verify; and (3) those who
want detailed and specialized financial advice. In sum, we can expect to see large banks
specializing in standardized small-business lending and community banks in more
tailored lending.
On balance, there is an excellent chance that, rather than reduced availability,
small businesses will find a wider array of loan products to choose from going forward in
other words a more efficient loan market with no loss of availability. Here, as in some of
the other areas I have discussed, the mergers currently taking place may create
transitional costs as long-standing banking relationships are lost or altered in
reorganizations. Ultimately, though, small businesses should benefit from a broader
selection of lending institutions to meet their specific credit needs.
Concluding Remarks
You may wonder where the Fed's main interest in all of this lies. Briefly, the Fed's
goal and responsibility regarding bank mergers—and my personal goal and
responsibility as a senior Fed official—is to ensure that these changes in the structure of
banking institutions and markets are consistent with relevant banking law and, most
fundamentally, that they serve the public interest rather than detract from it. So where do
I come out on the issues I've raised?
In broad terms, I like what's going on, undoubtedly in part because I have a
visceral aversion to efforts by governments to prevent, regulate, or slow market-driven
change. In my view, the recent bank megamergers represent the structural adaptation of
the banking industry, unfettered by archaic geographic restrictions on competition, to the
opportunities afforded by new and emerging technologies. While some may suspect that
the megamergers are motivated by a desire to monopolize markets and raise prices,
there is no evidence that banking markets in fact are becoming more monopolized. On
the contrary, the banking industry remains far less concentrated than many others we
consider highly competitive. Moreover, competition has been enhanced by the recent
entry of hundreds of new banks into particular local markets and the entry of a large
number of existing banks into new local markets they had not served before. Although
inevitably there will be costly disruptions of established banking relationships in the
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transition, this heightened competition offers the prospect of increased consumer and
business choices among banking products and institutions, and decreased costs. These
changes are squarely in the public interest. I might note here that I am well aware of the
concerns some local community leaders have expressed regarding the potential impact
of mergers on community reinvestment. The Board of Governors has given these
concerns very careful attention in its consideration of particular merger applications, and
it will continue to do so.
Having said all these generally favorable things about bank mergers, let me
mention in closing one significant risk in this trend. This risk doesn't get much attention in
the media when particular mergers are announced—indeed, it gets almost no
attention—but it is quite important nonetheless. Unlike most other businesses, banks
enjoy what is often called a federal financial safety net, specifically deposit insurance
and access to the Fed's discount window and payment services. This safety net serves
the public well most of the time.
Here's the risk: when a bank's balance sheet has been weakened by financial
losses, the safety net creates adverse incentives that economists usually refer to as a
"moral hazard." Since the bank is insured, its depositors will not necessarily rush to
withdraw deposits even if knowledge of the bank's problems begins to spread. In these
circumstances the bank has an incentive to pursue relatively risky loans and investments
in the hope that higher returns will strengthen its balance sheet and ease the difficulty. If
the gamble fails, the insurance fund and ultimately taxpayers are left to absorb the
losses. I am sure you remember that not very long ago, the S&L bailout bilked taxpayers
for well over $100 billion.
The point I want to make in the context of bank mergers is that the failure of a
large merged banking organization could be very costly to resolve. Additionally, the
existence of such organizations could exacerbate the so-called "too-big-to-fail" problem
and the risks it presents. Consequently, I believe the current merger wave has
intensified the need for a fresh review of the safety net—specifically the breadth of
deposit insurance coverage—with an eye toward reform. But that's another speech,
folks, best left for another day.
Cite this document
APA
J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr. (1998, September 16). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19980917_j_alfred_broaddus_jr
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_19980917_j_alfred_broaddus_jr,
author = {J. Alfred Broaddus, Jr.},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {1998},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_19980917_j_alfred_broaddus_jr},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}