speeches · July 22, 2001
Regional President Speech
E. Gerald Corrigan · President
Moral Hazard and Bank Protection | Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis https://minneapolisfed.org/news-and-events/presidents-speeches/moral-h...
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Good afternoon. The organizers of the conference largely gave
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me free rein to select a topic, although they suggested that I may Banking in the Ninth
want to address "moral hazard and bank protection," in fact one of
my favorite themes. And so I will take them up on the suggestion,
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because I think significant and challenging public policy issues
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I essentially will be emphasizing three points this afternoon.
1. Prospective developments in global financial markets,
together with the reforms of the Basel II capital proposal,
suggest that over time the international banking system will
be characterized both by greater adherence to consistent
standards and by sounder banking institutions.
2. There will over time be greater reliance by supervisors on
disclosure, market data and market discipline of banks. The
same factors that have pushed policymakers to support
increased disclosure for banking organizations will lead them
to take action to address the perverse incentives—the moral
hazard—of too-big-to-fail policies.
3. Effective market discipline which addresses the moral hazard
problem requires credibility, in the sense that uninsured
creditors of large, complex banking organizations must
believe that they are at risk of loss. Establishing and
maintaining this credibility are difficult, and I will have some
specific suggestions about how this might best be
accomplished.
I will spend the next several minutes developing these points.
Then, I will be ready to turn to your comments and questions. Let
me remind you at the outset, that, as usual, I am speaking only for
myself and not for others in the Federal Reserve System.
A productive place to start thinking about the international
financial system is with the U.S. financial marketplace. The United
States, to be sure, has a number of very large commercial
banking organizations. But such institutions face competition from
regional and community banks, as well as from investment banks,
insurance companies, credit unions, finance companies and
others in specialized lines of business. From the perspective of a
customer, financing, in theory, can be obtained from a wide range
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of sources, including of course accessing the debt and equity
markets directly in many cases. Moreover, this description fails to
do justice to the breadth, depth and competitiveness of the U.S.
financial system, because I have yet to mention venture capital
firms, "angel" investors and so on. Even the retail customer has
an enormous number and variety of options.
Customers worldwide may not currently face as complete a set of
alternatives, but in my view they soon will, and probably within the
next decade. This is because globalization matters. By the term
globalization, I mean the growing integration of the world
economy, including the ongoing expansion in international trade,
in cross-border location of manufacturers and service providers,
and especially in finance. While it may not quite be true that
"financial capital knows no boundaries," this is clearly the direction
in which things are moving. And I would judge that something akin
to the U.S. financial system will prove to be exportable.
From the financial services firms' (the providers') point of view,
there is an incentive to expand profitable products geographically
and to meet the needs of customers with far-flung operations.
Indeed, for firms operating in highly competitive domestic
markets, international expansion may represent the most
attractive opportunity available. From the customers' viewpoint,
there is an incentive to shop for the most attractive terms and
conditions irrespective of the national origin of the provider. And
with the sharp decline in telecommunications and information
processing costs, it is inexpensive to do so.
Both sets of incentives augur well for further financial integration,
and greater integration suggests heightened competition in many
markets. Obviously, the advent of the European Monetary
System, the euro and the European Central Bank is a dramatic
case in point. Moreover, we continue to see overseas expansion
by major commercial banks, with Citigroup's recently announced
purchase of a large institution in Mexico, Bank of Scotland's
further growth in the United States, several Spanish banks'
significant presence in Brazil and so on.
With increased competition should come a more consistent set of
standards, and application of standards, in international banking.
Level playing field considerations support such a conclusion, and
the interests of customers and counterparties favor standards as
well. Both parties have an interest in the caliber of the institutions
with which they do business, either because of direct exposure or
because they value ready access to liquidity, especially in times of
financial stress. That is, nonfinancial firms should want to do
business with banks that can provide liquidity when it is sorely
needed.
Moreover, financial intermediaries have to fund themselves, and
routine access to the capital markets would seem to require
adherence to standards as well as voluntary disclosure of
information demonstrating such adherence. In other words, there
are reasons to believe that normal market practice will go quite
some distance toward establishing acceptable standards.
Thus, market developments, left to themselves, should encourage
adoption of consistent standards and increased disclosure of
relevant information of bank positions and performance. However,
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there remains a role for government in the management of bank
risk taking due to both explicit and implicit support for creditors. As
a modest contribution, government can reinforce the market
trends discussed previously by better linking bank capital to risk
and by promoting greater disclosure.
The new Basel capital accord (Basel II), although complex, should
result in sounder banking institutions in the sense that capital
levels will be more appropriate for the risks to which the
institutions are actually exposed. While there are, to be sure,
options in Basel II, it seems that the intent is to move to internal
ratings based capital standards over time. Since the internal
ratings-based approach should rely on an institution's actual
experience, to the extent that risk taking is initially mispriced, and
therefore banks take more than they intend, it will be reflected in
their results and ultimately in their capital levels.
In principle, customers should demand increased disclosure and
sound banks should willingly provide it. Hence there may not be
much need for government involvement. But there are several
reasons why banks may be hesitant to unilaterally and voluntarily
increase disclosure, including:
Uncertainty about the benefits of disclosure. Assuming there
are costs to providing additional information, bank
management would want to be reasonably confident of the
benefits. To the extent they are uncertain, they are likely to be
hesitant.
Concern about the timing of disclosure. To the extent that
firms cannot or do not coordinate the timing of their releases,
there may be a cost to going first, in that proprietary
information may be revealed, albeit indirectly or inadvertently.
Externalities. Bank supervisors would benefit from the
improvement in market pricing following from increased
disclosure, but this benefit is external to the calculations of
bank management. Hence, management is likely to provide
inefficiently small amounts of information.
As a consequence of these and other considerations, there is a
wide variety of official proposals afoot designed to enhance
disclosure. I have neither the time, nor the inclination, to review
them this afternoon. Instead, let me move to a discussion of a far
more important role for government, namely its role in addressing
the too-big-to-fail issue. Too-big-to-fail is a serious concern, and, if
unchecked, could with time hinder the favorable market trends I
previously identified and lead to significant resource misallocation
as well. By too-big-to-fail, I mean a set of government
practices—in some cases policies—that protect large banking
organizations from the normal discipline of the marketplace
because of concerns that such institutions are so important to
markets and their positions so intertwined with those of other
banks that their failure would be unacceptably disruptive,
financially and economically.
Basel II and market pressure for standards may not be sufficient
to address effectively too-big-to-fail perceptions surrounding large
organizations. Policymakers and bank supervisors recognize this,
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which explains why there is considerable renewed interest in
various proposals to enhance market discipline of such institutions
and, in fact, the new Basel accord has disclosure as its third
supervisory pillar. While I view disclosure as a lead-in to
enhanced market discipline, some appear to see it as market
discipline personified.
There is, however, a meaningful distinction between disclosure
and market discipline. In fact, the gulf between the two concepts
is enormous, because increased disclosure is unlikely to advance
market discipline appreciably unless creditors of all institutions,
including (and especially) those considered by some to be
too-big-to-fail, believe they are at risk of loss. In this regard, let me
quote Chairman Greenspan from a recent speech, where he
makes this point well:
"Expanded disclosure will be critical to enhanced market
discipline, but the additional information will be irrelevant unless
counterparties believe that they are, in fact, at risk. That is why ?
a prerequisite to effective market discipline is the belief by
uninsured creditors that at least they may be at risk of loss.
Uninsured counterparties have little reason to engage in risk
analysis, let alone act on such analysis, if they believe they will
always be made whole under a defacto too-big-to-fail policy. ?"
Admittedly, it is probably neither possible nor wise to eliminate
entirely the potential for support of uninsured creditors, but it is
possible to reduce both the probability of a bailout and the extent
of protection creditors receive when a bailout occurs. That is, it is
possible to improve incentives so that creditors of large
institutions will in practice take advantage of increased disclosure,
thereby mitigating to an extent the moral hazard associated with
the public safety net supporting banking.
Putting creditors of large organizations at risk of loss in a credible
manner is no easy task. Experience tells us that such credibility
will have to be explicitly and deliberately established; we cannot
count on addressing moral hazard by jawboning or by having
creditors spontaneously decide to pay attention and price risk
appropriately.
I will describe and assess four strategies that might contribute to
establishing such credibility, that is, that might convince creditors
of large banks to pay attention to the caliber of the institutions with
which they do business because they may not be fully protected
in the event the institution runs into difficulty. The first strategy is
rules or laws that prohibit bailouts of uninsured creditors. For
success, this approach requires policymakers to ignore the
incentives to engage in bailouts, and these can be rather
compelling.
There are several ways such a strategy could be pursued. It could
be accomplished simply by forbidding in law the coverage of all
creditors of a certain type (for example, coverage only allowed for
those with bank deposits under $100,000), that is, as we in the
United States have done. A variant of the prohibition tactic relies
on creditors with legal standing that puts them beyond coverage
limits and makes it unlikely that they will receive support when
their financial institution fails. Subordinated debt plans exemplify
this approach.
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The rule-based approach is relatively easy to implement and
offers a direct way to convey the sentiments of policymakers to
creditors. But is it credible? That is, will it change what uninsured
creditors expect, and the decision that policymakers make when a
large bank is failing?
While perhaps better than nothing, I doubt that such rules will
advance credibility very far. To be credible, policymakers must
have little desire to evade the rule, and such evasion must be
difficult; these conditions are unlikely to be met. First, these legal
regimes do not change any of the incentives to provide bailouts.
Policymakers will still fear the economic and political costs
associated with large bank failure and will have a strong desire to
evade the rule. Second, there are a fair number of options
available to policymakers for circumventing prohibitions, ranging
from emergency legislation to resolution techniques that
accomplish the economic substance of a bailout without violating
the legal restriction. Given these options, it seems unreasonable
to believe that policymakers will shackle themselves when the
benefits of extending the safety net arise, as they surely will some
day.
A second commitment strategy attempts to raise the costs to
policymakers of engaging in bailouts without relying on
prohibitions per se. In the United States, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA) contains
reforms of this nature. In particular, FDICIA requires policymakers
to take a series of votes that are reported publicly before bailouts
occur. FDICIA thus raises costs via the added publicity and
formality that would accompany an attempt to bailout creditors.
Another commitment strategy that relies on disincentives and has
received attention in the literature (in this case, the literature on
credible monetary policy) involves explicit contracts. For example,
a contract could penalize policymakers monetarily or otherwise for
actions that make implicit coverage more likely or for the coverage
itself (as has been suggested for central bankers when they fail to
meet inflation targets). A second such approach would rely on
issuance of federal debt, which pays holders a lump sum if a
bailout occurs and nothing otherwise.
Again, these explicit means of establishing commitment are better
than nothing. Moreover, these strategies are not as extreme as
outright prohibitions and thus cannot be dismissed as easily. But
even ignoring their obvious political problems, this approach may
not prove useful in establishing credibility or changing the
decisions of policymakers. One problem is with implementation,
because it appears difficult to write contracts such that all
contingencies and actions by policymakers are covered. Thus, the
same types of evasion that are possible under the rules based
reforms could occur here as well.
A third alternative is a commitment strategy that tries to achieve
credibility by reducing the incentives to bailout creditors,
principally by reducing the likelihood of spillovers. A major
incentive to policymakers in providing implicit coverage is the
management of systemic risk and the prevention of spillover
failures and contagion, the heart of the too-big-to-fail issue. If a
plan could significantly reduce or eliminate these possibilities,
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then policymakers would have less incentive to provide such
coverage. A few suggestions of this type focus on payments
system reform because proponents argue that spillovers from the
failure of a large financial institution are transmitted via exposure
in the payments system.
A second type of plan to limit spillovers focuses on the amount of
loss borne by uninsured creditors. The goal is to establish the loss
that uninsured creditors bear at an amount that, on the one hand,
motivates them to monitor financial institutions but which, on the
other, does not lead to their own insolvency in the event of a
failure at another institution. As a result, the failure of one bank
would not lead to the failure of other banks or nonbank creditors.
We, at the Minneapolis Fed, have proposed a plan that
implements this notion through the application of co-insurance for
uninsured creditors of large banks.
These plans present some complex and difficult issues, which
make evaluation challenging. Some have questioned, for
example, the ability of policymakers to devise an effective
coinsurance loss rate. And perhaps the focus on payments
systems would not capture adequately the channels by which
exposures between financial institutions occur. Despite these
concerns, I would argue that some of these plans move us in the
direction of credibility: That is, they alter in an appropriate way the
underlying incentives that policymakers face. I think it will be
extremely difficult to reduce the likelihood of bailouts without
reducing the incentives that policymakers have to take such
actions. Reforms that focus on prohibitions and disincentives, in
contrast, seem likely to fall short precisely because they do not
address the incentives that lead to bailouts in the first place.
In any event, a fourth method of addressing the incentive to
provide bailouts is through so-called constructive ambiguity. This
policy involves general statements that the government will not
routinely provide bailouts to creditors of large firms and avoids
explicitly detailing the conditions under which a bailout will occur.
However, a policy of constructive ambiguity does not directly
address policymakers' incentives to provide bailouts. Indeed, this
policy risks either creating unnecessary uncertainty for market
participants or providing, at best, temporary relief until a large
failure looms and the bailout is provided.
Let me summarize and conclude.
At the end of the day, I would expect to see several, perhaps
disparate, trends emerge in international banking and finance
over the next decade or so. Heightened competition globally,
together with reform of Basel capital calculations, should
contribute to increased adherence to consistent standards. Such
a development is, I believe, in the interest both of bank customers
and, certainly, of financially sound banking organizations.
Adherence to consistent standards should help to assure a sound
financial infrastructure, and voluntary or mandatory increases in
disclosure by banks should contribute as well, but disclosure by
itself is not enough. Market discipline must be strengthened so
that the incentives confronted by large, possibly too-big-to-fail,
banks are appropriate.
It will not be easy to improve effective market discipline of large
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banks, because doing so requires putting uninsured creditors of
such institutions at risk of loss in a credible way. To achieve this,
we will need a mechanism to limit spillovers from one bank to
another, because these spillovers—the contagion effect—are a
principal rationale for the practice of too-big-to-fail. Co-insurance,
where all bank creditors are potentially exposed to loss but the
maximum loss is capped, would help to accomplish this objective.
Similarly, payments system reforms to limit interbank exposures
would help to contain spillovers. Other constructive proposals may
surface, which could alter favorably the underlying incentives
policymakers face. In any event, if we are serious about a sound
financial system and efficient allocation of resources, we are
going to have to come to grips with too-big-to-fail.
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Cite this document
APA
E. Gerald Corrigan (2001, July 22). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010723_e_gerald_corrigan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20010723_e_gerald_corrigan,
author = {E. Gerald Corrigan},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2001},
month = {Jul},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20010723_e_gerald_corrigan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}