speeches · February 24, 2011
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
“Prudential Stress Testing in Theory and Practice:
Comments on ‘Stressed Out: Macroprudential Principles for Stress Testing’”
February 25, 2011
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
2011 U.S. Monetary Policy Forum
New York City, New York
I am pleased to have this opportunity to be with you today to discuss stress testing. In the wake of the
housing bust and subsequent financial turmoil, the regulation and supervision of financial institutions and
markets has been the subject of intense scrutiny. The 2009 U.S. stress tests appeared to play a critical role
in the resolution of the crisis, which has led to recommendations that such tests, with appropriate
refinements, be made a routine component of the supervisory regime for large financial institutions.
Indeed, as the authors note, the Dodd-Frank Act mandates annual stress tests for bank holding companies
and nonbank financial firms supervised by the Federal Reserve. Analysis of the motivation for and design
of supervisory stress tests is therefore well worthwhile.
In this paper the authors draw a sharp distinction between microprudential and macroprudential
approaches to regulation, and they use this distinction as the main lens through which they assess the
current conduct of stress tests. They distinguish between the different theoretical motivations for
microprudential and macroprudential regulation, and contrast what they view as distinct practices
associated with the two approaches. They go on to sketch out a method of evaluating the overall strength
of a banking system based on correlations between equity prices and CDS spreads. On the basis of their
analysis, they argue that the stress tests conducted in the U.S. in 2009 and Europe in 2010 have brought
about insufficient improvements in financial conditions. And they conclude with a set of
recommendations for regulators as to how their stress tests should be improved.
The Distinction Between Microprudential and Macroprudential Regulation in Theory
I will begin with their discussion of the motivation for prudential regulation and what that implies about
stress tests. Microprudential regulation, according to the authors, aims to offset the moral hazard
distortions associated with deposit insurance, in which case the purpose of stress tests is to ensure that
bank capital buffers are large enough to keep incentives well aligned. In contrast, macroprudential
regulation aims to “control the social costs associated with excessive balance-sheet shrinkage on the part
of multiple financial institutions hit with a common shock.” The authors cite the burgeoning theoretical
literature on fire sales, margin spirals and other financial market spillovers, where the flaws inherent in
modern financial markets also distort financial institution decisions, beyond distortions due to
government guarantees.
I want to make two comments here. First, the formal economic modeling of financial fragility is still in its
infancy, and in my view models of financial market spillovers do not yet provide a persuasive foundation
for policy making. What we have so far is a collection of “possibility theorems” showing that under a
particular collection of assumptions the prices and quantities of some financial instruments could fall
dramatically. Of course, since the fundamentals are unobserved, there is usually an alternative theory with
1
equivalent price and quantity predictions under which observed arrangements are reasonably efficient.
One strategy for distinguishing between alternative theories is to assess the plausibility of shifts in
fundamentals large enough to rationalize observed price changes. To my knowledge, such head-to-head
contests between alternative theories of financial strains are relatively rare.
Another strategy for distinguishing between alternative theories of financial fragility is to compare a
broad range of qualitative model characteristics against real world observations. Models of financial
market spillovers generally rely on frictions that lead to some form of market segmentation and “cash-inthe-market pricing” under which assets can sell for less than their fundamental value. I have a hard time
reconciling the apparent fluidity of modern financial markets with the notion that market segmentation is
pervasive enough to warrant frequent and widespread interventions. Indeed, one stylized fact about this
crisis is that from mid-2007 onward a substantial amount of investable wealth was reported to be “on the
sidelines” awaiting more attractive asset prices.
I get the sense, though, that the popularity of policy prescriptions derived from models of financial
spillovers owes less to hardnosed evaluation of microeconomic foundations, than to the attraction of a
popular class of narratives about the crisis we’ve just been through. 1 In these accounts, regulators did not
fully appreciate the extent to which (under regulated) financial markets are inherently prone to excessive
risk-taking, and did not have the full set of tools to cope with the resulting financial fragilities. These
accounts imply, consistent with our authors’ recommendations that stress tests ought to focus on
mitigating the distortionary effects of the spillovers that run rampant in financial markets.
An alternative narrative that I find more compelling builds on the moral hazard associated with explicit
government guarantees and the time consistency dilemma associated with ambiguous implicit
guarantees. 2 This narrative acknowledges the potential fragility associated with maturity transformation,
both inside and outside of the banking sector, but emphasizes the extent to which such fragility is a matter
of choice by financial intermediaries, particularly the extent to which inefficient runs can be prevented
through partial suspension provisions or avoided altogether through longer-term funding. Constructive
ambiguity biases policy towards rescues and dampens creditors’ incentives to avoid vulnerability.
Maturity transformation proliferates and the implicit safety net expands. 3
This alternative narrative illuminates the critical role of the 2009 U.S. stress tests – the so-called
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP). By the time the Capital Assistance Program was
announced on February 23, 2009, several large banks already had received equity-diluting government
capital injections as part of the Troubled Asset Relief Program. Rumors circulated that the administration
was considering the outright nationalization of many large financial institutions. The acceleration in the
economic contraction in the fourth quarter of 2008 implied a broad deterioration in the outlook for
business and consumer lending portfolios. Financial statements were an inadequate guide to the
magnitude of future losses, however, because Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations
prevented reserving for expected future loan losses more than four quarters ahead, even if they were
reasonably forecastable. So uncertainty about future loan losses and government rescue policy, combined
with limitations in financial reporting, made new equity issuance nearly impossible.
In this context, the SCAP tests served two critical purposes. First, the test results provided more reliable
estimates of current and potential future capital positions than would otherwise have been available to
investors. By projecting losses over a three-year horizon, instead of being limited to a one-year horizon
under SEC reporting rules, it provided more complete estimates of current equity. 4 Projections also were
validated collectively by supervisory teams to assure consistency across participating financial firms and
provide investors with credibly verified reports.
2
Second, and perhaps most importantly, the Program provided a clear statement of the government’s
intentions for capital injections. If additional capital was required, and institutions could not raise enough
new equity privately, the government would provide a buffer in the form of mandatory convertible
preferred shares. If the hole could be filled with private equity, further dilution by government capital
injections would be unlikely barring a much more adverse scenario. The U.S. stress tests therefore
clarified the intended boundaries around future government interventions.
That clarity came at the cost, however, of establishing precedents that expanded the implicit government
safety net for financial firms. According to a recent estimate by Richmond Fed staff, 40 percent of bank
and savings institution liabilities were explicitly guaranteed at the end of 2009, while an additional 45
percent could reasonably be viewed, on the basis of official actions and statements, as implicitly
guaranteed. 5 Back in 1999, only 13 percent of bank and savings institution liabilities were implicitly
guaranteed by this criterion, while 50 percent were explicitly guaranteed.6 Overall, government
guarantees thus expanded from 63 percent of banking liabilities to 85 percent.
The Distinction Between Microprudential and Macroprudential Regulation in Practice
I have been discussing the theoretical distinctions between macroprudential and microprudential
approaches to stress tests. I would also like to comment on the practical distinctions the authors draw
between macroprudential and microprudential approaches to stress tests. Here, I think the authors
overstate the differences.
The authors emphasize the goal of ensuring that the banking system has sufficient capacity to continue
lending. On that basis they argue that evaluating bank solvency based on capital ratios rather than the
dollar value of capital allows banks to remedy capital deficiencies by reducing lending, potentially
exacerbating the effect of banking system deleveraging on credit supply. “Supervisors should mandate,”
the authors state, “dollar amounts for capital additions rather than focusing on restoration of capital
ratios.” This is what we actually did. Financial firms participating in the SCAP were asked to estimate
expected losses on their year-end 2008 portfolios under the two macroeconomic scenarios and compare
them to current capital, plus current allowance for loan and lease losses plus resources available from preprovision net revenue over the two-year horizon. Firms generally were not allowed to meet their capital
need by planning to shrink their balance sheets.
I also think the authors are a bit off-base in criticizing current stress tests for neglecting wholesale
funding. It’s true that runs by short-term creditors would pose risks to financial institutions. But the
central premise of the Capital Assistance Program was that participating banks would receive government
funds to ensure they remained amply capitalized. That implied a commitment to support those firms’
deposit and non-deposit liabilities – in essence, to do “whatever it takes” in the event of a run. SCAP was
designed to reduce uncertainty about how much government capital was needed to prevent runs. To the
extent that broad banking system support by Europeans governments was a presumption at the end of
2009, I think the same argument applies to their stress tests as well.
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act is aimed at altering the presumption of full government support for the
liabilities of large financial institutions. The failure of a large “systemically important” institution is to be
handled under the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation’s Orderly Liquidation Authority. The FDIC can
borrow from the U.S. Treasury to fund the continued operations of the seized institution, but creditors are
to receive no more than they would under a straight liquidation. The FDIC has the authority, however, to
make exceptions to that requirement. Retaining broad discretion to rescue creditors would perpetuate the
“constructive ambiguity” that led to the dramatic expansion of the government safety net in recent
decades. So it is not clear whether the presumption of full creditors support is behind us.
3
I have not yet commented on the empirical work that the authors use to support their hypothesis that the
stress tests have not significantly improved financial market conditions. The authors recognize that news
about shocks that are common across financial institutions, including changes in expectations regarding
government rescue policy, could swamp the idiosyncratic news about individual institutions, in which
case correlations among equity prices and CDS spreads are all positive and one cannot distinguish
between their different cases. Because risk exposures have been so similar across large institutions, it
seems quite plausible to me that a large portion of the variation in their equity prices and CDS spreads
reflect common shocks, including common movements in expectations about government support.
One prominent thread in the authors’ discussion is the importance of ensuring that healthy banks are
capable of rescuing problem banks in a crisis. But U.S. banking institutions raised substantial amounts of
equity in public markets or through direct placements between the beginning of the crisis in 2007 and the
fall of 2008 when events raised uncertainty about government dilution and made such investments
problematic. 7 My sense is that outside equity deserves supervisors’ attention as well.
Conclusion
So while I applaud the authors’ attention to the theory and practice of supervisory stress tests, I part
company regarding the distinction between macroprudential and microprudential perspectives. Most of
their practical recommendations for the actual conduct of stress tests strike me as useful, but I think of
them as “prudential stress tests done right” rather than as a sharp break from past practice.
I would like to close with some general comments on the use of stress tests. As I have said, they have
proven their usefulness in the crisis. Quantifying the risks at large financial institutions is a complex and
costly process that is vulnerable to manipulation. A disciplined and well-organized supervisory process
for validating those assessments strikes me as well worth the costs. Stress tests are not a panacea,
however. In a sense they are only as good as the imagination of the scenario designers, who need to resist
the temptation to dismiss extreme scenarios as too far-fetched or focus too much attention on preparing
for the last war.
One critical question about stress tests is whether or not to disclose the results, and if so, at what level of
detail. A good case can be made for transparency; stress tests provide quantitative assessments that are
forward-looking, independently certified and methodologically comparable across institutions. On the
other hand, there can be good reasons to restrict the release of bank-specific supervisory information. 8 As
is often the case in financial regulation, the answer is not as obvious as it might seem.
1
Vincent Reinhart, “A Year of Living Dangerously: The Management of the Financial Crisis in 2008,” Journal of
Economic Perspectives, Winter 2011, vol. 25, no. 1, pp. 71-90.
2
See Jeffrey M. Lacker, “Reflections on Economics, Policy and the Financial Crisis,” Speech to the Kentucky
Economic Association, Frankfort, Ky., September 24, 2010.
3
Marvin Goodfriend and Jeffrey M. Lacker, “Limited Commitment and Central Bank Lending,” Federal Reserve
Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, Fall 1999, vol. 85, no. 4, pp. 1-27.
4
The Supervisory Capital Assessment Program projected losses and capital over a two year horizon, through the end
of 2010. Because the capital position at the end of 2010 reflected loan loss reserves at that time, expected losses for
2011 were required as well. See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, “Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program: Design and Implementation,” April 24, 2009.
5
John R. Walter and Nadezhda Malysheva, “How Large Has the Federal Financial Safety Net Become?” Federal
Reserve Bank of Richmond Working Paper No. 2010-03, March 2010.
6
John R. Walter and John A. Weinberg, “How Large is the Federal Financial Safety Net?” Cato Journal, Winter
2002, vol. 21, no. 3, pp. 369-99.
4
7
Viral V. Acharya, Irvind Gujral, and Hyun Song Shin, “Dividends and bank Capital in the Financial Crisis of
2007-2009,” March 2009.
8
Edward Simpson Prescott, “Should Bank Supervisors Disclose Information About Their Banks?” Federal Reserve
Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, Winter 2008, vol. 94, no. 1, pp. 1-16.
5
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2011, February 24). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110225_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20110225_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2011},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20110225_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}