speeches · June 6, 2012
Regional President Speech
Eric Rosengren · President
EMBARGOED UNTIL
Thursday, June 7, 2012 at 5:30 a.m. U.S. Eastern Time and 11:30 a.m. in Copenhagen, Denmark – or Upon Delivery
Remarks for a Panel Discussion of
the Global Outlook and Risks
Eric S. Rosengren
President & Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
At the Institute of International Finance
Spring Membership Meeting
June 7, 2012
Copenhagen, Denmark
I have been asked to briefly discuss the risks to the economic and financial outlook.1 In
some sense, this is much easier than the jobs assigned to other panelists tasked with forecasting the
outlook for either financial markets or the real economy. At a time when some of the risk scenarios
are increasingly seeping into relevance, forecasting the most likely outcome can be quite difficult.
Risks that one year ago were viewed as so-called “tail-risk events” are increasingly being
integrated into many peoples’ base forecasts. This shift highlights that risks are once again on the
rise, and that uncertainty about some of the challenges facing the global economy is already
impacting the economic behavior of households and businesses.
1 Of course, I would like to note that the views I express today are my own, not necessarily those of my colleagues on
the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors or the Federal Open Market Committee (the FOMC).
EMBARGOED UNTIL
Thursday, June 7, 2012 at 5:30 a.m. U.S. Eastern Time and 11:30 a.m. in Copenhagen, Denmark – or Upon Delivery
Such uncertainty is leading to a degree of risk aversion that becomes apparent when we look
at 10-year government bond rates in the U.S., U.K., and Germany (Figure 1). In all three countries,
10-year government bond rates are well below the inflation targets of their respective central banks.
The fact that 10-year government bonds are trading at well below 2 percent indicates that perceived
risks are leaving investors willing to purchase an asset that would provide a negative real return for
10 years (assuming that central banks are successful in hitting their inflation targets). For investors
to view this pricing as reasonable implies that rising inflation is not a prime concern of financial
market participants. It seems investors believe that central banks are more likely to undershoot their
inflation targets than overshoot them, and that policymakers need to be particularly attentive to the
downside risks of their economic and financial outlooks – and examine how best to mitigate these
risks.
Some analysts have focused on direct exposures of financial institutions to a particular
geographic location as a measure of current risk exposures. I would say that such measures do not
capture the true risks. For example, in 2008 signs of potential disruption in financial intermediation
activity and liquidity were a much better gauge of the financial and economic risks building up in
the system than were measures of direct exposure to sub-prime U.S. mortgages. While it took many
months for sub-prime credit losses to materialize, sources of short-term funding dried up well in
advance, providing a timelier indicator of underlying stresses than measures of credit exposure.
This episode highlights the risk that remains today to any institution that relies heavily on short-
term funding to finance its business, and suggests that monitoring stresses in short-term funding
markets may provide better early indications of troubles to come.
In 2008, many financial institutions learned that strategies of capital arbitrage, often in the
form of holding assets off-balance sheet to avoid capital charges, were profitable during good times
2
EMBARGOED UNTIL
Thursday, June 7, 2012 at 5:30 a.m. U.S. Eastern Time and 11:30 a.m. in Copenhagen, Denmark – or Upon Delivery
but were recipes for disaster during times of financial stress. Those structures quickly lost the
confidence of counterparties who had been funding them, and thus became a significant problem to
financial institutions. Fortunately, some of the most egregious structures, like certain structured
investment vehicles (SIVs), have been wound down.
Furthermore, many financial institutions have taken measures over the past several years to
bolster capital and liquidity. However, we – banks and regulators – need to understand better how
funding models and investment structures are likely to behave under severe stress. Our best way to
learn more about that is through ongoing stress tests. Such tests should focus on undercapitalized
structures, or structures that are sufficiently opaque or risky that they are likely to require significant
capital or liquidity at a time when they are particularly expensive.
Financial institutions and their regulators must make continued progress in reducing the
institutions’ sensitivity to rapid changes in risk preferences, and the consequences of such shifts for
funding the assets of many institutions. In recent years and recent weeks, such shifts have pulled
funders out of many risky investments and into the lowest-risk financial vehicles – most often the
sovereign debt of the safest countries. This dynamic lies behind the recent surge in demand for
U.S., U.K., and German bonds. The financial system remains quite vulnerable to this rapid
shrinkage of funding sources.
A second significant risk is that a failure to decisively resolve banking problems could cause
collateral damage to the global economy. Historically, Japan is probably the leading example of
how the failure to aggressively address banking problems can yield serious collateral damage. A
protracted period of deleveraging of bank balance sheets, coupled with a persistent pattern of
allocating capital to defer the realization of unavoidable losses, can cause an extended period of
significantly misallocated resources. Such misallocation hoards scarce funds in inefficient
3
EMBARGOED UNTIL
Thursday, June 7, 2012 at 5:30 a.m. U.S. Eastern Time and 11:30 a.m. in Copenhagen, Denmark – or Upon Delivery
investments and siphons them away from profitable and productive new investment opportunities.
The combination of a banking system in denial, with business and households that are constrained
by deleveraging and risk-avoidance, helps explain why recessions that are accompanied by financial
crises are often deeper and slower to recover.
The global economy remains at risk. The longer the risks I have highlighted remain
unaddressed, the more that investors, financial institutions, households, and businesses will shift
what they considered tail risks into their expected outcomes. In this way, concerns about the
possibility of future problems cause a substantial reduction in current economic growth.
Policymakers and financial institutions need to continue to improve the robustness of the financial
system in order to minimize the impact of this uncertainty.
Thank you for inviting me to join this panel today.
Figure 1
Ten-Year Government Bond Yields
April 24, 2012 -June 4, 2012
Percent
2.5
2.0
1.5
United Kingdom
United States
Germany
1.0
24-Apr-2012 01-May-2012 08-May-2012 15-May-2012 22-May-2012 29-May-2012
Source: U.S. Treasury, Financial Times / HaverAnalytics
4
Cite this document
APA
Eric Rosengren (2012, June 6). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120607_eric_rosengren
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20120607_eric_rosengren,
author = {Eric Rosengren},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2012},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20120607_eric_rosengren},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}