speeches · May 8, 2013
Regional President Speech
Charles I. Plosser · President
Can We End Too Big to Fail?
4th Annual Simon New York City Conference
Reform at a Crossroads: Economic Transformation in the Year Ahead
New York, NY
May 9, 2013
Charles I. Plosser
President and CEO
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
The views expressed today are my own and not necessarily
those of the Federal Reserve System or the FOMC.
Can We End Too Big to Fail?
4th Annual Simon New York City Conference
Reform at a Crossroads: Economic Transformation in the Year Ahead
New York, NY
May 9, 2013
Charles I. Plosser
President and Chief Executive Officer
Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
Introduction
It has been nearly three years since the passage of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, which called for significant reforms of financial system regulation and
supervision. As regulators continue to write thousands of pages of rules to implement the
various provisions of the act, it seems like a good time to ask if we are adequately addressing
the issues in most urgent need of reform. Today, I want to focus on one of the most significant
issues: too big to fail.
Ending too big to fail was one of the highest priorities of regulatory reform and one of the most
difficult to achieve. The idea that a failing financial firm must be rescued to prevent risks to
overall financial stability is at the heart of the most controversial aspects of the recent financial
crisis. Of course, having the government intervene to rescue a private firm is largely anathema
to the idea of a free market. Just as reaping the rewards of success is an essential incentive
that makes a market economy so highly productive, bearing the costs of failure is equally
important and necessary. A real or perceived guarantee that taxpayers would backstop losses
distorts effective decision-making, encourages excessive risk-taking, and leads to financial
fragility.
Today, I will highlight why I think current efforts may not be sufficient and discuss a two-
pronged approach to ending the problem of too big to fail. The first aspect of this approach is
establishing a framework that permits a large financial institution to, in fact, fail without placing
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the financial system at risk. Large financial firms, and particularly their creditors, should not be
rescued or protected by government guarantees or supports or by regulatory discretion. The
second line of defense that I will discuss is to expect all financial firms to maintain sufficient
levels of capital to significantly reduce the ex-ante risk of failure. Increased capital
requirements can lower the incentive for financial institutions to become systemically
important and lower the probability that such firms will fail in the first place.
But before I turn to specific proposals, I want to step back and reiterate some principles that
help to guide my judgments about the right approach to regulatory reform. I should point out
that these are my own views and are not necessarily those of the Federal Reserve System.
The Value of Simple, Robust Regulations
In the context of monetary policy, I have long been an advocate of simple, robust rules and
transparent communications.1 Robust rules are important because they are intended to work
well in a variety of environments, reflecting our limited knowledge about the true model that
guides economic outcomes. Economists have also come to understand that using policies that
are optimal in one specific model can deliver very poor outcomes if that model proves
incorrect.
This cautionary tale applies to the design of regulatory frameworks as well. Although the
financial world is very complex, there is merit in simple, transparent regulatory solutions
designed to work reasonably well in a wide range of situations that are hard to predict. We
want rules that regulators can enforce without having superhuman knowledge or foresight.
However, regulators can predict with certainty that private actors will seek to evade regulatory
taxes. They also know that enforcement costs rise with firms’ incentives to evade regulatory
taxes. In my view, simple mechanisms that are harder to evade – and even better, mechanisms
that utilize market forces as an enforcement tool – are superior to an elaborate list of rules that
1 See, for example, Charles I. Plosser, “Transparency and Monetary Policy,” University of California, Santa Barbara
Economic Forecast Project, May 3, 2012, and Charles I. Plosser, “Output Gaps and Robust Policy Rules,” 2010
European Banking & Financial Forum, Czech National Bank, March 23, 2010.
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seeks to cover every possible outcome. Simple and transparent regulatory mechanisms make it
easier for market participants to predict how regulators are likely to behave. This, in turn,
makes it easier for regulators to credibly commit to implementing these regulations.
I would also note that as regulation becomes ever more complex, compliance and enforcement
costs rise significantly. Andrew Haldane of the Bank of England has argued that regulation of
the financial sector is exploding with the cost of compliance and supervision following suit. He
argues that we could be more effective and more efficient by simplifying our approach to
regulatory reform.2 I whole-heartedly endorse this general approach.
The Problem of Too Big to Fail
So let me elaborate on the problem of too big to fail. During the financial crisis, we learned that
regulators did not have adequate tools for handling the failure of seriously troubled financial
firms that were perceived to be systemically important. Our responses to the failures of such
firms were inconsistent, to say the least. With Bear Stearns, regulators brokered a sale to
JPMorgan Chase and provided guarantees to the buyer against losses. While Bear Stearns’
shareholders were largely wiped out, its creditors were made whole. With Lehman Brothers,
no sale was brokered, the firm entered bankruptcy, and bondholders suffered significant losses.
At nearly the same time, regulators intervened to take over AIG, many of whose creditors and
large derivatives counterparties were made whole.
There are many conflicting narratives about this sequence of events, but I think we can all agree
that our tools for resolving what we now refer to as systemically important financial institutions
– or SIFIs – were inadequate. Going forward, without a credible resolution mechanism, the
creditors of SIFIs will continue to believe that there is a significant probability that they will be
bailed out if their firms get into trouble. And the bigger or more central a role the firm plays in
the financial markets, the higher the chances of a rescue. Consequently, the creditors of these
institutions have little incentive to exert discipline on the SIFIs’ risk-taking activities, which is, of
2 Andrew Haldane and Vasileios Madouros, “The Dog and the Frisbee,” the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City’s
36th Economic Policy Symposium, “The Changing Policy Landscape,” Jackson Hole, Wyoming, August 31, 2012.
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course, a traditional role for debt. Thus, an important source of market discipline on these
firms is eliminated. Moreover, as long as regulators believe that creditors expect a bailout, they
are likely to want to satisfy these creditors’ expectations because not doing so could entail
significant risk to the financial system. This is the essence of the too-big-to-fail dilemma. How
do we break this cycle of expectations and get out of this trap?
Dodd-Frank’s Solution to Too Big to Fail
Dodd-Frank’s solution to this problem was embodied in Title II of the legislation. In particular,
Dodd-Frank created a new type of resolution mechanism, the Orderly Liquidation Authority.
Title II expands the existing authority of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to
resolve failing banks to include SIFIs. While there are some merits to Title II, I believe that a
more standard bankruptcy mechanism, specialized for financial institutions, would be more
effective in addressing the too-big-to-fail problem.
Before a firm can be resolved under the Title II framework, a majority of the Board of
Governors and another regulator (the FDIC, the Commodity Futures Trading Corporation, or the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) must petition the Treasury, in consultation with the
President of the U.S., to exercise the Title II authority. In order to invoke Title II, the institution
must be in or close to default and its failure must present serious adverse effects on U.S.
financial stability.
At this point, the FDIC may take the firm, or parts of the firm, into receivership. As the receiver,
the FDIC has expansive discretionary powers, including the ability to use Treasury funds to
make advances to particular creditors in a manner that may be inconsistent with the legal
priorities specified in their debt contracts if it believes that this is necessary to prevent systemic
problems.3
3 To be clear, these powers are not unlimited. Indeed, by law, the FDIC must claw back the money for any
privileged creditors who receive more than they would have received in a straight liquidation if the resolution
leads to losses for the Treasury.
4
While Title II improves our ability to wind down SIFIs, it affords substantial discretion to
regulators, which I see as a serious drawback. Remember that Title II resolution is triggered
only when there are concerns about systemic problems. On the one hand, by unleashing the
FDIC’s wide range of discretionary powers, the mechanism may lead to bailouts that are
unnecessary or to rewarding certain creditors at the expense of others. Worse, these decisions
might be made in an arbitrary manner that is inconsistent with the rules of priority. On the
other hand, the complicated procedure for invoking the FDIC’s Title II authority may lead to
excessive delay. Just think about the highly politically charged issue of determining whether a
firm is systemically important, especially if it has not been designated as such by the Financial
Stability Oversight Committee – known as FSOC. The longer the delay, the harder it will be to
ultimately resolve the firm without a bailout. In either case, Title II resolution is likely to be
biased toward bailouts.
The discretionary aspect of Title II also makes it subject to other political pressures. Creditors
will perceive that their payoffs will be determined through a regulatory resolution process in
which political pressure can be brought to bear, independent of the rule of law.
Finally, the discretion entailed in Title II also makes decisions and subsequent outcomes less
predictable. Thus, the mechanism could induce firms to game the system by taking actions that
would place them in the category of firms that would receive a bailout.
Should We Supplement or Supplant Title II?
A new bankruptcy mechanism, specialized for financial firms and applicable to all financial
firms, whether systemically important or not, could alleviate most of the potential problems
caused by the discretionary nature of Title II.4 By being more systematic and rule-like, a
bankruptcy resolution would largely eliminate the potential for bailouts. Rather than providing
firms with incentives to take actions that might increase their systemic-risk potential, a
4 This partially addresses another dilemma for macroprudential regulation. Economists and regulators have yet to
come up with a clear definition of what “systemically important” really means.
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bankruptcy resolution mechanism would likely increase the firm’s incentives to avoid actions
that might result in bankruptcy.
One such bankruptcy mechanism proposed is to add a new Chapter 14.5 Under this system, a
specialized federal judge, who could call upon the expertise of a special master, would oversee
the resolution process. While the FDIC, or another regulator, could trigger a bankruptcy filing
and would be one of the participants in the procedure, ultimate decision-making would rest
with the judge. Deviations from absolute priority would be cleared through a judicial authority,
not through regulatory discretion that is negotiated behind closed doors. The opportunities for
drawing on Treasury funds would be more limited and carefully circumscribed.
Chapter 14 would also modify the bankruptcy treatment of repurchase agreements and
derivatives, which would be treated more like other claims. Counterparties with claims
collateralized by illiquid securities would have to petition the bankruptcy judge to take their
collateral when a firm goes bankrupt, unlike the treatment under current bankruptcy law or
Title II. Furthermore, any extra collateral taken by counterparties within 90 days of the
bankruptcy would have to be returned to the bankruptcy court, just as collateral is treated for
other secured claimants.6 Such changes have the potential to reduce the cost to the taxpayers
of a financial firm bankruptcy by changing the incentives of financial institutions.
These changes would reduce the incentives for stressed firms to take on highly unstable liability
structures as a means of forestalling bankruptcy. Counterparties would be wary about
providing short-term wholesale funding, for example, or making derivatives trades with a
stressed firm with illiquid securities as collateral. The sooner a troubled firm enters bankruptcy,
the more likely that it can be reorganized or wound down without a bailout. This is a good
5 See Thomas H. Jackson, “Bankruptcy Code Chapter 14: A Proposal,” February 2012 and Thomas H. Jackson and
David A. Skeel, Jr., “Dynamic Resolution of Large Financial Institutions,” Institute for Law and Economics, Research
Paper, No. 13-03.
6 Under current law, repos and derivatives are exempted from the automatic stay. While all other secured
creditors (for example, secured bondholders) must wait until the bankruptcy court has made a judgment so that
they may take their collateral, a dealer with a repo agreement can simply net all of its agreements and take any
collateral the debtor has put up as margin. Furthermore, the court cannot demand that counterparties return
additional collateral taken in the 90 days preceding bankruptcy under current law.
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example of a regulatory mechanism that uses market discipline and the firm’s own private
incentives to reduce taxpayer losses.
Some Caveats
Let me be clear. I believe that specialized bankruptcy resolution mechanisms like Chapter 14
should supplant Title II, not supplement it. The coexistence of two separate resolution
mechanisms creates some difficulties. Most notably, once a firm has entered bankruptcy,
regulators might nonetheless invoke Title II. This possibility will certainly complicate managers’
and claimants’ expectations and incentives. That said, if a bankruptcy resolution mechanism for
financial firms were offered, I believe that both regulators and firms may prefer to avoid Title II
in most circumstances. In particular, regulators could avoid raising the threat of systemic risk,
which might follow a petition to the President of the U.S. So, while I believe that a resolution
regime with Chapter 14 could fully supplant Title II, a regime with Chapter 14 supplementing
Title II is a significant improvement over one with Title II alone.
Another important issue that I have not discussed is the problem of international coordination
when a global firm fails. This is a complicated issue that arises whether resolution occurs
through Title II or through a specialized bankruptcy alternative. While progress is being made,
more work needs to be done.7
I should also recognize that Dodd-Frank requires bank holding companies with more than $50
billion in assets and nonbank financial firms supervised by the Fed to prepare living wills. The
living will is a detailed plan for the orderly resolution of the firm under the U.S. bankruptcy code
in the event of serious distress or failure. The largest financial firms have already submitted the
first round of living wills to the Fed. While requiring firms to plan ahead for their potential
resolution should simplify the bankruptcy process and enhance the credibility of resolution
without bailouts, I believe that we should be realistic about the limits of living wills. In
particular, I have doubts that regulators can realistically expect firms to significantly reorganize
7 See the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the Bank of England, “Resolving Globally Active, Systemically
Important, Financial Institutions,” December 10, 2012.
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their internal structure to facilitate their own demise, certainly not in normal times. I do
believe that preparing a living will may open some firms’ eyes to needless complexity in their
internal organization. Indeed, we have seen this in the first round of submissions. In addition,
the living will should become a part of our prompt corrective program when firms are under
stress, in effect mimicking the use of prepackaged bankruptcies for nonfinancial firms.
Bank Capital and Too Big to Fail
Let me turn now to the second prong of eliminating too big to fail – preventive measures that
reduce the probability that a financial firm will fail in the first place. The most effective
preventive measure is adequate capital. Requiring financial firms to hold more capital can
reduce the probability that Title II or Chapter 14 would have to be invoked. It cannot and
should not eliminate all risk of failure, which is why higher capital should not be seen as a
complete substitute for a having a well-articulated bankruptcy mechanism.
One accomplishment of Dodd-Frank is that it gives regulators the power to assign a capital
surcharge for systemically important institutions. In the final analysis, the best protection
against a bailout is for a bank to have sufficient capital to cover its own losses. In addition,
higher levels of capital may permit regulatory or market interventions before a firm actually
fails, thereby making bankruptcy or bailouts unnecessary. However, deciding on what level of
capital is required is not trivial. Current Basel III proposals for a SIFI surcharge of 1 to 2.5
percent may simply be too low.
In addition to equity capital, requiring SIFIs to hold subordinated debt instruments, like
contingent capital, can provide benefits. The fact that market participants have already been
adopting contingent convertible bonds (COCOs) in various forms suggests that it might simply
be easier to increase capital requirements by reverse convertible debt instruments rather than
through large increases in equity capital. Reverse convertible debt automatically becomes an
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equity claim when, for example, the firm’s capital falls below some trigger. The idea is that the
firm’s equity capital automatically increases when it comes under sufficient stress.8
More important than the details of the numerator of the capital asset ratio is the denominator.
The Basel II and III emphasis on risk-weighted capital as the primary measure of capital
adequacy should be seriously reconsidered, with more emphasis on the simple leverage ratio —
the ratio of capital to unweighted assets.9 The primary arguments in favor of leverage ratios
are straightforward. If we were looking for a regulatory tool that violated the basic principles I
outlined at the beginning of this talk, i.e., that regulations should be simple and robust, you
could hardly find a better example than the risk-weighted capital calculation. Haldane provides
a rough estimate of the increasing complexity of the Basel risk weights using the number of
pages of documentation for each successive Basel accord. The 30 pages of documentation in
Basel I increased to 347 pages of documentation in Basel II and now to 616 pages in Basel III.10
We have a wealth of examples in which risk weighting has permitted very risky activities by
institutions with little or no capital.11 In addition, there is evidence that even for relatively
simple portfolios the measure of risk-weighted assets can vary significantly across banks.12
8 The Squam Lake Group has proposed another interesting form of capital, deferred compensation for managers.
They suggest that perhaps 20 percent of managers’ compensation be deferred for five years and that this
compensation is forfeited if the firm fails (according to some well-defined notion of failure, perhaps the conversion
of its reverse convertibles). Squam Lake Group, “Aligning Incentives at Systemically Important Financial
Institutions,” March 25, 2013.
9 See Thomas M. Hoenig, “Basel III Capital: A Well-Intended Illusion,” speech to the International Association of
Deposit Insurers, April 9, 2013, and William Poole, “Banking Reform: A Free Market Perspective,” speech to the
31st Annual Monetary and Trade Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, April 17, 2013. Hoenig has
argued that the simple leverage ratio be the primary measure of capital adequacy and that risk-weighted assets be
used as a supplementary regulatory tool, precisely reversing the Basel ordering.
10 See Haldane and Madouros (2012).
11 See, for example, Acharya, Schnabl, and Suarez’s account of the collapse of the asset-backed commercial paper
market. Viral V. Acharya, Philipp Schnabl, and Gustavo Suarez, “Securitization Without Risk Transfer,” Journal of
Financial Economics, March 2013.
12 Researchers at the Bank of International Settlements conducted an experiment to see how a relatively simple
portfolio of long and short positions would be treated for calculating risk-weighted capital at 16 global banks. They
found wide variations, even for these simple portfolios. Interestingly, although the banks’ own models were a
significant source of variation, the largest source of variation was different regulatory treatments by the banks’
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The measurement issue and complexity of risk-weighted capital requirements suggest to me
that we should move to a simpler, more transparent approach. Specifically, we could adopt a
framework that relies on simple but higher leverage ratios and require them to increase with
the size, interconnectedness, and complexity of the institution.
Some policymakers and commentators have argued that designing mechanisms to resolve
financial organizations without bailouts is largely beside the point. If some financial
organizations are simply too big to fail, why not break them up into smaller organizations or
require that each of the organization’s entities that is above some critical size, for example,
$50 billion, be separately capitalized at a relatively high level. On the face of it, these proposals
meet the requirements of simplicity and transparency. In addition, I am sympathetic to the
view that higher capital levels can protect taxpayers and that higher capital requirements
would change organizations’ incentives. Nonetheless, I have serious doubts about this
particular approach.
For example, I don’t think that regulators know enough to break these firms apart. I would
rather see us pursue higher capital requirements. If that gives firms the incentive to reorganize,
then let the firms and the marketplace determine the most efficient structure. This in
combination with enforcing bankruptcy would be a better solution in my view.
Some Remaining Challenges
Let me end with a few remaining challenges. We should be aware of the risk that activities may
move outside the regulated banking sector in response to higher capital charges or that U.S.
banks would become less competitive if capital requirements were higher here than in other
countries. This is a real concern that is worth considerable thought.
But there are reasons that requiring more capital need not lead to an increase in the size of the
shadow banking system. First, we should keep in mind that increasing capital requirements for
home country regulators. “Regulatory Consistency Assessment Programme (RCAP ) – Analysis of Risk-Weighted
Assets for Market Risk,” BIS (Jan 2013).
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SIFIs permits banks to engage in arbitrage by shrinking and becoming less interconnected,
precisely the intention of the increased capital charges. Also, current estimates of an increase
in capital requirements do not suggest that that even significantly higher capital requirements
would be prohibitively costly.13
Recent Fed proposals to require foreign banking organizations to organize their U.S.
subsidiaries under a unified, separately capitalized bank holding company in the U.S. would
remove the most obvious path to shift regulated activities if capital requirements for U.S. SIFIs
were to increase. Greater international cooperation in raising capital requirements will limit
opportunities for arbitrage.
Conclusion
Can we end too big to fail? I think we can, but I believe the current efforts may come up short.
If we are to end discretionary bailouts and the associated moral hazard problems that they
create, we should seek more rule-like methods to resolve failing firms, such as a new Chapter
14 bankruptcy mechanism. But we also should accept the idea that more capital is an
important buffer against financial distress. Importantly, we should seek to simplify capital
regulation and reduce or eliminate the ever-increasing complexity of risk-weighted capital
calculations. Finally, we should design regulations that encourage rather than discourage
markets to monitor risk-taking. These steps will provide us with a better chance of ending too
big to fail and promote a more stable financial system.
13 Hanson, Kashyap, and Stein estimate that a 10-percentage-point increase in a bank’s tier-1-to-risk-weighted-
capital ratio would raise its weighted average cost of capital by 25 to 45 basis points. Baker and Wurgler arrive at
the somewhat higher range of 60-90 basis points. See Samuel Hanson, Anil Kashyap, and Jeremy Stein, “A
Macroprudential Approach to Financial Regulation,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, 25, 1, Winter 2011, and
Malcolm Baker and Jeffrey Wurgler, “Would Stricter Capital Requirements Raise the Cost of Capital? Bank Capital
Regulation and the Low Risk Anomaly,” Working paper, New York University, March 15, 2013.
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Cite this document
APA
Charles I. Plosser (2013, May 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130509_charles_i_plosser
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20130509_charles_i_plosser,
author = {Charles I. Plosser},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2013},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130509_charles_i_plosser},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}