speeches · May 8, 2013
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Ending ‘Too Big to Fail’ Is Going to Be Hard Work
May 9, 2013
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Council on Foreign Relations
New York, N.Y.
These remarks are abridged from a speech of the same title delivered April 9, 2013, to the
Global Society of Fellows Conference in Richmond, Va.
In my opening remarks, I would like to discuss the problem people refer to as “too big to fail.” A
wide range of reform proposals for dealing with this problem emerged following the crisis of
2008, many of which were considered in the debate leading up to the Dodd-Frank financial
regulatory legislation of 2010. Some found their way into the act itself, but that has not put an
end to the debate. In fact, an array of proposals have garnered attention in recent months, from
breaking up large financial institutions to dramatically increasing their capital requirements.
Despite the diversity of ideas, there appears to be widespread agreement on at least one of the
goals of financial reform — ending “too big to fail.” This morning, I would like to discuss some
work that I believe is essential to ending “too big to fail.” As always, my remarks today will
reflect my own views and are not necessarily shared by others in the Federal Reserve System.1
Broadly stated, “too big to fail” consists of two mutually reinforcing problems. First, creditors of
some financial institutions feel protected by an implicit government commitment of support
should the institution become financially troubled. Second, policymakers often feel compelled to
provide support to certain financial institutions to insulate creditors from losses. Instances of
such intervention reinforce creditors’ expectations of support and encourage reliance on highly
liquid funding sources that make such support more likely. Creditor expectations of support, in
turn, force policymakers to intervene in the event of distress, since disappointing those
expectations by withholding support would provoke a sudden, turbulent readjustment of investor
expectations regarding support for other, similarly situated firms. Perceived guarantees thus
encourage fragility, which induces interventions, which encourages further fragility. The result is
seriously distorted incentives to monitor and control risk and taxpayer-funded subsidies to
financial firms that are widely viewed as deeply unfair.
To end “too big to fail,” therefore, we need to bring about two mutually reinforcing conditions.
The first is that creditors do not expect government support in the event of financial distress. The
second is that policymakers allow financial firms to fail without government support. If we can
achieve that commitment and make it credible to market participants, we can improve private
sector incentives to avoid fragile financing arrangements and limit risk-taking, thereby reducing
the pressure for government intervention.
1
Allowing a financial firm to fail without government support for creditors does not mean that the
operations and activities of the failing firm will simply come to an abrupt halt. Outside of the
financial sector, most firms — even relatively large ones — fail by filing for bankruptcy, thereby
initiating court-supervised procedures to either restructure obligations and continue operations or
liquidate assets and distribute the proceeds to creditors. If it proves collectively more valuable to
creditors to continue the firm’s operations as a going concern than to liquidate, bankruptcy
provides a mechanism for doing so. Indeed, several large airline companies have gone through
bankruptcy reorganization while continuing regular flight operations. Our goal should be for the
bankruptcy of a large financial firm to be as much of a nonevent as the bankruptcy of a large
airline.
A key provision of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act requires that bank holding companies larger
than $50 billion in assets, as well as certain nonbank financial companies, draw up detailed plans
for their orderly resolution in bankruptcy, without government assistance, and submit them to
regulators.2 I believe that these resolution plans, also known as “living wills,” represent the most
promising path toward ending “too big to fail.” Indeed, I believe that without robust and credible
resolution plans, other financial reform strategies will be incomplete and likely to fall short.
Some observers see the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s Orderly Liquidation Authority, or
OLA, as a credible mechanism for resolving financial firms without bailouts. But under the
OLA, the FDIC can make payments to creditors it deems “necessary,” and it can draw on funds
from the Treasury to do so.3 Indeed, the FDIC has announced its willingness to do so in some
circumstances.4 This ability, and willingness, opens the door for creditors to believe they might
benefit from such treatment and therefore to pay less attention to risk than they should. If
expectations of support for financially distressed institutions in orderly liquidation became
widespread, regulators would likely feel forced to provide support simply to avoid the turbulence
of disappointing expectations. We will have replicated the two mutually reinforcing problems
that define “too big to fail.”
Many recent proposals to address the “too big to fail” problem would make structural changes to
financial firms — imposing quantitative limits on their size, for instance, or prohibiting certain
risky capital market activities.5 In my view, it makes perfect sense to constrain the scale and
scope of financial firms in a way that ensures that they can be resolved in an orderly manner,
without government protection for creditors. But how would you know you have chosen the right
limits? Is size alone the issue, and if so, how small should you make them? If activities are the
problem, which ones make them hard to resolve? And how do you know you haven’t gone too
far and sacrificed valuable efficiencies that may derive from the current industrial organization
of the financial system?
The only approach I can envision to answering such questions is resolution planning — that is,
the hard work of mapping out in detail just what problems the unassisted bankruptcy of a large
financial firm as it’s currently structured might encounter. Such maps would provide an objective
basis for judgments about how the structure or activities of such firms need to be altered in order
to give policymakers the confidence to choose unassisted bankruptcy in the event of distress, but
without going too far and unnecessarily eliminating efficiencies associated with economies of
scale and scope.
2
The Dodd-Frank Act requires that bank holding companies larger than $50 billion in assets, as
well as nonbank financial companies supervised by the Fed, submit resolution plans annually to
the Federal Reserve and the FDIC.6 A final rule implementing this provision was announced by
the Fed and the FDIC in October 2011. A plan, or “living will,” is a description of a firm’s
strategy for rapid and orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the event of material
financial distress or failure. It must contain a detailed description of the firm’s organizational
structure, key management information systems, critical operations and a mapping of the
relationship between core business lines and legal entities. The heart of the plan is specification
of the actions the firm would take to facilitate rapid and orderly resolution and prevent adverse
effects of failure, including the firm’s strategy to maintain operations of and funding for their
material entities. Firms are required to provide analysis under the three economic scenarios —
“baseline,” “adverse” and “severely adverse.” Plans may not rely on the provision of
extraordinary support by the U.S. government.
The Federal Reserve and the FDIC can jointly determine that a plan is not credible or would not
facilitate an orderly resolution under the Bankruptcy Code, in which case the firm would be
required to submit a revised plan to address identified deficiencies. A resubmission could include
plans to change the business operations and corporate structure in order to eliminate deficiencies.
If the Fed and the FDIC jointly determine that the revised plan does not remedy identified
deficiencies, they can require higher capital, leverage liquidity requirements or restrict the
growth, activities or operations of the firm. In essence, regulators can order changes in the
structure and operations of a firm to make it resolvable in bankruptcy without government
assistance.
Regulators last year required the first round of submissions from the largest U.S. firms and
foreign-based companies with significant U.S. assets.7 These plans reflect considerable effort by
covered companies to address requirements of the resolution plan rule. Through the process of
developing the plans, firms have deepened their understanding of their own complex legal entity
structures, their financial and operational interconnectedness, as well as the vulnerabilities that
may arise in their resolution.
The living wills program will require more hard work and detailed analysis. But I see no other
way to reliably identify exactly what changes are needed in the structure and operations of
financial institutions to end “too big to fail.” I see no other way to achieve a situation in which
policymakers consistently prefer unassisted bankruptcy to incentive-corroding intervention and
investors are convinced that unassisted bankruptcy is the norm.
It is essential that we eliminate the government backstop implied by “too big to fail.” Ambiguous
commitments induce fragilities that in turn induce intervention that expands implied
commitments. Richmond Fed economists estimated that, at the end of 1999, about 45 percent of
financial sector liabilities were explicitly or implicitly government guaranteed. At the end of
2011, as a result of the precedents set during the crisis, they estimated the figure to have grown
to 57 percent.8 This fraction is likely to continue to grow unless we end “too big to fail.” And to
end “too big to fail,” we need to do the hard work of learning what it takes to make all firms safe
to fail without government rescues.
3
1 I am grateful for assistance from John Weinberg in preparing these remarks.
2 See section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
3 Funds paid in excess of what a creditor would have received in bankruptcy must be recovered from the
disposition of the failed firm’s assets, or if this amount is insufficient, from clawing back any additional payments
(payments beyond what would have been received in a liquidation) made to creditors, and if that is insufficient, by
taxing all large bank holding companies and other systemically important financial institutions. See section 210(o)
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Protection Act.
4 See remarks by Martin J. Gruenberg, acting chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., to the Federal
Reserve Bank of Chicago Bank Structure Conference, May 10, 2012. Gruenberg stated: “The new resolution
authority comes with access to a new source of liquidity support provided by the Dodd-Frank Act: the Orderly
Liquidation Fund, or OLF, located in the Treasury Department. The OLF must either be repaid from recoveries on
the assets of the failed firm or from assessments against the largest, most complex financial companies. Taxpayers
cannot bear any loss from the resolution of a financial company under the Dodd-Frank Act. The OLF does address a
critical issue to prevent a system-wide collapse, as we saw with the Lehman bankruptcy, because it provides an
emergency source of liquidity to allow the bridge financial company to complete transactions that provide real
value and prevent contagion effects. While the OLF can be a source of direct funding for the resolution, it can also
be used to provide guarantees, within limits, on the debt of the new company.”
5 See, for instance, Richard W. Fisher and Harvey Rosenblum, “Vanquishing Too Big to Fail,” in the Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas 2012 Annual Report, and Thomas M. Hoenig, “Financial Reform: Post Crisis?” Address to Women in
Housing and Finance, Washington, DC, February 23, 2011.
6 See section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
7 The public portions of the plans are available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/resolution-
plans.htm.
8 The Richmond Fed’s estimates of the size of the federal financial safety net are available at
https://www.richmondfed.org/publications/research/special_reports/safety_net.
4
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2013, May 8). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130509_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20130509_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2013},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20130509_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}