speeches · October 17, 2013
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Toward Orderly Resolution
October 18, 2013
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Federal Reserve 2013 Resolution Conference
Washington, D.C.
Welcome to the Federal Reserve 2013 Resolution Conference. This gathering is sponsored
jointly by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Reserve Bank
of Richmond. Our objective is to stimulate constructive dialogue among knowledgeable
professionals and the practitioners involved in constructing and assessing resolution plans. This
is a critically important element of our collective response to the financial crisis.
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act requires that certain large U.S. financial institutions submit
resolution plans to the Federal Reserve and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. As most
of you know, a resolution plan describes a firm’s strategy for liquidation or reorganization under
the U.S. bankruptcy code, without extraordinary government assistance, in the event of material
financial distress or failure. The heart of the plan is the 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 for maintaining the operations of and funding for its critical
operations and material entities.
Separate from Title I, Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act provides for the FDIC to take a firm into
receivership if there is a determination that, among other things, the firm’s failure under the U.S.
bankruptcy code would have serious adverse effects on “financial stability.” One difference
between Title II and the bankruptcy code is that Title II gives the FDIC the ability to borrow
funds from the U.S. Treasury to make payments to creditors of the failed firm or to guarantee the
liabilities of the failed firm.1 The funds are to be repaid from recoveries on the assets of the
failed firm or from assessments against the largest, most complex financial companies.
Clearly, the Dodd-Frank Act envisions bankruptcy without government support as the first and
most preferable option in the case of a failing financial institution, and for good reason, in my
opinion. If Title I resolution comes to be expected as the norm, the incentives of market
participants will be much better aligned with our public policy goal of a financial system that
effectively allocates capital and risks. Large financial firms will prefer to be less leveraged and
less reliant on short-term funding. Institutions and markets would, accordingly, be more resilient
in response to financial stress. Policymakers could then credibly commit to avoiding rescues,
which would reinforce appropriate incentives. In short, robust Title I resolution planning is a
strong complement to the array of ongoing enhancements to prudential supervision that are
aimed at reducing the likelihood of failure.
A critical success factor for resolution plans is that, in the event of financial distress,
policymakers will view them as making bankruptcy preferable to alternative approaches, such as
Title II, in which government funding protects some creditors, the prospect of which blunts
incentives. Title I stipulates that the Federal Reserve and the FDIC can jointly determine that a
plan is “not credible,” meaning that it would not facilitate an orderly resolution under the
bankruptcy code. In this case, the firm would be required to submit a revised plan to address
identified deficiencies, including altering business operations or corporate structure. If the Fed
and the FDIC jointly determine that the revised plan does not remedy identified deficiencies,
they can mandate tighter capital, leverage or 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.
A veritable army of professionals has been devoting considerable time and effort to crafting and
evaluating Title I resolution plans. Many of you have enlisted in this army, although some of you
may have been drafted. The initial wave of firms has provided two rounds of submissions
already. Another wave of firms submitted plans midyear, and a third wave is slated to submit
plans at year-end. Substantial work remains to be done, however, and substantial issues remain
to be sorted out before regulators and policymakers can convince market participants of the
credibility of these plans.
Ensuring that the relevant portion of the financial sector is covered by robust and credible
resolution plans can seem like a daunting task. The critical feature to keep in mind, however, is
that resolution planning in some sense reverses the usual bankruptcy planning exercise. Instead
of asking how to take a given financial institution through bankruptcy, Title I asks us to work
backward from bankruptcy resolution and determine what the institution needs to look like in
order for that bankruptcy to be orderly. It invites us to not take any aspect of the structure and
financing of a large financial institution as fixed.
This perspective casts a new light on financial firm characteristics ― such as short-term funding
strategies ― that might appear to pose impediments to orderly resolution without government
support. Credibility may require altering the funding profile of the firm so that debtor-in-
possession financing needs in bankruptcy are manageable without public sector funds.
Resolution planning will require a great deal of hard work. But I see no other way to ensure that
policymakers have confidence in unassisted bankruptcy and that investors are convinced that
unassisted bankruptcy is the norm, both of which strike me as necessary to solving the “too big
to fail” problem. Resolution planning provides a framework for identifying the actions we need
to take now to ensure that the next financial crisis is handled appropriately, in a way that is fair to
taxpayers and establishes the right incentives. While I expect we will hear diverse perspectives
today on many key issues, I am sure we all share that goal. To that end, I am very much looking
forward to our discussions today.
1 For a comparison of the Orderly Liquidation Authority provisions with the U.S. bankruptcy process, see Sabrina R.
Pellerin and John R. Walter, “Orderly Liquidation Authority as an Alternative to Bankruptcy,” Federal Reserve
Bank of Richmond Economic Quarterly, First Quarter 2012, vol. 98, no. 1, pp. 1-31.
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2013, October 17). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20131018_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20131018_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2013},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20131018_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}