speeches · February 23, 2014
Regional President Speech
Thomas M. Hoenig · President
Thomas M. Hoenig Vice Chairman
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Presented to the National Association
For
Business Economics 30th Annual Economic
Policy Conference;
Arlington, Virginia
February 24, 2014
The views expressed are those of the author and not necessarily those of the FDIC.
The United States is in its sixth year following the financial and economic crisis of 2008,
and we are just about to start our fourth year since the enactment of the Dodd-Frank
Act. Enormous energy has been expended in an attempt to implement a host of
required reforms. The Volcker Rule has been implemented, and more recently a rule
requiring foreign bank operations to establish U.S. holding companies has been
adopted.
While these are important milestones, much remains undone and I suspect that 2014
will prove to be a critical juncture for determining the future of the banking industry and
the role of regulators within that industry. The inertia around the status quo is a powerful
force, and with the passage of time and fading memories, change becomes ever more
difficult. There are any number of unresolved matters that require attention.
This past July the regulatory authorities proposed a sensible supplemental
capital requirement that is yet to be adopted. This single step would do much to
strengthen the resiliency of the largest banks, since even today they hold
proportionately as little as half the capital of the regional banks. The Global
Capital Index points out that tangible capital to asset levels of the largest firms
average only 4 percent.
The largest banking firms carry an enormous volume of derivatives. The law
directs that such activities be conducted away from the safety net, and we are
still in the process of completing what is referred to as the push-out rules.
Bankruptcy laws have not been amended to address the use of long-term assets
to secure highly volatile short-term wholesale funding. This contributes to a
sizable moral hazard risk among banks and shadow banks, as these instruments
give the impression of being a source of liquidity when, in fact, they are highly
unstable. The response so far has required that we develop ever-more
complicated bank liquidity rules, which are costly to implement and enforce, and
leave other firms free to rely on such volatile funding.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac continue to operate under government
conservatorship, and as such they dominant home mortgage financing in the
United States.
Finally, among the more notable and difficult pieces of the unfinished business is
the assignment to assure that the largest, most complicated banks can be
resolved through bankruptcy in an orderly fashion and without public aid.
Congress gave the Federal Reserve and the FDIC, and the relevant banking
companies, a tough assignment under the Title 1 provisions of the Dodd-Frank
Act to solve this problem. It requires making difficult decisions now, or the die will
be cast and the largest banking firms will be assured an advantage that few
competitors will successfully overcome1.
The Persistence of Too Big To Fail
I want to spend a few more minutes on this last topic, as it remains a critical step to a
more sound financial system.
The chart titled Consolidation of the Credit Channel shows the trend in concentration of
financial assets since 1984. The graph shows the distribution of assets for four groups
of banks, ranging in size from less than $100 million to more than $10 billion. The chart
shows that in 1984, the control of assets among the different bank groups was almost
proportional. Also, within each group if a single bank failed, even the largest, it might
shock the economy, but most likely would not bring it down. Today this distribution of
assets is dramatically different. Banks controlling assets of more than $10 billion have
come to compose an overwhelming proportion of the economy, and those with more
than a trillion dollars in assets have come to dominate this group. If even one of the
largest five banks were to fail, it would devastate markets and the economy.
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act is intended to address this issue by requiring these largest
firms to map out a bankruptcy strategy. This is referred to as the Living Will. If
bankruptcy fails to work, Title II of Dodd-Frank would have the government nationalize
and ultimately liquidate a failing systemic firm.
While these mechanisms outline a path for resolution, success will be determined by
how manageable large and complex firms are under bankruptcy and whether under any
circumstance they can be resolved without major disruption to the economy. This is a
daunting task, and increasing numbers of experts question whether it can be done given
current industry structure.2 Two impediments are most often highlighted to organizing
an orderly bankruptcy or liquidation for these firms.
First, it is not possible for the private sector to provide the necessary liquidity through
"debtor in possession" financing due to the size and complexity of the institutions and
due to the speed at which crises occur. There simply would be too little confidence in
bank assets and the lender's ability to be repaid, and too little time to unwind these firms
in an orderly fashion in a bankruptcy. Under the current system, it would have to be the
government that provides the needed liquidity, it is argued, even in bankruptcy to avoid
a broader financial meltdown.
Second, when a mega banking firm goes into bankruptcy, capital markets and cross-
border flows of money and capital most likely would seize up, intensifying the crisis, as
happened following the failure of Lehman Brothers, for example. International
cooperation is critical in such circumstances, and it would be ideal if creditors, bankers
and governments acted calmly and rationally in a crisis. It would be ideal also if all
contracts were honored and if collateral and capital were free to move across borders.
But, experience suggests otherwise. Panic is about panic, and people and nations
generally protect themselves and their wealth ahead of others. Moreover, there are no
international bankruptcy laws to govern such matters and prevent the grabbing of
assets, sometimes known as ring-fencing.
This raises the important question of whether firms must simplify themselves if we hope
to place them into bankruptcy. This is no small question, and it must be addressed.
A further sense of the importance of these unresolved issues can be gained by working
through the annual report of any one of these largest firms. These reports show that
individual firms control assets close to the equivalent of nearly a quarter of U.S. GDP,
and the five largest U.S. financial firms together have assets representing just over half
of GDP. The reported composition of firm assets represents a further challenge in
judging their resolvability, as it is opaque and the relationship among affiliate firms is
sometimes unclear. A host of assets and risks are disclosed only in footnotes, although
they often involve trillions of dollars of derivatives that are not shown on the balance
sheet. Inter-company liabilities are in the hundreds of billions of dollars and if any one
link fails, it can initiate a chain reaction of losses, failure and panic. And should crisis
emerge, liquidity is sought through the insured bank, not through the provisions of
bankruptcy. One failure means systemic consequences.
These conditions mean "too big to fail" remains a threat to economic stability. They
necessarily put the economic system at risk should even one mega bank fail. And they
allow these mega banks to operate beyond the constraints of economies of scale and
scope, and provide the firms an enormous competitive advantage -- all of which is
antithetical to capitalism.
Structural Change, Subsidarization, and Capital
These observations are not new to the financial system, and they have sparked a
broadening debate on what action might be taken to better assure that bankruptcy is the
first option for resolution. Potential actions include some of the following:
First, simplify the corporate structure of the mega banks that now dominate the financial
system. There is mounting evidence of the benefits that would flow from such an action.
Market analysts and economists3 have pointed to increased value and greater
economic stability that would flow from such restructuring. Commercial banking is
different than broker-dealer activities, and studies show that requiring banks and broker-
dealers to operate independently would serve potentially to improve the pricing and
allocation of capital, and to increase value.
Second, as the Federal Reserve recently required for foreign banks operating in the
United States, governments should require global banking companies to establish
separate operating subsidiaries within each country. This subsidarization would give
greater clarity to where capital is lodged globally, and it would serve to assure that
banks within each country have capital available at foreign affiliates to absorb losses on
a basis comparable to that jurisdiction's domestic banks. Subsidarization also would
lead to greater recognition of the risks on firms' balance sheets, causing more capital to
be held globally and thus contributing to greater overall financial stability and availability
of credit.
Those who object to this concept suggest that such a requirement interferes with capital
flows and would actually reduce available credit. However, subsidarization would
require that capital be aligned with where assets reside, and it would identify for markets
and authorities the capital available to absorb losses should it be needed. It provides far
more transparency than the current structure. Such transparency would encourage a
more responsible use and allocation of capital and resources. It ends the charade that
markets are open and safe, only to see them suddenly shut down and ring fenced, with
devastating effect, when the inevitable crisis occurs.
Conclusion
It is fundamental to capitalism that markets be allowed to clear in an open, fair manner
and that all participants play by the same rules. A situation whereby oligopolies that
evolve into institutions that are too big to fail, and are so significant and complex that
should they fail the economy fails, is not market economics. To ignore these
circumstances is to invite crisis.
###
Thomas M. Hoenig is the Vice Chairman of the FDIC and the former President of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. His research and other material can be found at
http://www.fdic.gov/about/learn/board/hoenig/
1 Literature review of the too-big-to-fail subsidy.
http://www.fdic.gov/news/news/speeches/literature-review.pdf
2 December 11, 2013 meeting of the FDIC Systemic Risk Advisory Committee.
http://www.fdic.gov/about/srac/
3 OECD research by Adrian Blundell-Wignall, Paul Atkinson and Caroline Roulet
http://www.oecd.org/daf/fin/financial-markets/Bank-Separation-2013.pdf
http://www.oecd.org/daf/fin/financial-markets/Bank-Business-Models-Basel-2013.pdf
"Break Up Banks: Show Me My Money," Credit Agricole Securities - Mike Mayo.
January 2013.
Hoenig and Morris: http://www.fdic.gov/about/learn/board/hoenig/Restructuring-the-
Banking-System,Hoenig,Morris,Nov.2013.pdf
Global Capital Index Consolidation of the Credit Channel Consolidation of the Credit
Channel notes
Last Updated 2/26/2014
Cite this document
APA
Thomas M. Hoenig (2014, February 23). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140224_thomas_m_hoenig
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140224_thomas_m_hoenig,
author = {Thomas M. Hoenig},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {Feb},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140224_thomas_m_hoenig},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}