speeches · May 12, 2014
Regional President Speech
Jeffrey M. Lacker · President
Welcome and Introductory Remarks, 2014 Credit Markets Symposium
May 13, 2014
Jeffrey M. Lacker
President
Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Charlotte Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
Charlotte, North Carolina
Good morning. I’m Jeff Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. It is my
pleasure to welcome you to our eighth annual Credit Markets Symposium. We are once again
delighted to bring together market practitioners, financial industry policymakers and academics
for an open and honest dialogue about current issues in credit markets.
Since 2007, the year of the first Credit Markets Symposium, we’ve had a number of fruitful
discussions in this forum. Many of them have been focused on the process by which credit
markets have been recovering from the financial crisis. At this point, conditions have certainly
improved, but many challenges remain — not the least of which is navigating a landscape that
has undergone a number of significant regulatory changes, with more to come.
Those changes will be our focus over the next day and a half. In particular, we have organized
discussions on:
the implementation and impact of the Volcker Rule;
o
trends and expectations for leveraged lending;
o
how firms have been affected by the transition to a central counterparty;
o
and the ever-popular question of the fate of the housing finance GSEs, as well as the
o
broader question of the government’s proper role in housing finance.
These sessions will be led by a diverse group of panelists with strong representation from both
industry and the regulatory community. In each session, our goal is not merely to review the
details of a specific regulation but also to have an engaging discussion about the implications for
your work and for the credit markets more broadly. To that end, we have allocated time during
each session for Q&A, and we encourage you to use that time to ask questions and share your
perspective.
We’re also honored to have with us keynote speakers Edward DeMarco and Phillip Swagel. Mr.
DeMarco is the former acting director at the Federal Housing Finance Agency. We’re looking
forward to hearing his perspective on housing policy and the residential mortgage market. Mr.
Swagel is a professor of international economic policy at the University of Maryland’s School of
Public Policy and was the assistant secretary for economic policy at the Treasury Department
from 2006 through 2009. He will share with us his insights on financial regulatory reform since
the crisis.
Before I hand things over to Matt Martin, the regional branch executive here in Charlotte, I
would like to note that it is especially appropriate to be having these discussions in 2014, the
Fed’s centennial year. As you are probably aware, the Federal Reserve Act was signed in
December 1913, and the regional Reserve Banks opened for business in November 1914. The
commemoration of the our centennial is an opportunity to reflect on how the financial system has
evolved — sometimes for the better, and at times, to be frank, for the worse — and how
regulators and market participants have coped along the way.
At the time the Fed was founded, banking laws sharply restricted branching, and as a result there
were 27,285 banks when the Fed was founded.1 Banking laws also made it cumbersome to issue
bank notes, our main form of hand-to-hand currency. The result was a fragmented banking
system with critical structural weaknesses. Moving crops to market strained the monetary system
every autumn, driving up interest rates and drawing in gold from abroad. And banks would
suspend withdrawals during periodic panics, disrupting people’s ability to make payments. These
issues gave rise to a broad banking reform movement focused on “The Currency Problem.” The
primary goal in establishing the Federal Reserve thus was “to furnish an elastic currency” that
would expand and contract appropriately with the needs of the economy.2
The world looks very different today, of course. The gold standard is a thing of the past, and an
elastic supply of payment instruments ― both paper and digital ― is taken for granted.
Branching restrictions have largely disappeared. Surely the Fed’s founders would be amazed by
the fact that they can withdraw money from the same bank whether they’re in California or
North Carolina (not to mention being amazed by the machine that allows them to do so). And I
doubt that the founders envisioned the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, much less synthetic
collateralized debt obligations.
Alongside the dramatic changes we’ve seen in banking and credit markets since the founding of
the Fed, we’ve also seen a significant evolution in the role and operations of the Fed itself. In the
beginning, lending to banks through the discount window was our method of supplying currency
to meet swings in demand. Over time, however, we shifted to relying on open market purchases
of U.S. Treasury securities to carry out monetary operations. Under this approach, Fed lending
operations are divorced from monetary policy and have become pure fiscal policy actions, in
which Treasury securities are sold to the public to raise funds for the Fed’s borrowers. It seems
likely that the Fed’s founders would have been amazed by the uses made of Fed lending in the
recent crisis.
There are some who praise the Fed’s credit market interventions and advocate an expansive role
for the Fed in promoting financial stability and mitigating financial system disruptions. They
construe the founders of the Federal Reserve System as motivated by a broad desire to minimize
and prevent financial panics, even beyond simply satisfying increased demand for currency. My
own view, which I must note may not be shared by all my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System, favors a narrower and more restrained role, focused on the critical core function of
managing the monetary liabilities of the central bank. Ambitious use of a central bank’s balance
sheet to channel credit to particular economic sectors or entities threatens to entangle the central
bank in distributional politics and place the bank’s independence at risk. Moreover, the use of
central bank credit to rescue creditors boosts moral hazard and encourages vulnerability to
financial shocks.
But I recognize that there is a range of views on this topic both outside of and within the Federal
Reserve System and, I am sure, within this room. That’s why events like this are so important, to
bring people together to share their ideas and opinions about the many important issues related to
our credit markets today.
***
In addition to the disclaimer I just offered for myself, I will go ahead and offer a blanket
disclaimer for the Federal Reserve officials moderating panels today and tomorrow: The views
and opinions they express here are their own and do not necessarily reflect the official opinions
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, the Federal Reserve System, or any other regulatory
agency or individual. While we will be covering a variety of topics over the next two days, to the
extent that we discuss topics for which the Board of Governors is writing rules but the comment
period has closed, participants from the Federal Reserve may be limited in what they can say.
Finally, I would like to thank our hosts here in Charlotte for putting together an excellent event.
Our Charlotte branch first opened in 1927, at the urging of local bankers, but Charlotte was
actually one of the cities that competed vigorously with Richmond to be one of the original
Federal Reserve cities. I’m sure, however, that the wonderful hospitality you will receive over
the next day and a half will put to rest any concerns that there is still lingering resentment over
losing out to the River City.
1 U.S. Bureau of the Census, “Historical Statistics of the United States, Colonial Times to 1970, Part 2,”
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1975.
2 See Jeffrey M. Lacker, “A Look Back at the History of the Federal Reserve,” Speech at Christopher Newport
University, Newport News, Va., August 29, 2013.
Cite this document
APA
Jeffrey M. Lacker (2014, May 12). Regional President Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140513_jeffrey_m_lacker
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_regional_speeche_20140513_jeffrey_m_lacker,
author = {Jeffrey M. Lacker},
title = {Regional President Speech},
year = {2014},
month = {May},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/regional_speeche_20140513_jeffrey_m_lacker},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}