speeches · August 1, 1995
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
10 00 a m , E D T
August 2, 1995
Statement by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Subcommittee on Financial Institutions and Consumer Credit
of the
Committee on Banking and Financial Services
United States House of Representatives
August 2, 19 95
I am pleased to be able to appear here today to
offer my thoughts on the status of the SAIF insurance fund,
and on deposit insurance more generally
The combination of deposit insurance and a central
bank providing discount window credit has made the contagion
of bank runs that often characterized the 19th and the first
third of the 20th century an anachronism The United States
has not suffered a financial panic or systemic bank run in the
last 50 years In large part, this reflects the safety net,
whose existence, as much as its use, has helped to sustain
confidence
But deposit insurance is not without its costs By
relieving depositors of the consequences of bank failure,
government guarantees of bank deposits make depositors
relatively indifferent to bank failure and thus encourage
banks to have larger, riskier asset portfolios than would be
possible in a wholly market-driven intermediation process
Without the safety net, additional risks would have to be
reflected in some combination of higher deposit costs, greater
liquid asset holding, or a larger capital base, and these in
turn would constrain risk-taking. In the late 1980s and early
1990s, Congress responded to problems at insured depository
institutions—and their insurance funds—with legislation
designed to induce these entities to be more prudent
risk-takers
Today, we are here to address an evolving
competitive imbalance and other implications of two insurance
funds with sharply different premiums But, it is critical to
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underline that even if there were no evolving problem with
SAIF, the existing deposit insurance system, with its reliance
on two funds, is inherently unstable
With deposit insurance, as it is currently
administered and funded, depositors do not move their funds
from depository institution to depository institution based on
the soundness of particular insurance funds Depositors are
generally unaware, and indeed should be unconcerned, about BIF
versus SAIF In the mind of the typical depositor, the FDIC
provides the insurance, and the details of one fund versus
another receive little attention
Competitive depository institutions cannot
differentiate themselves by the quality of the deposit
insurance that is offered because it is the same insurance
regardless of whether it is from BIF or SAIF In either case,
it is government-mandated and government-sponsored deposit
insurance For identical insurance, it is rational that
depository institutions seek the one available at the lowest
cost If a substantial difference in deposit premiums exists
between SAIF and BIF, the institutions paying the higher
premium will pursue insurance offered by the other insurance
fund unless there is some other reason to remain with their
current fund
While today we are discussing what to do about SAIF,
I want to stress that the problem we are addressing is a
general one If there is no substantial difference between
BIF and SAIF insurance, and if there is no substantial
difference between the advantages granted to BIF institutions
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or SAIF institutions, then anytime one deposit insurance fund
has difficulties that result in substantially higher deposit
premiums, members will try to shift to the other deposit
insurance fund In the process, the disadvantaged fund
becomes increasingly vulnerable to insolvency as its premium
base declines This in turn engenders a still greater
incentive to leave the troubled fund or requires the payment
of still higher premiums to support it Short of effective
barriers to exit, once initiated the downward spiral does
indeed lead to fund insolvency Thus, having two deposit
insurance funds creates a mechanism that is prone to
instability now, and probably, in the future Today, the
problem is at the SAIF, it may, at some date in the future, be
at the BIF
Congress can attempt to legislate barriers that try
to stop institutions from shifting deposits, but the history
of efforts to legislate against such strong financial
incentives is not encouraging We are, in effect, attempting
to use government to enforce two different prices for the same
item—namely, government-mandated deposit insurance Such
price differences only create efforts by market participants
to arbitrage the difference In the present case, with SAIF
institutions expected to pay at least five times more per year
for the same deposit insurance, this arbitrage means that SAIF
institutions will pursue all avenues open to them profitably
to move deposits from SAIF to BIF
The difference between paying, say, 24 basis points
and paying 4 5 basis points for deposit insurance translates
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into about $1 4 billion per year in additional premiums paid
for SAIF deposits For SAIF institutions, this equals roughly
18 percent of their 1994 pretax income Given the large
potential financial gains to SAIF institutions if they move
deposits to BIF, the current deposit insurance system will
impose a large deadweight loss on the financial system Many
of the political, policy, financial, and legal institutions
concerned with banking issues will be pre-occupied, for the
foreseeable future, with the details of this issue because
SAIF institutions will continually strive to move deposits
into BIF and BIF institutions will attempt to thwart such
movements
Indeed, BIF institutions suffer under the current
system to the extent that SAIF members successfully shift
their deposits to BIF One way for a SAIF institution to
minimize its cost under the current system is for that
institution either to acquire or to be acquired by a BIF
institution The SAIF institution can be funded from
nondeposit sources, while its depositors are encouraged to
shift funds to the BIF institution Current BIF members would
almost surely find their premiums higher than otherwise
because the new BIF deposits come without the associated
insurance fund reserves, requiring older BIF deposits to pay a
higher assessment in order to maintain the required 1 25
percent reserve ratio on both the new and the old deposits
Using the FDIC's projections of future deposit
premiums, a migration of only $40 to $50 billion per year of
SAIF deposits to BIF deposits might yield higher deposit
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premiums for existing BIF members than if those members were
to participate in any of a number of proffered solutions to
the potential SAIF problem, each of which would remove
incentives to migrate Such a shift of deposits seems
entirely credible if a large deposit premium difference exists
between SAIF and BIF, since $50 billion amounts to only 7
percent of the existing SAIF assessment base Furthermore,
even this relatively small migration suggests that payments of
FICO bond interest funded by SAIF could be put in jeopardy in
the very near future If action is not taken shortly, a
future congressional appropriation for interest on FICO bonds
might be required, or further increases in SAIF premiums on
the smaller SAIF deposit base might be necessary, or possibly
even the imposition of higher premiums on both SAIF and BIF
deposits might be needed
Meanwhile, SAIF institutions will be harmed directly
by the continuation of a deposit premium higher than that to
be assessed on BIF members, and the returns on capital of SAIF
members will be driven lower than similarly situated
competitors As I noted, BIF institutions will be harmed by
the inflow of new deposits shifted from SAIF institutions
requiring the BIF members to pay higher premiums The only
winners created by the looming deposit premium difference
between SAIF and BIF deposits will be those depositories able
to "game" the system, and leave SAIF first The solution to
this problem is to end this game and merge SAIF and BIF
A prerequisite is to put SAIF on a sound basis
This could be accomplished if, as has been recommended, the
institutions that hold SAIF deposits pay a special one-time
assessment to recapitalize SAIF at the legally mandated 1 25
percent ratio of insured deposits Such a one-time charge is
large SAIF-member institutions would pay as much as $6 6
billion or 85 to 90 basis points of their deposit base This
assessment seems unlikely, however, to drive healthy SAIF
members into insolvency and weaker SAIF institutions can be
allowed a longer pay-in period The merging of a
recapitalized SAIF with a sound BIF would then consolidate the
FICO bond obligation of SAIF into the new insurance fund and
effectively obligate past BIF members to participate on a pro
rata basis
Most bankers would argue, with some justice, bhat
they should not be responsible for this legacy of the thrift
crisis in which they played no role Many may, nonetheless,
conclude that two or two and a half basis points per year in
additional deposit premiums for the FICO interest payments may
be a price they would willingly pay to finally remove the
incentives of SAIF members to shift to BIF, with the
associated increase in the premiums of BIF members.
Even after SAIF is recapitalized, in the years
immediately ahead some large savings and loans, still
suffering from the residue of past difficulties, may continue
to represent a risk of relatively large loss to their federal
deposit insurer If SAIF were not merged with BIF, or if that
merger were delayed, the risk of such loss would expose a
recapitalized SAIF both to a reserve shortfall and to a higher
deposit insurance premium to once again rebuild its reserves
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An industry that had just paid a large one-time premium to
recapitalize its insurance fund would be understandably
concerned about that possibility If such losses were to
occur to a merged BIF-SAIF fund, the necessity of reserve
building would be shared among banks and thrifts pro
rata—implying a larger dollar burden on the larger commercial
bank industry Banks would be understandably concerned about
such exposure, especially after accepting a pro rata share of
the FICO interest obligation
Both sets of institutions are thus sensitive to the
small probability of a large thrift failure imposing still
further costs on them One way to address these concerns is
for the Congress to arrange a catastrophe contingency funding
arrangement over, say, the next five years to bridge the
period over which this risk exists It has been suggested,
for example, that over such an interval public funds be made
available in any year that losses to the SAIF, or losses
created by present SAIF members to a merged BIF-SAIF, exceed
$500 million If increased budget outlays are with good
reason not acceptable to the Congress, one possibility is that
this catastrophe insurance be financed through a small special
insurance fee, paid to the Treasury by SAIF members to cover
the potential taxpayer risk exposure,
Discussions about merging the BIF with a
recapitalized SAIF insurance fund and sharing the FICO
interest obligation among the members of both deposit
insurance funds raise the question of retaining separate bank
and thrift charters It is difficult to overstate the
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importance of savings and loan associations in the financing
of the residential housing market in the first two decades
after World War II Their continued demonstration to other
lenders of the basic credit quality of the lower downpayment,
long-term, conventional, amortized, residential mortgage
instrument revolutionized housing finance Their success led
public policymakers to look at thrifts as innovators operating
at the cutting edge of the market. But, beginning in the
1970s, market forces and innovations began to erode the
original purpose of specialized thrifts, and, hence, their
charter The development of mortgage-backed securities —
along with the technological revolution facilitated by the
computer — has lessened the special franchise of thrifts by
creating a secondary market for most residential mortgages
As a result, the standard residential mortgage no longer
requires specialized financial institutions to originate or
fund these instruments
So far in this decade, savings and loans and savings
banks have originated 25 percent of residential mortgages —
as compared to 50 percent over the previous 20 years — and
hold, on average, only 28 percent of outstanding residential
mortgage debt, compared to two-thirds during the earlier
period Currently, only two thrifts are among the top 15
mortgage servicers and none are among the top ten originators
Over the last decade, when thrifts' participation in the
residential mortgage market receded, the aggregate supply of
housing finance was unimpaired and mortgage rates apparently
unaffected. Indeed, events over the last decade suggest that
market forces and innovations have reduced the relative yield
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on the standard residential mortgage, while at the same time
other market forces have made deposit rates increasingly
competitive In such an environment, significant questions
are raised about the economic viability of any institution
that by law or regulation is required to place most of its
assets in mortgage instruments and fund them in the deposit
market
Two conclusions are clear First, the nexus between
thrifts and housing largely has been broken without any
detriment to housing finance availability Second, a public
policy that induces — let alone requires — thrifts to
specialize in mortgage finance threatens the continued
viability of many of these entities — particularly those
without wide and deep deposit franchises, tight cost controls,
and the ability, when necessary, effectively to originate and
sell standard mortgages that cannot profitably be held
long-term A broader charter for thrifts — such as a
commercial bank charter that lets them hold a wider range of
assets — thus would seem to be good public policy
Even if such modifications of the thrift charter are
not adopted, but especially if charter changes are made,
serious consideration ought to be given to reevaluatmg tax
rules that not only induce mortgage specialization but
penalize thrifts that try to adopt more diversified
portfolios The special bad debt reserve treatment that
provides tax benefits — and, hence, subsidy — to mortgage
lending by thrifts should be considered for removal going
forward In addition, consideration should be given for
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grandfathering the reserve buildup from this past tax subsidy
in order to remove it as a barrier for entities that wish to
diversify A penalty should not be charged institutions
striving to respond rationally to market realities
Charter changes and adjustment of tax policies will
not mean that all, or even most, thrifts will give up mortgage
originations and portfolio holdings These entities have,
over the years, built up special skills that they will
continue to use in mortgage finance Some — those with
strong cost controls, greater expertise, and the ability to
respond to changing market conditions — will probably
continue to be strong, profitable, and viable institutions
specializing mainly in mortgage credit But long-run health
for the thrift industry as a whole, I think, requires that
most cannot be mortgage specialists to the same degree as in
the past and good public policy must, at a minimum, drop those
provisions that penalize diversification for those that choose
to do so
Let me conclude by clarifying why the Federal
Reserve is concerned about the SAIF problem and believes it is
necessary to resolve it The Federal Reserve's primary
concerns are sustainable economic growth and financial
stability A healthy and competitive financial system is
critical for maintaining and promoting economic growth One
key component of a healthy financial system is a sound
depository institution system, and an important component of a
sound depository institution system is that depository
institutions are not given artificial incentives to switch
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between insurance funds or to abandon an insurance fund in
order to gain competitive advantages. Such "regulatory
arbitrage" wastes scarce and valuable resources that could be
much more productively employed
Furthermore, as we know from our experience in the
last recession, uncertainties about the resolution of
insurance fund failures, and the regulatory policies needed to
protect the taxpayer while these uncertainties are resolved,
can only inhibit the willingness of depository institutions to
lend While there were many reasons monetary policy
encountered strong headwinds during that period, surely the
legislative and regulatory reactions to the taxpayer funding
of the thrift deposit insurance fund and to the depleted
nature of the BIF compounded our problems
Whatever solution is finally adopted, we should not
lose sight of first principles A deposit insurance system
that focuses the attention of banks and thrifts on the
relative status of their funds, and a system that rewards
those who can jump ship first, is, to say the least,
counterproductive. What is needed is a deposit insurance
system whose status is unquestioned so that the depositories
can appropriately focus their attention on the extension and
management of credit in our economy I might also add that a
congressional decision to provide a more bank-like thrift
charter and bank-like taxation would be consistent with market
trends and stronger depositories, and would not be likely to
reduce mortgage credit flows
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Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1995, August 1). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19950802_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19950802_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1995},
month = {Aug},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19950802_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}