speeches · October 4, 1996
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
10 30 a m , Honolulu Time (4 30 p m, E D T)
October 5, 1996
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Annual Convention
of the
American Bankers Association
Honolulu, Hawaii
October 5, 1996
You may well wonder why a regulator is the first speaker at a conference in which a
major theme is maximizing shareholder value I hope that by the end of my remarks this
morning it will be clear that we, the regulators, share with you ultimately the same objective
of a strong and profitable banking system Such a banking system knows how to take and
manage risk for profit The problem is what, if anything, regulators should do to constrain
the amount of risk bankers take in trying to meet their corporate objectives I have given
considerable thought to this issue over the years, and today I would like to address this theme
once again
I. The Changing Nature of Bank Supervision and Regulation
At the outset, it is critical to understand some key unintended implications of the
safety net-our system of deposit insurance, payment guarantees, and discount window credit
First, since the safety net makes bank creditors feel safer, the banking system is larger, more
stable, and more able to take risk and extend more credit than otherwise would be the case
In the process, banks have contributed significantly to the economic growth of the nation, and
continue to do so
Second, since deposit insurance premiums do not, and probably cannot, vary
sufficiently with risk, the disconnect between bank portfolio risk-taking and a bank's cost of
funding has made necessary a degree of regulation and supervision that would be unnecessary
without the safety net That is, since the market signals that usually accompany excessive
risk-taking are substantially muted, regulators are compelled to act as a surrogate for market
discipline
In addition, our preoccupation with prudential risk-taking has added to the pressures
put on the entire banking and regulatory structure by technology and globalization Many of
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the activities that banks feel are necessary responses to these market pressures are either
prohibited by statute, or constrained by regulation, because of our concerns about exposing
the safety net to unacceptable risk
These implications of the safety net highlight the dilemma of the regulator How do
we avoid killing the goose that lays the golden egg-an innovative and flexible banking
system-without either exposing the taxpayer to excessive potential cost or the financial
system to excessive systemic risk?
The answers to this question are critical First and foremost, as I have indicated many
times before, the optimal failure rate in banking is not zero Risk-taking means that failures
will occur, and, moreover, if we did not permit risk-taking, and therefore the possibility of
failure, the banking system would not be in a position to foster economic growth The
banking system would shnnk because it would be unable to carry out its underlying economic
function
While failures will inevitably occur in a dynamic market, the safety net—not to
mention concerns over systemic risk—requires that regulators not be indifferent to how banks
manage their risks To avoid having to resort to numbing micromanagement, regulators have
increasingly insisted that banks put in place systems that allow management to have both the
information and procedures to be aware of their own true nsk exposures and to be able to
modify such exposures The better these risk information and control systems, the more risk
a bank can prudently assume, although higher risk positions generally will require larger loan
loss reserves and higher capital
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I might also note that risk management standards are increasingly an important
supplement to traditional supervisory techniques The use of new technology and instruments
in rapidly changing financial markets means that some balance sheets are already becoming
historical artifacts that are not even necessarily indicative of risk exposures of the next day
In such a context, the supervisor must rely on his evaluation of risk management procedures
as a supplement to—and in extreme cases, in lieu of—balance sheet facts As the 21st century
unfolds, the supervisors' evaluation of safety and soundness, of necessity, increasingly will be
focussed on process, and less on historical records.
Well-functioning risk management systems are necessary, but not sufficient, for taking
on greater risk Banks must also have the capital resources to absorb the inevitable losses
that result from risk-taking and still remain solvent Thus, banks are required to maintain
both reserves consistent with expected losses and capital sufficient to absorb the vast majonty
of unexpected losses that expenence and data suggest could occur, but whose timing and size
are not predictable
Determination of appropriate capital levels is not just a regulatory concern
Increasingly, bankers are treating the determination of proper capital levels as integral to the
meeting of shareholder goals Shareholder value is maximized, almost surely, when long run
risk adjusted return on equity is maximized One method of quantifying the risk adjusted
return is to measure returns—net of expected losses—against the capital that should be
allocated to a transaction to reflect that transaction's risk As I will discuss in more detail
shortly, some bankers are doing exactly that quantifying risks, allocating sufficient capital to
cover those measured risks, and then trying to focus on those lines of business for which risk
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adjusted returns to allocated capital are the highest It does not matter whether the bank
concentrates on low-risk, low capital business, or on high-risk, high capital business, only that
it concentrates on businesses for which it has a comparative advantage, that is, businesses that
earn an above average rate on its internally allocated capital, after provisions for expected
losses Regulators, in my opinion, should take notice of this emerging business philosophy--
for a bank that properly measures its nsks and allocates capital to those risks is well on its
way to being a safe and sound bank, as well as one that meets its shareholders' objectives
n. Implications of Technology for Shareholder Value and for Regulatory
Policy
Many observers have commented on the increasing complexity of financial instruments
and transactions However, these complexities would not have been possible in actual market
circumstances without the technological advances that also allowed these risks to be measured
and managed Indeed, as I noted earlier, banks can now quantify the dimensions of risks for
instruments and transactions that we could only conceptualize a short time ago Consider just
two examples of what risk quantification permits today securitization and the day-to-day
control of market risk in a portfolio of complex derivative contracts In both of these cases,
risk quantification is a prerequisite to informed risk-based pricing Moreover, the comparison
of the risk-based price to current market conditions is critical to management decisions
regarding withdrawing, cutting back, or expanding a bank's endeavor in specific credit
markets
A critical component of risk-based pricing, as I noted earlier, is the determination of
an appropriate internal allocation of capital to the individual credit subportfolios For internal
management purposes, banks for some time have been grouping their credits by risk class,
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modifying the classification of individual credits periodically Now, banks on the frontier are
using historical data and advanced modeling techniques to determine formal estimates of
probable losses for each loan classification Some of these banks have gone one step further,
using these risk estimates to estimate the amount of capital that management should allocate
against vanous loan classifications for internal pricing and other resource allocation purposes
The widespread adoption of these techniques lies in the future, but, as I suggested
earlier, some forms of risk quantification are now being used by banks to enhance shareholder
values Unfortunately, some bankers believe that new technologies, such as credit scoring,
and the growth of some activities, such as secuntization, will reduce their franchise values by
driving down spreads Indeed, the new technologies can be viewed as chipping away at
banks' specialized knowledge of the local loan customer Li effect, barriers to entry are
lowered when the new technologies allow nonlocal competitors to offer standardized products
through nationwide marketing campaigns using, for example, toll-free 800 telephone numbers
On the other hand, the byproducts of these new technologies include lower underwriting
expenses and the more accurate estimation of probable losses These byproducts act to offset
the effects of increasing competition created by the new technologies, both by raising profits
on existing operations and by opening up opportunities with customers previously not served
Better and more quantifiable estimates of risk are tantamount to risk reduction
More generally, and of much greater importance, rapidly changing technology is
broadening and deepening financial markets while inevitably enhancing competitive pressures
In one sense this trend has been with us since the industrial revolution, but it has clearly
accelerated in recent years in banking markets Because the hot hand of competition is
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always putting pressure on us, we in our darker moments wish it would just go away I very
often succumbed to such melancholy when I was in the private sector But we are wrong
Competition is the force which keeps us on our toes, makes us better and more productive,
and creates higher market values for our banking institutions, just as it does for other firms
Competition is what has raised our standards of living for generations and made this nation
the world's preeminent economic power.
Technological change and the accompanying competition are irreversible, and those
banks unwilling or unable to adapt to them will lose market share and suffer lower risk-
adjusted rates of return But the banks that embrace the cost-cutting and risk-reducing effects
of the technology will, in my judgment, tend to find it a rewarding experience Scale is not
an issue Small banks can now purchase the software that will permit them to use the new
procedures, and upstream correspondents and others will be there to buy the product
HI. Regulatory Innovation
Technological change is not the sole province of the private sector Regulators too
must adapt to the new technology, and, in this regard, some important lessons are being
learned For example, the private sector, for a considerable time, has been accustomed to
product planning cycles in which the planning of the replacement product is begun, if not
well along, by the time a new product is being introduced Similarly, regulators are
beginning to understand that the supervision of a financial institution is, of necessity, a
continually evolving process reflecting the continually changing financial landscape This is
not a fault, but rather a description of an appropriate regulatory process Indeed, given our
own long lead times, we must begin designing the next generation of supervisory procedures
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even while introducing the latest modification, much as you are forced to do for your own
products
Increasingly, the new supervisory techniques and requirements try to harness both the
new technologies and market incentives to improve oversight while reducing regulatory
burden, burdens that are becoming progressively obsolescent and counterproductive This is
becoming especially true in evaluating the capital adequacy of banks One example is the
recent decision by regulators to use internal model approaches for measuring market risks at
banks and allocating regulatory capital to those risks In addition, the Federal Reserve Board
has been studying an alternative capital allocation process for market risk, the so-called pre-
commitment approach This methodology would provide market and other financial
incentives for banks to choose their own capital allocations for trading risk that they believe
are consistent with their own risk management capabilities, as well as with regulatory
objectives
The range and extent of securities powers permissible for bank holding companies is
another area where the Federal Reserve has attempted to modify its regulations to parallel
changing market realities As you know, beginning in 1987 the Federal Reserve allowed
increased securities powers in so-called Section 20 subsidiaries Most recently, based on our
favorable experience with these subsidiaries, we have proposed dismantling some of the
limitations and restrictions that, in an abundance of caution, we originally imposed to
constrain risk exposures of the insured bank affiliate Both that favorable expenence and the
changing structure of financial markets suggested these modifications were desirable
Similarly, both changing markets and our experience suggested the need to streamline
the bank holding company application process and related provisions Accordingly, in August
the Board requested comment on a wide ranging revision to its Regulation Y You will note
that the expedited application procedures were proposed only for strong and well-managed
entities that we believe, by definition, need less oversight This, too, is a simulation of the
way the market would treat such financial institutions
However, both the Section 20 and Regulation Y examples illustrate another major
problem in the current banking environment Both areas are still constrained by outdated and
increasingly inefficient statutes Indeed, statutory provisions ultimately limit the Fed's ability
to relax Section 20 or Regulation Y limits Fundamental congressional reform of the Glass-
Steagall and the Bank Holding Company Acts is still needed
IV. Conclusion
If banks were unregulated, they would take on any amount of risk they wished, and
the market would rate their liabilities and price them accordingly Ideally, banks should also
face regulatory responses to their portfolio risks that simulate market signals And these
signals should be just as tough, but no tougher than market signals in an unregulated world
Perfection would occur if bankers had a genuinely difficult choice deciding if they really
wanted to remain an insured bank or become an unregulated financial institution
While awaiting perfection, it is useful to underline that regulators and banks have a
common interest in using the evolving new technologies to meet their own separate
objectives maximizing shareholder value and maintaining a safe and sound banking system
One cannot be done without the other And, as you increasingly apply these new
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technologies, we will be replacing our procedures with those that depend increasingly on risk
management, risk quantification, market simulations, and—within the confines of law-reduced
barriers Our "best practice" is to assure that regulatory restrictions are not a barrier to your
"best practice " Your "best practice" is to employ improved risk management and all its tools
in order to increase your risk-adjusted rate of return If you succeed in doing that, bank
shareholders, the financial system in general, and our economy as a whole, all will be better
off
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1996, October 4). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19961005_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19961005_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1996},
month = {Oct},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19961005_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}