speeches · September 23, 2008
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Chair
For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT
September 24, 2008
Statement of
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Joint Economic Committee
United States Congress
September 24, 2008
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Chairman Schumer, Vice Chair Maloney, Representative Saxton, and other members of
the committee, I appreciate this opportunity to discuss recent developments in financial markets
and to present an update on the economic situation. As you know, the U.S. economy continues
to confront substantial challenges, including a weakening labor market and elevated inflation.
Notably, stresses in financial markets have been high and have recently intensified significantly.
If financial conditions fail to improve for a protracted period, the implications for the broader
economy could be quite adverse.
The downturn in the housing market has been a key factor underlying both the strained
condition of financial markets and the slowdown of the broader economy. In the financial
sphere, falling home prices and rising mortgage delinquencies have led to major losses at many
financial institutions, losses only partially replaced by the raising of new capital. Investor
concerns about financial institutions increased over the summer, as mortgage-related assets
deteriorated further and economic activity weakened. Among the firms under the greatest
pressure were Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, Lehman Brothers, and, more recently, American
International Group (AIG). As investors lost confidence in them, these companies saw their
access to liquidity and capital markets increasingly impaired and their stock prices drop sharply.
The Federal Reserve believes that, whenever possible, such difficulties should be
addressed through private-sector arrangements--for example, by raising new equity capital, by
negotiations leading to a merger or acquisition, or by an orderly wind-down. Government
assistance should be given with the greatest of reluctance and only when the stability of the
financial system, and, consequently, the health of the broader economy, is at risk. In the cases of
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, however, capital raises of sufficient size appeared infeasible and
the size and government-sponsored status of the two companies precluded a merger with or
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acquisition by another company. To avoid unacceptably large dislocations in the financial
sector, the housing market, and the economy as a whole, the Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA) placed Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac into conservatorship, and the Treasury used its
authority, granted by the Congress in July, to make available financial support to the two firms.
The Federal Reserve, with which FHFA consulted on the conservatorship decision as specified in
the July legislation, supported these steps as necessary and appropriate. We have seen benefits
of this action in the form of lower mortgage rates, which should help the housing market.
The Federal Reserve and the Treasury attempted to identify private-sector solutions for
AIG and Lehman Brothers, but none was forthcoming. In the case of AIG, the Federal Reserve,
with the support of the Treasury, provided an emergency credit line to facilitate an orderly
resolution. The Federal Reserve took this action because it judged that, in light of the prevailing
market conditions and the size and composition of AIG's obligations, a disorderly failure of AIG
would have severely threatened global financial stability and, consequently, the performance of
the U.S. economy. To mitigate concerns that this action would exacerbate moral hazard and
encourage inappropriate risk-taking in the future, the Federal Reserve ensured that the terms of
the credit extended to AIG imposed significant costs and constraints on the firm's owners,
managers, and creditors. The chief executive officer has been replaced. The collateral for the
loan is the company itself, together with its subsidiaries.! (Insurance policyholders and holders
of AIG investment products are, however, fully protected.) Interest will accrue on the
outstanding balance of the loan at a rate of three-month Libor plus 850 basis points, implying a
current interest rate over 11 percent. In addition, the U.S. government will receive equity
I Specifically, the loan is collateralized by all of the assets of the company and its primary non-regulated
subsidiaries. These assets include the equity of substantially all of AIG's regulated subsidiaries.
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participation rights corresponding to a 79.9 percent equity interest in AIG and has the right to
veto the payment of dividends to common and preferred shareholders, among other things.
In the case of Lehman Brothers, a major investment bank, the Federal Reserve and the
Treasury declined to commit public funds to support the institution. The failure of Lehman
posed risks. But the troubles at Lehman had been well known for some time, and investors
clearly recognized--as evidenced, for example, by the high cost of insuring Lehman's debt in the
market for credit default swaps--that the failure of the firm was a significant possibility. Thus,
we judged that investors and counterparties had had time to take precautionary measures.
While perhaps manageable in itself, Lehman's default was combined with the
unexpectedly rapid collapse of AIG, which together contributed to the development last week of
extraordinarily turbulent conditions in global financial markets. These conditions caused equity
prices to fall sharply, the cost of short-term credit--where available--to spike upward, and
liquidity to dry up in many markets. Losses at a large money market mutual fund sparked
extensive withdrawals from a number of such funds. A marked increase in the demand for safe
assets--a flight to quality--sent the yield on Treasury bills down to a few hundredths of a percent.
By furtqer reducing asset values and potentially restricting the flow of credit to households and
businesses, these developments pose a direct threat to economic growth.
The Federal Reserve took a number of actions to increase liquidity and stabilize markets.
Notably, to address dollar funding pressures worldwide, we announced a significant expansion of
reciprocal currency arrangements with foreign central banks, including an approximate doubling
of the existing swap lines with the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank and the
authorization of new swap facilities with the Bank of Japan, the Bank of England, and the Bank
of Canada, among others. We will continue to work closely with colleagues at other central
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banks to address ongoing liquidity pressures. The Federal Reserve also announced initiatives to
assist money market mutual funds facing heavy redemptions and to increase liquidity in short
term credit markets.
Despite the efforts of the Federal Reserve, the Treasury, and other agencies, global
financial markets remain under extraordinary stress. Action by the Congress is urgently required
to stabilize the situation and avert what otherwise could be very serious consequences for our
financial markets and for our economy. In this regard, the Federal Reserve supports the
Treasury's proposal to buy illiquid assets from financial institutions. Purchasing impaired assets
will create liquidity and promote price discovery in the markets for these assets, while reducing
investor uncertainty about the current value and prospects of financial institutions. More
generally, removing these assets from institutions' balance sheets will help to restore confidence
in our financial markets and enable banks and other institutions to raise capital and to expand
credit to support economic growth.
I will now tum to a brief update on the economic situation.
Ongoing developments in financial markets are directly affecting the broader economy
through several channels, most notably by restricting the availability of credit. Mortgage credit
terms have tightened significantly and fees have risen, especially for potential borrowers who
lack substantial down payments or who have blemished credit histories. Mortgages that are
ineligible for credit guarantees by Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac--for example, nonconforming
jumbo mortgages--cannot be securitized and thus carry much higher interest rates than
conforming mortgages. Some lenders have reduced borrowing limits on home equity lines of
credit. Households also appear to be having more difficulty of late in obtaining nonmortgage
credit. For example, the Federal Reserve's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey reported that as
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of July an increasing proportion of banks had tightened standards for credit card and other
consumer loans. In the business sector, through August, the financially strongest firms remained
able to issue bonds but bond issuance by speculative-grade firms remained very light. More
recently, however, deteriorating financial market conditions have disrupted the commercial paper
market and other forms of financing for a wide range of firms, including investment-grade firms.
Financing for commercial real estate projects has also tightened very significantly.
When worried lenders tighten credit, then spending, production, and job creation slow.
Real economic activity in the second quarter appears to have been surprisingly resilient, but,
more recently, economic activity appears to have decelerated broadly. In the labor market,
private payrolls shed another 100,000 jobs in August, bringing the cumulative drop since
November to 770,000. New claims for unemployment insurance are at elevated levels and the
civilian unemployment rate rose to 6.1 percent in August. Households' real disposable income
was boosted significantly in the spring by the tax rebate payments, but, excluding those
payments, real after-tax income has fallen this year, which partly reflects increases in the prices
of energy and food.
In recent months, the weakness in real income together with the restraining effects of
reduced credit flows and declining financial and housing wealth have begun to show through
more clearly to consumer spending. Real personal consumption expenditures for goods and
services declined in June and July, and the retail sales report for August suggests that outlays for
consumer goods fell noticeably further last month. Although the retrenchment in household
spending has been widespread, purchases of motor vehicles have dropped off particularly
sharply. On a more positive note, oil and gasoline prices--while still at high levels, in part
reflecting the effects of Hurricane Ike--have come down substantially from the peaks they
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reached earlier this summer, contributing to a recent improvement in consumer confidence.
However, the weakness in the fundamentals underlying consumer spending suggest that
household expenditures will be sluggish, at best, in the near term.
The recent indicators of the demand for new and existing homes hint at some stabilization
of sales, and lower mortgage rates are likely to provide some support for demand in coming
months. Moreover, although expectations that house prices will continue to fall have probably
dissuaded some potential buyers from entering the market, lower house prices and mortgage
interest rates are making housing increasingly affordable over time. Still, homebuilders retain
large backlogs of unsold homes, which should continue to restrain the pace of new home
construction. Indeed, single-family housing starts and new permit issuance dropped further in
August. At the same time, the continuing decline in house prices reduces homeowners' equity
and puts continuing pressure on the balance sheets of financial institutions, as I have already
noted.
As of midyear, business investment was holding up reasonably well, with investment in
nonresidential structures particularly robust. However, a range of factors, including weakening
fundamentals and constraints on credit, are likely to result in a considerable slowdown in the
construction of commercial and office buildings in coming quarters. Business outlays for
equipment and software also appear poised to slow in the second half of this year, assuming that
production and sales slow as anticipated.
International trade provided considerable support for the U.S. economy over the first half
of the year. Economic activity has been buoyed by strong foreign demand for a wide range of
U.S. exports, including agricultural products, capital goods, and industrial supplies, even as
imports declined. However, in recent months, the outlook for foreign economic activity has
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deteriorated amid unsettled conditions in financial markets, troubled housing sectors, and
softening sentiment. As a consequence, in coming quarters, the contribution of net exports to
U.S. production is not likely to be as sizable as it was in the first half of the year.
All told, real gross domestic product is likely to expand at a pace appreciably below its
potential rate in the second half of this year and then to gradually pick up as financial markets
return to more-normal functioning and the housing contraction runs its course. Given the
extraordinary circumstances, greater-than-normal uncertainty surrounds any forecast of the pace
of activity. In particular, the intensification of financial stress in recent weeks, which will make
lenders still more cautious about extending credit to households and business, could prove a
significant further drag on growth. The downside risks to the outlook thus remain a significant
concern.
Inflation rose sharply over the period from May to July, reflecting rapid increases in
energy and food prices. During the same period, price inflation for goods and services other than
food and energy also moved up from the low rates seen in the spring, as the higher costs of
energy, other commodities, and imported goods were partially passed through to consumers.
Recently, however, the news on inflation has been more favorable. The prices of oil and other
commodities, while remaining quite volatile, have fallen, on net, from their recent peaks, and the
dollar is up from its mid-summer lows. The declines in energy prices have also led to some
easing of inflation expectations, as measured, for example, by consumer surveys and the pricing
of inflation-indexed Treasury securities.
If not reversed, these developments, together with a pace of growth that is likely to fall
short of potential for a time, should lead inflation to moderate later this year and next year.
Nevertheless, the inflation outlook remains highly uncertain. Indeed, the fluctuations in oil
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prices in the past few days illustrate the difficulty of predicting the future course of commodity
prices. Consequently, the upside risks to inflation remain a significant concern as well.
Over time, a number of factors should promote the return of our economy to higher levels
of employment and sustainable growth with price stability, including the stimulus being provided
by monetary policy, lower oil and commodity prices, increasing stability in the mortgage and
housing markets, and the natural recuperative powers of our economy. However, stabilization of
our financial system is an essential precondition for economic recovery. I urge the Congress to
act quickly to address the grave threats to financial stability that we currently face. For its part,
the Federal Open Market Committee will monitor economic and financial developments
carefully and will act as needed to promote sustainable economic growth and price stability.
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2008, September 23). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20080924_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20080924_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2008},
month = {Sep},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20080924_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}