speeches · November 17, 2008
Speech
Ben S. Bernanke · Chair
For release on delivery
9:30 a.m. EST
November 18, 2008
Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Financial Services
U.S. House of Representatives
November 18, 2008
Chairman Frank, Ranking Member Bachus, and other members of the Committee, I
appreciate having this opportunity to review some of the activities to date of the Treasury’s
Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, and to discuss recent steps taken by the Federal
Reserve and other agencies to support the normalization of credit markets.
The legislation that created the TARP put in place a Financial Stability Oversight Board
to review the actions of the Treasury in administering the program. That Oversight Board
includes the Secretary of the Treasury, the Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, the
Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission, the Director of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, and the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. We have met four times,
reviewing the operational plans and policy initiatives of the TARP and discussing possible
additional steps that might be taken. Officers for the Oversight Board have been appointed, and
the Federal Reserve and the other agencies are providing staff support for the board. Minutes of
each meeting are being posted to a special website established by the Treasury.1 In addition,
staff members of the agencies whose heads are participating in the Oversight Board have met
with staff from the Government Accountability Office to explore strategies for coordinating the
oversight that the two bodies are required to perform under the enabling legislation.
The value of the TARP in promoting financial stability has already been demonstrated.
The financial crisis intensified greatly in the latter part of September and spread to many
countries that had not yet been touched by it, which led to grave concerns about the stability of
the global financial system. Failure to prevent an international financial collapse would almost
certainly have had dire implications for both the U.S. and world economies. Fortunately, the
existence of the TARP allowed the Treasury to react quickly by announcing a plan to inject
1 See U.S. Department of the Treasury, Emergency Economic Stabilization Act website,
www.ustreas.gov/initiatives/eesa.
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$250 billion in capital into U.S. financial institutions. Nine large institutions received the first
$125 billion, and the remainder is being made available to other banking organizations through
an application process. In addition, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation announced that it
would guarantee non-interest-bearing transaction accounts at depository institutions and certain
other liabilities of depository institutions and their holding companies, and the Federal Reserve
expanded its provision of backstop liquidity to the financial system. These actions, together with
similar measures in many other countries, appeared to stabilize the situation and to improve
investor confidence in financial firms. Notably, spreads on credit default swaps for large
U.S. banking organizations, which had widened substantially over the previous few weeks,
declined sharply on the day of the joint announcement. Going forward, the ability of the
Treasury to use the TARP to inject capital into financial institutions and to take other steps to
stabilize the financial system--including any actions that might be needed to prevent the
disorderly failure of a systemically important financial institution--will be critical for restoring
confidence and promoting the return of credit markets to more normal functioning.
As I noted earlier, the Federal Reserve has taken a range of policy actions to provide
liquidity to the financial system and thus promote the extension of credit to households and
businesses. Our recent actions have focused on the market for commercial paper, which is an
important source of short-term financing for many financial and nonfinancial firms.
Normally, money market mutual funds are major lenders in the commercial paper
markets. However, in mid-September, a large fund suffered losses and heavy redemptions,
causing it to suspend further redemptions and then close. In the next few weeks, investors
withdrew almost $500 billion from prime money market funds. The funds, concerned about their
ability to meet further redemptions, began to reduce their purchases of commercial paper and
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limit the maturity of such paper to only overnight or other very short maturities. As a result,
interest rate spreads paid by issuers on longer-maturity commercial paper widened significantly,
and issuers were exposed to the costs and risks of having to roll over increasingly large amounts
of paper each day.
The Federal Reserve has developed three programs to address these problems. The first
allows money market mutual funds to sell asset-backed commercial paper to banking
organizations, which are then permitted to borrow against the paper on a non-recourse basis from
the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Usage of that facility peaked at around $150 billion. The
facility contributed importantly to the ability of money funds to meet redemption pressures when
they were most intense and remains available as a backstop should such pressures reemerge.
The second program involves the funding of a special-purpose vehicle that purchases
highly rated commercial paper issued by financial and nonfinancial businesses at a term of three
months. This facility has purchased about $250 billion of commercial paper, allowing many
firms to extend significant amounts of funding into next year.
A third facility, expected to be operational next week, will provide a liquidity backstop
directly to money market mutual funds. This facility is intended to give funds confidence to
extend significantly the maturities of their investments and reduce over time the reliance of
issuers on sales to the Federal Reserve’s special-purpose vehicle. All of these programs, which
were created under section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act, must be terminated when
conditions in financial markets are determined by the Federal Reserve to no longer be unusual
and exigent.
The primary objective of these and other actions we have taken is to stabilize credit
markets and to improve the access to credit of businesses and households. There are some signs
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that credit markets, while still quite strained, are improving. Interbank short-term funding rates
have fallen notably since mid-October, and we are seeing greater stability in money market
mutual funds and in the commercial paper market. Interest rates on higher-rated bonds issued by
corporations and municipalities have fallen somewhat, and bond issuance for these entities rose a
bit in recent weeks. The ongoing capital injections under the TARP are continuing to bring
stability to the banking system and have reduced some of the pressure on banks to deleverage,
two critical first steps toward restarting flows of new credit. However, overall, credit conditions
are still far from normal, with risk spreads remaining very elevated and banks reporting that they
continued to tighten lending standards through October. There has been little or no bond
issuance by lower-rated corporations or securitization of consumer loans in recent weeks.
To help address the tightness of credit, on November 12 the federal banking agencies
issued a joint statement on meeting the needs of creditworthy borrowers. The statement took
note of the recent strong policy actions designed to promote financial stability and improve
banks’ access to capital and funding. In light of those actions, which have increased the capacity
of banks to lend, it is imperative that all banking organizations and their regulators work together
to ensure that the needs of creditworthy borrowers are met in a manner consistent with safety and
soundness. As capital adequacy is critical in determining a banking organization’s ability and
willingness to lend, the joint statement emphasizes the need for careful capital planning,
including setting appropriate dividend policies. The statement also notes the agencies’
expectation that banking organizations should work with existing borrowers to avoid preventable
foreclosures, which can be costly to all involved--the borrower, the lender, and the communities
in which they are located. Steps that should be taken in this area include ensuring adequate
funding and staffing of mortgage servicing operations and adopting systematic, proactive, and
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streamlined mortgage loan modification protocols aimed at providing long-term sustainability for
borrowers. Finally, the agencies expect banking organizations to conduct regular reviews of
their management compensation policies to ensure that they encourage prudent lending and
discourage excessive risk-taking.
Thank you. I would be pleased to take your questions.
Cite this document
APA
Ben S. Bernanke (2008, November 17). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20081118_bernanke
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_20081118_bernanke,
author = {Ben S. Bernanke},
title = {Speech},
year = {2008},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_20081118_bernanke},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}