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Whatever's
happened to Global Banking? |
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Mar
4th 2009, C.P. Chandrasekhar and Jayati Ghosh |
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After
having failed to salvage a crisis-afflicted banking
system by guaranteeing deposits, providing refinance
against toxic assets and pumping in preference capital,
governments in the US, UK, Ireland and elsewhere are
being forced to nationalize their leading banks by buying
into new equity shares. What is more, even staunch free
market advocates like former Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan, who made the case for regulatory forbearance
and oversaw a regime of easy money that fueled the speculative
bubble (which he declared was just ''froth''), now see
nationalization as inevitable. In an interview to the
Financial Times, Greenspan, identified by the newspaper
''as the high priest of laisser-faire capitalism'',
said: "It may be necessary to temporarily nationalise
some banks in order to facilitate a swift and orderly
restructuring. I understand that once in a hundred years
this is what you do."
This ideological leap has come at the end of a long
transition during which the understanding of the nature
of the problem afflicting the banks in these countries
has been through many changes. Initially, when the subprime
crisis broke, this was seen as confined to subprime
markets and to institutions holding mortgage-backed
securities. Since banks were seen as entities which
had either stayed out of these markets or had transferred
the risks associated with subprime mortgage loans by
securitizing them and selling them on to others, the
banking system, the core of the financial sector, was
seen as relatively free of the disease.
In practice, however, the exposure of banks to these
mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt obligations
was by no means small. Because they wanted to partake
of the anticipated high returns or because they were
carrying an inventory of such assets that were yet to
be marketed, banks had a significant holding of these
assets when the crisis broke. A number of banks had
also set up special purpose vehicles for creating and
distributing such assets which too were holders of what
turned out to be toxic securities. And finally banks
had lent to institutions that had leveraged small volumes
of equity to make huge investments in these kinds of
assets. In the event, the banking system was indeed
directly or indirectly exposed to these assets in substantial
measure.
It needs noting that even if the exposure of banks to
these assets was a small proportion of the total amount
in circulation, the effect of such assets turning worthless
can be debilitating for the banks for two reasons. First,
even if the proportion of derivative assets held by
the banks was small, the value of that exposure tended
to be high because of the large volume of such assets
circulating in the system. Because securitization is
geared to transferring risk off the balance sheet of
the originator of the base asset, the tendency in the
system is for the creators of such assets to discount
risk and create large volumes of excessively risky credit
assets, as happened in the subprime mortgage market.
The effects of this tendency to sharply increase the
volume of asset-based securities was aggravated by the
easy money environment that was created by the Federal
Reserve under Greenspan as part of an effort to keep
a credit-financed boom going in the system.
Second, the equity base of most banks is relatively
small even when they follow Basel norms with regard
to capital adequacy. Banks can use a variety of assets
to ensure such adequacy and the required volume of regulatory
capital can be reduced by obtaining assets with high
ratings (which we now know are not an adequate indicator
of risk). This results in the available regulatory capital
being small relative to the risky asset-backed securities
held by the banks.
The difficulty with these kinds of bad assets is that
they are valued on marked-to-market principles, implying
that since these assets are not all being traded, there
is a lag in the recognition of the losses suffered through
holding such assets. In the US, the process of price
discovery began a long time back when in August 2007
Bear Stearns declared that investments in one of its
hedge funds set up to invest in mortgage backed securities
had lost all its value and those in a second such fund
were valued at nine cents for every dollar of original
investment. What was noteworthy was that Bear Stearns
was a highly leveraged institution holding assets valued
at $395.4 billion in November 2007 on an equity base
of just $11.8 billion. Thus it was not just that the
assets held by the bank were bad, but that there were
many other institutions, including banks, that were
exposed to bad assets through their relationship with
Stearns. Yet they were slow in recognizing their potential
losses.
On March 14, 2008, Bear Stearns was put on life support
with what appeared to be an unlimited loan facility
for 28 days delivered through Wall Street Bank J.P.
Morgan Chase. That life support came when it became
clear that, faced with a liquidity crunch, Bear Stearns
would have to unwind its assets by selling them at prices
that would imply huge losses. This would have had spin
off effects on other financial firms since the investment
bank had multiple points of interaction with the rest
of the financial community. Besides being a counter
party to a range of transactions that would turn questionable,
its efforts to liquidate its assets would affect other
investors holding the same or related securities and
derivatives through a price decline. Fearing that the
ripple effects would lead to a systemic collapse, the
Fed, in collaboration with JP Morgan, sought to prop
up the investment bank. The Financial Times quoted an
unnamed official who reportedly declared that Bear Stearns
was too ''interconnected'' to be allowed to fail at
a time when financial markets were extremely fragile.
However, this lesson had not been learnt in full. When
in September last year, troubled Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc., the fourth largest investment bank on Wall Street
came to the table with requests for support, it was
refused the same. The refusal of the state to take over
the responsibility of managing failing firms was supposed
to send out a strong message. Not only was Lehman forced
to file for bankruptcy, but a giant like Merrill Lynch
that had also notched up large losses due to sub-prime
related exposures decided that it should sort matters
out before there were no suitors interested in salvaging
its position as well. In a surprise move, Bank of America
that was being spoken to as a potential buyer of Lehman
was persuaded to acquire Merrill Lynch instead, bringing
down two of the major independent investment banks on
Wall Street.
This was, however, only part of the problem that Lehman
left behind. The other major issue was the impact its
bankruptcy would have on its creditors. Citigroup and
Bank of New York Mellon were estimated to have an exposure
to the institution that was placed at upwards of a staggering
$155 billion. A clutch of Japanese banks, led by Aozora
Bank, were owed an amount in excess of a billion. There
were European banks that had significant exposure. And
all of these were already faced with strained balance
sheets. Soon trouble broke in banking markets with a
spurt of bank failures seeming inevitable. Though indications
of this problem emerged at least a year-and-a-half ago,
what was surprising was that the full import of the
problem at hand was not recognized. In the US, and elsewhere
in the world, the problem confronting the banks was
seen as two-fold: ensuring adequate access to liquidity
so that they are not victims of a run; and, cleaning
up their balance sheets by writing off or getting rid
of their bad assets.
In what followed, central banks pumped huge amounts
of liquidity into the system and reduced interest rates.
In the US, the Federal Reserve offered to hold the worthless
paper that the banks had accumulated and provide them
credit at low interest rates in return. But the problem
would not go away. By then every institution suspected
that every other institution was insolvent and did not
want to risk lending. The money was there but credit
would not flow through the pipe with damaging consequences
for the financial system and for the real economy.
It was at this point that it was realised that what
needed to be done was to clear out the bad assets with
the banks. Among the smart ideas thought up for the
purpose was the notion of splitting the system into
‘good' and ‘bad' banks. If a set of bad banks could
be set up with public money, and these banks acquired
the bad assets of the banks, the balance sheets of the
latter, it was argued, will be repaired. The bad banks
themselves can serve as asset reconstruction corporations
that might be able to sell off a part of their bad assets
as the good banks get about their business and the economy
revives.
This idea missed the whole point, because it did not
take account of the price at which the bad assets were
to be acquired. If they were acquired at par or more,
it would amount to blowing taxpayers' money to save
badly behaved bank managers, since the assets were likely
to be worth a fraction of what they were actually bought
for. On the other hand, if some scheme such as a reverse
auction (or one in which sellers bid down prices to
entice the buyer to acquire their assets) is used to
dispose of the bad assets, then the prices of these
assets would be extremely low and good banks would incur
huge losses which they would have to write down leading
to insolvency. The only way out it appeared was if these
banks just wrote down their assets and were saved from
bankruptcy by the government through recapitalisation
or the injection of equity capital into them. Additional
equity injection leading to nationalization seemed unavoidable.
What is more as the dimensions of the problem needing
resolution became clear the extent of the nationalization
required seems substantial.
In its update to the Global Financial Stability Report
for 2008, issued on January 28, 2009, the IMF has estimated
the losses incurred by US and European banks from bad
assets that originated in the US at $2.2 trillion. Barely
2 months back it had placed the figure at $1.4 trillion.
Loss estimates seem to be galloping and we are still
counting. The IMF estimates that these banks that have
already obtained much support including capital would
need further new capital infusions of around half a
trillion. With that much and perhaps more capital going
in, public ownership of banking would be near total
in some countries. By late January 2006, Bloomberg estimates,
banks had written down $792 billion in losses and raised
$826 billion in capital, of which $380 billion came
from governments.
Chart
1 >>
Though the problem originated in the US, nationalization
occurred first in Iceland (where the need was immediate),
in Ireland starting with Anglo Irish Bank and expected
to be necessary in the case of Bank of Ireland and Allied
Irish Banks and in the UK were Royal Bank of Scotland
and Lloyds Group are now under dominant public control,
and others are expected to follow. However, even here
the willingness to declare the process as nationalization
is still lacking. In the US, the government initially
found ways of providing capital but not demanding a
say. But this proved disastrous, since it became clear
that old habits of managers used to being paid to speculate
die hard. Huge salaries and bonuses were being paid
out of money meant to save dying banks. So intervention
became necessary and is part of the plank being espoused
by President Barack Obama. Yet, when the threat of inevitable
nationalization resulted in a sharp fall in the share
values of the likes of Bank of America and Citigroup,
that are surviving on government money, White House
spokesman Rober Gibbs told reporters that ''The President
(Barack Obama) believes that a privately held banking
system regulated by the government'' is what the US
should have.
What is missed is that the inevitability of public ownership
that is now being recognized stems from a deeper source.
The problems that drove the system to inevitable nationalization
arose because of the transition in banking from a structure
that was based on a ''buy-and-hold'' strategy (where
credit assets were created and held to maturity) to
one that relied on a ''originate-and-sell'' strategy
in which credit risk was transferred through a layered
process of securitisation that created the so-called
toxic assets. The deregulation of banking was crucial
for this transition. It permitted securitisation and
also allowed a geographically extensive banking system
to create credit assets far in excess of what would
have been the case in a more regulated system, so that
they could be packaged and sold. The role of banks as
mere agents for generating the credit assets that could
be packaged into products meant that risk was discounted
at the point of origination, since banks felt that they
were not holding the risks even while they were earning
commissions and fees. This transition was made possible
by the process of deregulation that began in the 1980s
and culminated in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Modernization
of Act of 1999, which completely dismantled the regulatory
structure and the restrictions on cross-sector activity
put in place by Glass-Steagall in the 1930s.
Why did deregulation occur, when a system regulated
by Glass-Steagall and all it represented served the
US well during the Golden Age of high growth in the
US? It did because implicit in the regulatory structure
epitomised by Glass -Steagall was the notion that banks
would earn a relatively small rate of return defined
largely by the net interest margin, or the difference
between deposit and lending rates adjusted for intermediation
costs. Thus, in 1986 in the US, the reported return
on assets for all commercial banks with assets of $500
million or more averaged about 0.7 per cent, with the
average even for high-performance banks amounting to
merely 1.4 per cent. This outcome of the regulatory
structure was, however, in conflict with the fact that
these banks were privately owned. What Glass-Steagall
was saying was that because the role of the banks was
so important for capitalism they had to be regulated
in a fashion where even though they were privately owned
they would earn less profit than other institutions
in the financial sector and private institutions outside
the financial sector. This amounted to a deep inner
contradiction in the system which set up pressures for
deregulation. Those pressure gained strength during
the inflationary years in the 1970s when tight monetary
policies pushed up interest rates elsewhere but not
in the banks. The result was a flight of depositors
and a threat to the viability of banking which was used
to win the deregulation that gradually paved the way
for the problems of today. What became clear was that
Glass-Steagall type of regulation of a privately owned
banking system was internally contradictory. It would
inevitably lead to deregulation. But as we know now
such deregulation seems to inevitably lead back to nationalisation.
So what capitalism needs for its proper functioning
is a publicly owned banking system. That implies that
the current move to ''inevitable'' nationalisation cannot
be just ''temporary'' as Greenspan wants it to be.
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