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2009 – The
Year
Monetarism Enters Bankruptcy
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: Bankrupt
Monetarism
Part II: Central Banking
Practices Monetarism at the
Expense of the Economy
Part III: Stress
Tests for Banks
This article appeared in AToL on May 13, 2009 as Credulity
Caught in Stress Test
The Treasury’s
stress tests for US banks in April 2009 was designed to ensure that US
banks
have sufficient capital to withstand worst case scenarios in an
economic
contraction. Ten months earlier, on July 16, 2008, and a full year
after the global credit crunch had
imploded in July 2007, the federal banking and thrift agencies (The
Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System; the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation; the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and; the
Office of
Thrift Supervision) had issued a final guidance outlining the
supervisory
review process for the banking institutions that implement the new
advanced
capital adequacy framework known as Basel II which establishes an
international standard for
bank capital requirements.
Basel II is the second
of the Basel Accords, which are recommendations on banking laws and
regulations
issued by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision of the Bank of
International Settlements (BIS). Basel II, initially published in June
2004
during the global credit bubble, aims to create an international
standard that
banking regulators can use when creating regulations about how much
capital
banks need to put aside to guard against the types of financial and
operational
risks banks face in recurring financial crises.
I warned in AToL
on May 9, 2007, two months before the credit
crisis:
The historical pattern
of a
10-year rhythm [1987, 1997 and 2007] of cyclical financial crises looms
as a
menacing storm cloud over the financial markets. …
Now in 2007, a looming debt-driven financial crisis
threatens to put an
end to
the decade-long liquidity boom that has been generated by the circular
flow of
trade deficits back into capital-account surpluses through the conduit
of US
dollar hegemony.
While the specific details of these recurring
financial crises are not
congruent, the fundamental causality is similar. Highly leveraged
short-term
borrowing of low-interest currencies was used to finance high-return
long-term
investments in high-interest currencies through “carry trade” and
currency
arbitrage, with projected future cash flow booked as current profit to
push up
share prices.
In all these cases, a point was reached where the
scale tipped to
reverse the
irrational rise in asset prices beyond market fundamentals. Market
analysts
call such reversals "paradigm shifts". One such shift was a steady
fall in the exchange value of the US dollar, the main reserve currency
in
international trade and finance, to cause a sudden market meltdown that
quickly
spread across national borders through contagion with selling in strong
markets
to try to save hopeless positions in distressed markets.
There are ominous
signs that such a point is now again
imminent, in
fact
overdue, in globalized markets around the world
Under Basel II, a bank needs to provide an estimate of the exposure
amount for each transaction, commonly referred to as Exposure at
Default (EAD),
in the bank’s internal systems. All these loss estimates should seek to
fully
capture the risks of an underlying exposure. In general, EAD can be
seen as an estimation of the extent to which a
bank
may be exposed in the event and at the time of a counterparty default.
It is a
measure of potential exposure as calculated by a Basel Credit Risk
Model for
the period of one year or until maturity whichever is sooner. Based on
Basel
Guidelines, EAD for loan commitments measures the amount of the
facility that
is likely to be drawn if a default occurs. The contagion effect of a
chain of
EAD is a key component that makes loss estimates difficult to pin down.
Loss Given Default (LGD) is the fraction of Exposure at
Default (EAD) that will not be recovered following default. LGD is
facility-specific because such losses are generally understood to be
influenced
by key transaction characteristics such as the presence of collateral
and the
degree of subordination. Theoretically,
LGD is calculated in different ways, but the most common is Gross LGD,
where
total losses are divided by EAD. Another method is to divide Losses by
the
unsecured portion of a credit line where security covers a portion of
EAD. This
is known as Blanco LGD. If collateral value is zero in the last case
then
Blanco LGD is equivalent to Gross LGD. Different types of statistical
methods
can be used to do this.
Gross LGD is preferred amongst academic economists because
of its simplicity and because academics only have access to bond market
data,
where collateral values often are unknown, uncalculated or irrelevant.
Blanco
LGD is preferred amongst some market practitioners (banks) because
banks often
have many secured facilities, and banks would like to decompose their
losses
between losses on unsecured portions and losses on secured portions due
to
depreciation of collateral quality. The latter calculation is also a
subtle
requirement of Basel II, but most banks are not sophisticated enough in
their
risk management at this time to make those types of calculations
internally.
LGD is a
common parameter in Risk Models and also a parameter used in the
calculation of
Economic Capital or Regulatory Capital under Basel II for a banking
institution. This is an attribute of any exposure on the bank’s client.
Under Basel
II, banks and other financial institutions are recommended to calculate
Downturn LGD, which reflects the losses occurring during a ‘Downturn’
in a
business cycle for regulatory purposes. Downturn LGD is interpreted in
many
ways, and most financial institutions that are applying for Internal
Rating
Base (IRB) approval under BIS II often have differing definitions of
what
Downturn conditions are. One definition is at least two consecutive
quarters of
negative growth in real GDP. Often, negative growth is also accompanied
by a
negative output gap in an economy (where potential production exceeds
actual
demand).
The calculation of LGD or Downturn LGD poses significant challenges to
modelers and practitioners. Final resolutions of defaults can take many
years
and final losses, and hence final LGD, cannot be calculated until all
of this
information is ripe. Furthermore, practitioners are in want of data
since BIS
II implementation is rather new and financial institutions may have
only just
started collecting the information necessary for calculating the
individual
elements that LGD is composed of: EAD, direct and indirect Losses,
security
values and potential, expected future recoveries.
Another challenge, and maybe the most significant, is the fact that the
default definitions between institutions vary. This often results in a
so-called differing cure-rates or percentage of defaults without
losses.
Calculation of LGD (average) is often composed of defaults with losses
and
defaults without. Naturally, when more defaults without losses are
added to a
sample pool of observations, LGD becomes lower. This is often the case
when
default definitions become more ‘sensitive’ to credit deterioration or
‘early’
signs of defaults. When institutions use different definitions, LGD
parameters
therefore become non-comparable.
Mark-to-Market as Crisis Detonator
The central issue over capital adequacy related to risk
exposure centers around the controversy of asset values mark-to-model
against
that mark-to-market. Basel II was instituted because mark-to-model
value
was considered inoperative, devoid of reality. Thus mark-to-market
value was
required at the close of each trading day. Yet mark-to-market is
generally
recognized as the detonator of the current credit crisis. Now, the
Fed’s stress
tests for banks have switched back to mark-to-model to calculate the
capital
adequacy of banks.
The differential between the two values in a market failure
can be more than total for assets to become “toxic” because of the
interconnectedness of structured finance instruments. In other words, a
bank
exposed to counter-party default on one single credit instrument can
affect the mark-to-market value of all other credit instruments in it
possession
and
also those held by other institutions, even those on which it had no
direct
counter-party exposure.
The seemingly innocuous rise in default rate of the riskier
unbundled tranches of an inverted credit pyramid can affect the credit
ratings
of the upper “safe” tranches to cause the whole credit superstructure
to
crumble much like the way the dead weight of falling upper floors of
the
collapsing World Trade Towers in lower Manhattan caused the collapse of
the
lower floors in an unstoppable cascade of mounting structural failures.
Credit Default Swaps
The banking system in recent decades has morphed into one
that is inherently risk-infested on account of its precarious
dependence on
unimpaired counterparty credibility. The shadow banking system has
deviously
evaded the reserve requirements of the traditional regulated banking
regime and
institutions and has promoted a chain-letter-like inverted pyramid
scheme of
escalating leverage, based in many cases on nonexistent reserve
cushion. This
was revealed by the AIG collapse in 2008 caused by its insurance on
financial
derivatives known as credit default swaps (CDS).
AIG Financial Products (AIGFP), based in London
where the regulatory regime was less restrictive, took advantage of AIG
statue
categorization as an insurance company and therefore not subject to the
same
burdensome rules on capital reserves as banks. AIG would not need to
set aside
anything but a tiny sliver of capital if it would insure the
super-senior risk
tranches of CDOs in its heoldings. Nor was the insurer likely to face
hard
questions from its own regulators because AIGFS had largely fallen
through the
interagency cracks of oversight. It was regulated by the US Office for
Thrift
Supervision, whose staff had inadequate expertise in the field of
cutting-edge
structured finance products.
AIGFP insured bank-held super-senior risk CDOs in the broad
CDS market. AIG would earn a relatively trifle fee for providing this
coverage
– just 0.02 cents for each dollar insured per year. For the buyer of
such
insurance, the cost is insignificant for the critical benefit,
particularly in
the financial advantage associated with a good credit rating, which the
buyer
receives not because the instruments are “safe” but only that the risk
was
insured by AIGFP. For AIG, with 0.02 cents multiplied a few hundred
billion
times, it adds up to an appreciable income stream, particularly if no
reserves
are required to cover the supposedly non-existent risk. Regulators were
told by
the banks that a way had been found to remove all credit risk from
their CDO
deals.
Systemic Risk and Credit Rating
Thus there were two dimensions to the cause of the current
credit crisis. The first was that unit risk was not eliminated, merely
transferred to a larger pool to make it invisible statistically. The
second,
and more ominous, was that regulatory risks were defined by credit
ratings, and
the two fed on each other inversely. As credit rating rose, risk
exposure fell
to create an under-pricing of risk. But as risk exposure rose, credit
rating
fell to exacerbate further rise of risk exposure in a chain reaction
that
detonated a debt explosion of atomic dimension.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Fed
Reserve jointly allowed banks with CDS insurance to keep super-senior
risk
assets on their books without adding capital because the risk was
insured.
Normally, if the banks held the super-senior risk on their books, they
would
need to post 8% capital. But capital could be reduced to one-fifth the
normal
amount (20% of 8%, meaning $160 for every $10,000 of risk on the books)
if
banks could prove to the regulators that the risk of default on the
super-senior portion of the deals was truly negligible, and if the
securities
being issued via a collateral debt obligation (CDO) structure carried a
Triple-A credit rating from a “nationally recognized credit rating
agency”,
such as Standard and Poor’s rating on AIG.
With CDS insurance, banks then could cut the normal $800
million capital for every $10 billion of corporate loans on their books
to just
$160 million, meaning banks with CDS insurance can loan up to five
times more
on the same capital. The CDS-insured CDO deals could then bypass
international
banking rules on capital. To correct
this bypass is a key reason why the government wanted to conduct stress
tests
on banks in 2009 to see if banks need to raise new capital in a
Downward Loss
Given Default.
CDS contracts are generally subject to mark-to-market
accounting that introduces regular periodic income statements to show
balance
sheet volatility that would not be present in a regulated insurance
contract.
Further, the buyer of a CDS does not even need to own the underlying
security
or other form of credit exposure. In fact, the buyer does not even have
to
suffer an actual loss from the default event, only a virtual loss would
suffice
for collection of the insured notional amount. So, at 0.02 cents to a
dollar (1
to 10,000 odd), speculators could place bets to collect astronomical
payouts in
billions with affordable losses. A $10, 000 bet on a CDS default could
stand to
win $100,000,000 within a year. That was exactly what many hedge funds
did
because they could recoup all their lost bets even if they only won
once in
10,000 years.
Default Correlation
Modeling the risks involved in credit derivatives revolved
around the issue of “correlation”, which is the degree to which
defaults within
any given pool of loans might be interconnected vertically.
Statisticians know
that company debt defaults can be contagious within and even beyond
industry
limits. Historical correlations in corporate default and equity prices
are
normally used as a basis to project future correlations. But most of
these
historical correlation models do not include that fact that deregulated
financial globalization has magnified correlation to the degree that
even a
small number of defaults would mushroom into catastrophic events of
too-big-to
fail dimension. Too-big-to-fail then is no longer enterprise specific,
but has
become systemic. This is beginning to finally hit on the consciousness
of
regulators to realize that even small individual mortgage or credit
card
holders have in fact also become too-big-to-fail in a perverse
manifestation of
debt-driven financial democracy.
While margin payments do flow periodically between
counterparties to rebalance changing risk exposures, the special
conduits that
hold CDO contracts insured by CDS are in effect non-regulated banks,
much like
hedge funds, with no requirements to hold reserves against a “Black
Swan” event
or a Minsky Moment that might cause a chain reaction.
A Black Swan event is a large-impact, hard-to-predict and
rare occurrence that deviates beyond what is normally expected
of a
situation. This term was coined by Nassim Nicholas Taleb and
summarized in his 2007 book: The Black Swan.
A Minsky Moment,
named after economist Hyman Minsky (1919-1996), is the point in a
credit cycle when investors develop cash flow
problems due to spiraling debt they had been structurally compelled by
systemic
logic to incur in order to finance irresistible speculative investments
offered
by imbalance between the penalty and reward of risk caused by
mis-pricing of
risk, usually caused by excessively low cost of borrowing. At the point
of a
Minsky Moment, a major sell-off would begin due to the inability to
find
counterparty to bid at the high asking prices previously quoted,
leading to a
sudden and precipitous collapse in market-clearing asset prices and a
sudden,
sharp drop in liquidity. The term Minsky Moment was coined by Paul
McCulley of
PIMCO in 1998 to describe the Russian default that led to the collapse
of hedge
fund LTCM, as worked out by the late Hyman Minsky decades earlier.
According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS),
total outstanding CDS at year end 2007 was $43 trillion, more than half
the
size of the entire asset base of the global banking system. Total
derivatives
amounted to over $500 trillion in notional value, spread out in the
balance
sheets of Special Investment Vehicles (SIVs), Collateralized Debt
Obligations
(CDOs) and other conduits comprising the highly-leveraged shadow
banking
system. July 2007 was the month the credit market imploded.
On July 16, 2008,
a full year after the credit markets failed im July 2007, the federal
banking
and thrift agencies (The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; the Office of the Comptroller of
the
Currency, and; the Office of Thrift Supervision) issued a final
guidance outlining
the supervisory review process for the banking institutions that are
implementing the new advanced capital adequacy framework known as Basel
II. The
final guidance, relating to the supervisory review, aims at helping
banking
institutions meet certain qualification requirements in the advanced
approaches
rule, which had taken effect on April 1, 2008.
Big Payoff for
Lobbying
During 2008, the
financial companies that received bailout money from the Fed and the
Treasury
had spent $114 million on lobbying Congress and political campaign
contributions. These companies received $295 billion in bailout money.
Center
for Responsive Politics Executive Director Sheila Krumholz said of this
development: “Even in the best economic times, you won’t find an
investment
with a greater payoff than what these companies have been getting.”
Ms. Krumholz was
correct that the campaign contribution was a fantastically good
investment for
the donors, but it was by far not the best.
The regulators’ relaxation on bank capital requirements from CDS
insurance beat it by a mile. But the biggest windfall was from lifting
of leverage limits.
Suicidal Leverage Ratios
The net capital rule created by the Security Exchange
Commission (SEC) in 1975 required broker-dealers to limit their
debt-to-net-capital ratio to 12-to-1, and they must issue early
warnings if
they began approaching this limit, and were forced to stop trading if
they
exceeded it, so broker-dealers often kept their debt-to-net capital
ratios much
lower than 12-1. The rule allowed the SEC to oversee broker-dealers,
and
required firms to value all of their tradable assets at market prices.
The rule
applied a haircut, or a discount, to account for the assets’ market
risk.
Equities, for example, had a haircut of 15%, while a 30-year Treasury
bill,
because it is less risky, had a 6% haircut. But a 2004 SEC exemption --
given
only to five big firms -- allowed them to lever up 30 and even 40 to 1.
Ever since the Great Depression of the 1930s, the government
has tried to limit the leverage available to the public in the US
stock market by maintain margin requirements. But regulators, led by
former
chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan, thought financial
innovation
would be hampered, and financial activity driven to unregulated market
overseas, if there were any attempts to impose limits on leverage in
the
unregulated globalized credit and capital markets. After all,
innovation was
viewed as the driving force in US
prosperity. The global financial system embarked on a race to assume
more risk
under a mentality of “if I don’t smoke, somebody else will.”
This brave new approach, which all five qualifying broker-dealers -
Bear
Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan
Stanley -
voluntarily adopted, altered the way the SEC measured their capital.
The five
big firms led the charge for the net capital rule change to promote
financial
innovation, spearheaded by Goldman Sachs, then headed by Henry Paulson,
who two
years later, would leave Goldman to become the Treasury Secretary
in 2006,
and a year later had to deal with the global mess created by high
leverage from
which three of the five qualifying broker-dealers had collapsed.
Using computerized models provided by the five big firms, the SEC,
under its
new Consolidated Supervised Entities (CSE) program, allowed the
broker-dealers
to increase their debt-to-net-capital ratios, sometimes, as in the case
of
Merrill Lynch, to as high as 40-to-1. It also removed the method for
applying
haircuts, relying instead on another math-based computerized model for
calculating risk that led to a much smaller discount.
The SEC justified the less stringent capital requirements by arguing it
was now
able to manage the consolidated entity of the broker-dealer and the
holding
company, which would ensure better management of risk. “The
Commission’s 2004
rules strengthened oversight of the securities markets, because prior
to their
adoption there was no formal regulatory oversight, no liquidity
requirements,
and no capital requirements for investment bank holding companies,” a
spokesman
for the agency rationalized.
In loosening the capital rule, which was supposed to provide a buffer
in
turbulent times, the SEC also decided to rely on the five big firms’
own
computer risk models, essentially outsourcing the job of monitoring
risk to the
banks it was supposed to supervise. Over subsequent years, all would
take
advantage of the looser capital rule to increase leverage.
The leverage ratio - a measurement of how much the companies were
borrowing
compared to their total assets - rose sharply at Bear Stearns, to 33 to
1. In
other words, for every dollar in equity, it had $33 of debt. The ratio
at the
other firms also rose significantly. This advantage enabled the
Big Five
to go on a frenzy of acquisition, expanding risk to the entire
financial
system. The abuse of leverage was particularly severe in the hedge fund
industry in which the Big Five were big players both in proprietary
funds and
as broker-dealer for large hedge funds who in turn were highly
leveraged. (Please see my October 30, 2008 AToL article: Killer
Touch for
Market Capitalism)
Government Bailouts
and Bank Executive Pay
Banks that received
bailout money had paid their top executives nearly $1.6 billion in
salaries,
bonuses, and other benefits in 2007. Benefits included cash bonuses,
stock
options, personal use of company jets and chauffeured cars, home
security
expenditure, country club memberships, and professional financial
management
fees. The Obama administration has
promised to set a $500,000 cap on executive pay at companies that
receive
bailout money, but the proposal would also allow banks to give
unlimited
amounts of stock to these same executives, presumably tying
compensation to
performance, even though much of the recent rise in the price of bank
shares
were the direct result of government bailout. The losses are still
there, only
now the taxpayers are paying for them rather than bank shareholders.
On January 15, 2009, the
out-going Bush/Paulson Treasury issued interim final rules for
reporting and
record keeping requirements under the executive compensation standards
of the
Capital Purchase Program (CPP).
On January 20, 2009, Barack
Obama assumed office as the 44th President of the United States.
On January 21, 2009, the new
Obama/Geithner Treasury announced new regulations regarding disclosure
and
mitigation of conflicts of interest in TARP contracts. It was the first
sign
that Obama’s politics of change might not be what it sounded like to
voters
during the campaign.
On February 5, 2009, the Senate
approved changes to the TARP which prohibit firms receiving TARP funds
from
paying bonuses to their 25 highest-paid employees. The amendment was
proposed
by Christopher Dodd of Connecticut as an amendment to the proposed $900
billion economic stimulus act then
yet to be passed. The fundamental flaw
of TARP, the myth that the transfer of hundreds of billion of toxic
assets from
the private sector into the public sector can make them less toxic, was
left
unchanged while distraction on a minor point on executive bonuses was
held up
as a sign of the new populism.
The Bank Stress
Tests
On February 10,
2009, the newly confirmed but still understaffed Secretary of the
Treasury
Timothy Geithner outlined his plan to use the $300 billion remaining in
TARP
funds, announcing his intention to use $50 billion for foreclosure
mitigation
and to use the rest to help fund private investors to buy toxic assets
from
banks. Nevertheless, this highly anticipated speech coincided with a
nearly 5%
drop in the S&P 500 and was criticized for being short on details.
On February 26, 2009, The Obama
administration, in unveiling details of its financial-rescue plan, laid
out a
dark economic scenario it expects banks to be able to withstand, the
starting
point for what could become a significant new infusion of government
cash into
the banking system.
The first step in the latest effort to shore up the banking
sector would be a series of “stress tests” to assess whether the
largest 19 US
banks can survive a protracted slump. To ensure banks can survive even
if the
unemployment rate rises above 10% and home prices fall by an additional
25%,
the administration will conduct stress tests that will end up requiring
some
institutions to either raise private money or accept a bigger
investment from
the government. The tests assume a 3.3% contraction in GDP in 2009,
which would
be the worst performance since 1946. And it assumes home-price declines
of
another 22% in 2009 and 7% in 2010.
The stress tests assume an unemployment rate averaging 8.9%
in 2009 and 10.3% in 2010. Because that is an average for a whole year,
the
tests envision the jobless rate reaching higher than the average in
some
months. The rate was 7.6% in January. In March the unemployment rate
for California
was 11.2%; for Michigan, it was
12.6%. The Fed said it does not expect the economy to deteriorate as
sharply as
the test scenarios, but it wants to be sure banks would be prepared for
worst
case eventualities. Yet many think the government’s dark scenario was
not dark
enough on both unemployment projections and inflation expectations.
Laurence Meyer,
former Fed governor (1996 – 2002), vice chairman of Macroeconomic
Advisers LLC, a forecasting firm whose models are widely used in
Washington and
New York, told the press that “I don't have any problem believing the
unemployment rate is going to move to 12% or that vicinity.”
Mr. Meyer said regulators had to strike a delicate realistic
balance in designing their tests - a truly grim scenario such as the
economy
contracted by 9% as in 1930, 6% as in 1931 and 13% as in 1932 - it
could force
banks to raise more capital than they are capable of raising, driving
them
further into the government’s arms. In other words, the dreaded N
word. “You don't want to know the answer to some of
the questions you might ask,” Mr. Meyer told the press.
The tests were completed by the end of April but the results
were not released until May 8 because banks were reported to have
disputed the
test results. The Wall Street Journal reported that as a result of
intense
negotiation with banks, the Fed significantly scaled back the size of
the
capital hole facing the nation’s biggest banks. As used in the stress
tests,
Tier 1 common capital ratio is an estimate of capital available to
common
shareholders as a percentage of a bank’s risk-weighted assets.
The Fed has told banks it looks at Tangible Common Equity
(TCE) ratio that measures how much shareholders would have left after
liquidation. TEC ratio shows the equity of a bank minus its preferred
shares,
goodwill and intangible assets as a percentage of tangible assets. The
Fed
wants TCE to be at lest 4% of a bank’s risk-weighted asset.
Citigroup’s TEC was only 1.9%, Bank of
America 2.9% and Wells Fargo 2.9%.
Citigroup, which has already been bailed out three times
amounting to $45 billion, reportedly needs to raise up to $10 billion
of new
capital as a result of the stress tests. Bank of America, which has had
$45
billion in government aid, was found to need $33.9 billion. Regional
banks
Wells Fargo ($13.7 billion) and PNC Financial ($600 million) were also
among
the banks that would need to raise more capital.
Citigroup is believed to be considering a plan to convert more than $15
billion in trust preferred shares – a hybrid of debt and equity – into
common
stock. Since trust preferred shares are held by non-government
investors, this
conversion could enable government authorities to inject further funds
into the
bank without raising its stake beyond the 36% it has already agreed to
buy.
Citigroup would have to force holders of trust preferred shares to
convert them
into common stock, which ranks below those securities and does not pay
a yearly
interest rate, by threatening to stop paying interest if they reject
the offer.
Banks have 30 day after the stress tests to give the
government a recapitalization plan and up to six months to correct any
capital
shortfall. The Fed’s strong preference is for banks in need of fresh
capital to
either raise it through private capital markets or selling assets. For
banks
that cannot raise private capital, they may have to sell to the
government big
stakes in their common equity to meet capital requirements.
Unlike the Bush administration’s effort to pump $250 billion
into banks, the Obama team did not commit a set amount of money to the
effort.
President Obama said after taking office that banks would need
additional funds
beyond the $700 billion rescue package approved by Congress in the fall
of
2008.
The government’s investment would come in the form of
convertible preferred shares, which institutions could choose to
convert into
common equity at any time. Regulators and investors have become
increasingly
concerned about the amount of common stock banks hold, since that is a
bank’s
first line of defense against losses. Regulators said they expect banks
would
convert the shares to common equity as needed to help protect against
losses.
Many economists think most of the nation’s largest banks
will likely have to raise more capital beyond the economic assumptions
that
regulators used. Under some circumstances, the government might end up
owning
majority stakes in banks.
Banks that get a government investment will have to comply
with strict executive-compensation restrictions, including curtailed
bonuses
for top executives and earners. The requirement is shaping up to be a
strong
incentive for banks to repay or reject government investment. The
securities
held by the government will pay a 9% dividend -- higher than the 5%
banks are
required to pay under the Bush-era program -- and banks would be
restricted in
dividend payouts and from buying back their own stock. The securities
would
automatically convert to common stock after seven years. Banks that
have
already sold preferred shares to the government as part of the $250
billion
program would also be able to swap the preferred shares for convertible
securities that can convert to common shares.
Administration officials said the effort is an attempt to
avoid nationalizing banks while making sure institutions can lend
money. While
officials said most banks are considered well capitalized, uncertainty
about
economic conditions is hindering their ability to lend money or attract
private
capital.
Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner sought to discredit
speculation that the government might nationalize banks, saying such a
move is
“the wrong strategy for the country and I don't think it's the
necessary
strategy.” Mr. Geithner, speaking on February 10 on The NewsHour with
Jim Lehrer, said there may be situations where
the government provides “exceptional support” but that the best outcome
is if
the banks “are managed and remain in private hands.”
Private Participation in Government Investment Plan
On March 23, 2009, Treasury
Secretary Geithner announced a Public-Private Investment Program
(P-PIP) to buy
toxic assets from bank balance sheets.
Major US stock market indexes rallied on the day of
the announcement, rising by over 6% with bank stocks leading the
way. P-PIP has two primary programs. The Legacy
Loans Program will attempt to buy residential loans from bank balance
sheets.
The FDIC will provide non-recourse loan guarantees for up to 85% of the
purchase price of legacy loans. Private sector asset managers and the
Treasury
will provide the remaining assets. The second program is called the
legacy
securities program which will buy mortgage backed securities (RMBS)
that were
originally rated AAA and commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS)
and
asset-backed securities (ABS) which are rated AAA. The funds will come
in many
instances in equal parts from the Treasury TARP money, private
investors, and
from loans from the Federal Reserve’s Term Asset Lending Facility
(TALF). The
initial size of the Public-Private Investment Partnership is projected
to be
$500 billion. Economist Paul Krugman has been very critical publicly of
this
program arguing the non-recourse loans lead to a hidden subsidy that
will be
split by asset managers, banks' shareholders and creditors. Banking
analyst
Meridith Whitney, who first raised questions about Citigroup’s
soundness,
argues that banks will not sell bad assets at fair market values
because they
are reluctant to take asset write downs. Removing toxic assets would
also
reduce the volatility of bank stock prices. Because stock is a call
option on
firm assets, this lost of volatility will hurt the stock price of
distressed
banks. Therefore, such banks will only sell toxic assets at above
market
prices.
Four small regional banks on March 30 2009 became the first financial
institutions to
return the federal money they had received under the government’s
banking
bailout, leaving a program that placed restrictions on their executive
compensation and other spending. Northern
Trust of Chicago repaid more than $1.5 billion after a hail of
criticism
from Capitol Hill over its lavish entertainment spending at a golf
tournament
in suburban Los Angeles. Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan
Chase and Bank of America
are among the biggest banks that have said they are aiming to return
the
government’s bailout money to avoid ceilings on executive pay.
On April 19, the
Obama administration outlined the conversion of banks bailouts payments
to
equity share holdings. Top economic advisers determined that the
nation’s banking system could be shored up without having to ask
Congress for
more money in the immediate future. In a significant shift, White House
and
Treasury officials claimed what was left of the $700 billion financial
bailout
fund could be stretched further than they had expected a few months
ago, simply
by converting the government’s existing loans to the nation’s 19
biggest banks
into common stock. The 19 big banks have received more than $140
billion from
the Treasury’s financial rescue fund, and all of that has been in
exchange for
nonvoting preferred shares that pay an annual interest rate of about
5%. Converting those loans to common shares
turned the federal aid into available capital for a bank — and gave the
government a large ownership stake in return.
While the option avoided a confrontation with Congressional
leaders about putting more government money into distressed banks, it
was
nationalization through the back door since the government could become
the
largest shareholder in several of the largest banks.
The Treasury had already negotiated this kind of conversion
with Citigroup and had said it would consider doing the same with other
banks
if needed. The administration said in January that it would alter its
arrangement with Citigroup by converting up to $25 billion of preferred
stock,
which is like a loan, to common stock, which represents equity. After
the
conversion, the Treasury would end up with about 36% of Citigroup’s
common
shares, which come with full voting rights. That would make the
government
Citigroup’s biggest shareholder, effectively nudging the government one
step
closer to nationalizing a major bank. Nationalization, or even just the
hint of
nationalization, is a politically explosive step that White House and
Treasury
officials have fought hard to avoid.
Now the administration appeared to have adopted a policy of
debt to equity to make up for any shortfall in capital that the big
banks might
confront in the near term. Taxpayers would be taking on more risk,
because
there is no way to know now what the common shares might be worth when
it comes
time for the government to sell them.
Treasury officials estimated that they would have about $135
billion left after left after the Treasury completes its $100 billion
plan to
buy toxic assets from banks and after it uses $50 billion to help
homeowners
avoid foreclosure. In practice, it could be more than a year before the
Treasury uses up the entire $100 billion in the toxic-asset programs
and uses
up the $50 billion budgeted for homeowners.
But the biggest way to stretch funds could be to convert
preferred shares to common stock, a strategy that the government seems
prepared
to use on a case-by-case basis.
Ever since the Treasury agreed to restructure Citigroup’s
loans, officials have made it clear that other banks could follow suit
and
convert their government loans to voting shares of common stock as
well. But
the nation’s banks are believed to need far more than that to maintain
enough
capital to absorb all their losses from soured mortgages and other loan
defaults, such as commercial mortgages and credit cards.
The Obama budget for 2010 includes $250 billion in
additional spending to prop up the financial system. Because of the way
the
government accounts for such spending, the budget actually indicated
that the
Administration might ask Congress for as much as $750 billion. The most
immediate expense of up to $75 billion came when federal bank
regulators
completed “stress tests” on the nation’s 19 biggest banks. The change
to common
stock would not require the government to contribute any additional
cash, but
it could increase the capital of big banks by more than $100 billion.
By the Treasury becoming a major shareholder, and perhaps
even the controlling shareholder, in some financial institutions could
lead to
increasingly difficult conflicts of interest for the government, as
policy
makers juggle broad economic objectives with the narrower
responsibility to
maximize the value of their bank shares on behalf of taxpayers.
Those were the very kinds of conflicts that Treasury and Fed
officials were trying to avoid when they first began injecting capital
into
banks in fall 2008.
The effects of the
TARP have been widely debated. The New York Times found that “few
[banks] cited
lending as a priority. An overwhelming majority saw the program as a
no-strings-attached windfall that could be used to pay down debt,
acquire other
businesses or invest for the future.” The report cited several bank
chairmen as
stating that they had no intention of changing their lending practices
to
“accommodate the needs of the public sector” and that they viewed the
money as
available for strategic acquisitions in the future.
May 10, 2009
Next: Government Life Support for the Comatose Auto Sector
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