Title: Chapter 14 The Banking Industry
1Chapter 14The Banking Industry
2Origins
- Unique structure of US banking traces to
Americas unique political culture, especially
early on. - America wasand remainsextremely decentralized,
implying strong local control. - Populism has also often been a strong political
current. - Result The US banking industry consisted of a
great many independent banks until recently.
3A Brief History 1789-1836
- With the Bank of England as his model, Alexander
Hamilton persuaded Congress to establish the
First Bank of the United States in 1791. - Congress allowed it to lapse in 1811.
- The drubbing taken in the War of 1812 convinced
Congress and Madison to establish the Second Bank
of the United States in 1816. - Andrew Jackson killed it in the 1830s.
4Brief History Free Banking
- Legislatures chartered banks in most states until
the 1830s. - Some consequences
- Corruption
- Scarcity of banks and monopoly
- In reaction, free banking spread beginning in the
late 1830s. - Free banking meant virtually free entry of
state-chartered banks.
5Brief History National Banking
- The need to service a large Civil-War debt led to
the National Banking Act of 1863. - It established a national banking system and
eliminated the issue of banknotes by state banks. - To avoid being driven from business, state banks
invented checkable deposits, a close substitute
for banknotes. - National banks soon followed suit.
6Brief History Federal Reserve
- Banks were prone to failure because of
fragmentation among thousands of independent
banks. - The failure of a few banks would turn into
system-wide payments crises. - After the severe payments crisis of 1907,
Congress created the Federal Reserve System in
1913. - Its ostensible purpose was to serve as a lender
of last resort (LOLR). - But populism fragmented it into 12
semi-autonomous Federal Reserve Banks, which
failed to serve as a LOLR during the payments
crises of 1930-1933. - Congress responded by enacting deposit insurance.
71. Chartering
- New banks must obtain charters.
- Who charters whom
- The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC) national banks - State banking authorities state banks
- Chartering authorities require banks to have
sufficient equity as well as managers who are
competent and honest. - With only that requirement from about 1840 to
1929, gt 25,000 banks existed in 1929.
82. Chartering
- Entry was almost eliminated between 1933 and the
early 1960s. - Would-be entrants had to show that they were
needed, a requirement that few could meet. - This regulation sought to increase bank
profitability, a goal largely unmet in practice. - Beginning in the 1960s and especially after 1980,
entry became much easier. - Chartering authorities require call reports,
which report assets, liabilities, earnings, and
activities.
9Examination
- Who examines and regulates whom
- OCC national banks
- The Fed member state banks
- FDIC insured nonmember state banks
- State banking authorities uninsured state banks
- How often examined
- Small and mid-sized national banks and state
member banks at least once every 18 months - Large national banks several times a year
- Mega national banks essentially continually
- Nonmember state banks at least once every three
years - The Fed also regulates all bank-holding
companies, corporations that own banks.
10CAMELS Ratings
- Examiners make unexpected trips to banks to check
whether they are complying with the regulations. - They grade on a scale of 1 (best) to 5 (worst)
- C capital adequacy
- A asset quality
- M management competence and honesty
- E earnings
- L liquidity
- S sensitivity to market risk
11How Is CAMELS Used?
- Banks with middling overall ratings are
encouraged to improve. - Banks with bad ratings receive cease and desist
orders and may be ordered to stop paying
dividends, to raise more equity, etc. - Banks with very bad ratings are taken over and
their managements are fired or even jailed. - Other bank-like institutions have their own
chartering authorities, examiners, deposit
insurers, and regulators.
12Why Is Banking Regulated?
- There are economic and non-economic reasons.
- The economic reasons stem from three key
characteristics of banking - Asymmetric information
- Interconnectedness of banks through the payments
system - The role of banks in operating the payments system
13Asymmetric Information
- Banks are not transparent to depositors.
- They make their loans using information that only
they possess. - Depositors cant be sure whether their bank is
sound with NW gt 0 or unsound with NW lt 0 - So rumors that a specific bank is unsound may set
off a run against it. - Why keep money in Bank I if rumor says its
unsound?
14Implications for US History
- This result of asymmetric info was greatly
exacerbated before deposit insurance was enacted. - Banks were often small and poorly diversified,
making NW lt 0 much more likely than in other
countries. - Deposit insurance since 1934 hasnt eliminated
asymmetric information but rather changed who
must worry about it FDIC rather than depositors. - A key reason for regulation is to protect
taxpayers.
15Interconnectedness of Banks
- The payments system tightly interconnects banks
because it leads them to owe large amounts to
each other even though little is actually owed in
net. - As a result, failure of several banks or any very
large bank strains the system. - Example Bank A owes 50 B to Bank B, which owes
50 B to Bank C, which owes 50 B to bank A. - Failure of any one brings down all three.
16Historical Relevance
- Agricultural distress once led many small and
poorly diversified rural banks to fail and
induced runs on many others. - Stock market crashes sometimes led to the failure
of a large NYC bank, which then brought down many
other banks. - The interconnectedness of banks contributed to
contagion, the tendency of depositors to run on
banks if they perceived any to be unsound.
17Efficiency of the Payments System
- An efficient payments system and financial system
more generally contributes to the well-being of
the entire economy. - System-wide bank runs impair the efficiency of
the payments system. - The economy can suffer recessions in the short
run and reduced productivity in the long run. - These effects can be very large.
181. Local Bank Runs
- A run on a single sound bank creates no
difficulties. - The currency withdrawn from one bank (Bank I) is
deposited in another bank (Bank II). - Lending contracts at Bank I and expands at Bank
II, and total lending is unchanged.
Bank II
A
L
Bank I
A
L
Loans 200 M
Loans -200M
Deposits -200 M
Deposits 200 M
192. Local Bank Runs
- Local runs on unsound banks also cause only local
problems. - The bank simply fails, depositors lose some
wealth, and life goes on. - The failure of such a bank is no different in
kind from the failure of any other business. - And bailing it out makes no more sense than
bailing out other failing businesses.
20System-Wide Liquidity Risk
- The banking system is always illiquid because it
cant increase the currency available for
depositors. - This holds even when every bank is solvent (NW ?
0). - Also when depositors try to withdraw currency
from the banking system, many banks may become
insolvent (NW lt 0).
21Example Initially
- Suppose the banking system has deposits of 950B,
loans of 1000B, and NW 50 B (solvent.) - The public then withdraws 100B in currency from
the banks.
A
L
Deposits 950 B NW 50
Loans 1000 B
22Example Result
- The only way for the banks to obtain currency is
to call bank loans away from the public. - Interest rates increase because the supply of
loans is lower. - The value of the banks remaining loans decreases
to, say, 840 B. NW -10 B - Depositors now have an excellent reason to run on
the banks insolvency.
A
L
Deposits 850 B NW -10 B
Loans 840 B
23Example Lender of Last Resort
- A lender of last resort can make the banking
system liquid. - It just prints up 100 B in currency and lends it
to the banks. - Eventually, when panic subsides and the currency
is redeposited, the banks can repay the 100 B in
loans.
A
L
Loans 1000 B
Deposits 850 B Loan from Fed 100 B NW 50 B
A
L
Loans 1000 B
Deposits 950 B NW 50B
24Case Study 9/11 and Its Aftermath
- The Fed lent banks about
- 50 B on 9/11
- 110 B on 9/12
- 120 B on 9/13
- 110 B on 9/14
- 50 B on 9/17
- Thereafter, its lending returned to normal.
- Its decisive action headed off panic in the
financial system.
251. History of Deposit Insurance
- The Fed failed to serve as a lender of last
resort in 1930-1933, allowing 10,000 of 25,000
banks to fail. - So Congress enacted deposit insurance to reduce
the need for a lender of last resort. - Deposit insurance was provided by
- Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to
commercial banks - Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation
(FSLIC) to savings institutions
262. History of Deposit Insurance
- Virtually all banks and savings institutions
bought deposit insurance. - With deposit insurance came increased regulation
of what the banks could do and increased
regulatory supervision. - Deposit insurance seemed to work well through the
1960s. - In the 1980s, FSLIC collapsed and FDIC nearly
collapsed because of the high interest rates of
the 1970s and 1980s, the computer revolution, and
relaxed regulation.
273. History of Deposit Insurance
- Banks and especially savings and loans failed in
large numbers and previously accumulated reserves
were quickly exhausted. - In the early 1990s, Congress appropriated about
200 B to bail out the insurance funds. - The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA) restructured the
regulation. - FDICIAs goal was to restrain moral hazard and
the resulting excessive risk-taking by banks and
savings institutions.
284. History of Deposit Insurance
- Following FDICIA, regulators first emphasized
capital adequacy. - Capital adequacy by itself does not restrain
risk-taking because banks can also decide how
risky their assets are. - Regulators must therefore monitor how risky bank
assets are. - Later under the BASEL I Agreement, regulators
here and abroad began requiring more equity, the
riskier a banks assets are.
29FDIC and Bank Failures
- If a bank becomes insolvent (NW lt 0), FDIC deals
with its failure in one of two ways - Liquidation close it, fire its managers, pay
off its insured depositors, sell its assets, use
the bankruptcy courts - Purchase and assumption buy it for any
remaining NW, arrange its merger with another
bank, sweeten the deal if necessary
30Pros and Cons of Liquidation
- Pros
- Costs FDIC less
- Reduces moral hazard because uninsured liability
holders know they can lose and managers know that
they can be fired or even jailed - Cons
- May disrupt the financial system
- May cause bank runs among uninsured liability
holders if contagion is possible
31FDIC Behavior
- It usually liquidates small and mid-sized banks.
- It always does so if managers behaved
inappropriately. - It always uses purchase and assumption for large
banks to prevent contagion. - So large banks are said to be too big to fail.
- In effect, the uninsured liability holders of big
banks are fully insured.
32FDIC and Mega Banks
- Moral hazard is a severe problem for large banks
because they are too big to fail. - With mega banks, even purchase and assumption is
impractical since they are much too complex for
outsiders to understand. - It is likely that the Fed and FDIC would be stuck
bailing them out while retaining most of the
existing management intact.
33Basel II
- The Basel II Agreement regulates mega banks by
requiring the soundness of their governance and
internal controls on exposure to risk. - For example, the Fed and OCC require mega banks
to provide the computer code used to manage
trading and loan assessment. - The staffs of the Fed and OCC then evaluate the
code and require changes if it controls
risk-taking inadequately.
34More on Basel II
- The Fed and OCC evaluate the exposure to risk
using VaR (value at risk). - Each mega bank is required to simulate the
outcomes from a wide range of scenarios. - If very few of the scenarios wipe out the banks
net worth, it is considered to be well run. - If not, the regulators take action against it.
35Basel IIs Contributionto the Financial Crisis
- Basel II required commercial banks to mark
mortgage-backed securities to market i.e. value
them at their current market price. - When their holdings of securities backed by
subprime mortgages became very illiquid, they had
to mark down these securities to much less than
their fundamental values. - The resulting fall in their equity put pressure
on them to sell assets, further fueling the
crisis.
36Contribution of the SEC
- The Securities and Exchange Commission required
corporations to also mark their marketable
securities to market. - Investment banks therefore found themselves in
the same bind as commercial banks. - American Insurance General was also driven to the
verge of bankruptcy by mark-to-market.
37Branching Restrictions
- Until about 1980, virtually all banks were unit
banks because most states forbade branching. - Some states allowed limited branching, and a few
like California permitted state-wide branching. - The McFadden Act of 1927 also prohibited
bank-holding companies from owning banks in more
than one state. - Since 1980, most branching restrictions have been
swept away. - The Riegel-Neal Interstate Banking and Branching
Efficiency Act of 1994 completed this process.
38Scope of Banking Activities
- The Glass-Steagall Act forbade banks to engage in
many activities that had been widespread before
1933. - Large banks had often been both commercial and
investment banks e.g. J. P. Morgan Company. - Glass-Steagall was a reaction to the go-go 1920s
and the Great Depression that followed. - Glass-Steagall was long realized to have been a
mistake. - The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Services
Modernization Act of 1999 repealed it, thereby
enhancing the efficiency of the financial system.
39Universal Banking
- Many other countries lack extensive financial
markets. In such countries, banks are central. - Some of these countries (e.g. Germany) have
universal banks, which take large equity
positions in firms and often put representatives
on boards of directors. (US banks also did so
before 1933 e.g. J P Morgan.) - So universal banks have tight links with
businesses. - The banks in many other countries also have tight
links with businesses e.g., Japan, South Korea
and China - These links may reduce information costs and
increase the efficiency of the financial system.
40Crony Capitalism
- Tight bank-business links have, however, a dark
side crony capitalism. - Without well-functioning financial markets, such
links can become not only tight but also
incestuous and corrupt. - Under crony capitalism, banks channel funds to
their favored borrowers, leaving others with too
little funding. - Crony capitalism has been a serious problem in
Thailand, Malaysia, South Korea, Indonesia, China
and to some extent Japan.