Title: Understanding the Financial Crisis 20072009
1Understanding the Financial Crisis 2007-2009
- Professor Paul Mizen
- Centre for Finance and Credit Markets, University
of Nottingham
2Background
- Low short-term and long term interest rates
occurred for several reasons - - inflation was low and stable
- - the action by FOMC in response to the dotcom
bubble, 9/11 and the 2001-2 recession reduced
short rates - - the long term rates were low because there was
a global savings glut (Asia, Oil economies)
3Great Moderation in Inflation and Short-term
Interest Rates
Source Bank of England
4Background
- Low interest rates encouraged several trends in
financial markets driven by affordable borrowing
for financial and non-financial sector. - growth of mortgage lending, and esp new segments
such as subprime, Alt-A, Jumbo. - expansion of banks balance sheets using borrowed
funds from wholesale markets rather than deposit
base. - new market for securitised financial products
such as RMBS, ABS, ABCP and move to originate
and distribute model.
5Three-Phase Crisis Phase 1
- The first phase of the crisis occurred from Aug
2007 February 2008, with difficulties at
overstretched financial intermediaries
Countrywide, Dillon Reed (US), IKB (Germany),
Paribas (France), Northern Rock (UK) - Interbank spreads widened,
- asset backed financial products faced dramatic
reduction in traded volumes.
6Three-Phase Crisis Phase 2
- The second phase of the crisis occurred from
March 2008 October 2008, following the near
collapse of Bear Stearns - US Treasury engineered a rescue by JP Morgan,
taking 29bn of assets onto its books - Interbank spreads which had moderated widened
again - Insurance costs in the CDS market increased.
7Three-Phase Crisis Phase 3
- The third phase of the crisis occurred from Oct
2008 present, beginning with bankruptcy at
Lehman Brothers. This was more severe than
earlier phases because - All investment banks were seen as vulnerable and
took steps to merge with stronger partners or
become bank holding companies - Of the top financial companies in the SP 500 by
asset holdings, 47 hold 95 of the assets, 22
required capital injections under the TARP, 33
sought assistance through this or other means. - Interbank spreads widened much further as LIBOR
spiked and official rates were cut very sharply.
8Special Features
- I would like to discuss some special features of
the financial crisis relating to - Securitisation
- Leverage
- Transmission
9Feature 1 Securitisation
- Securitisation allows originators of loans,
mortgages etc to re-package the assets and sell
them to investors. - It is not new but it has become much more
extensive in the last decade. - The process was engineered by Special Purpose
Vehicles (SPVs) which were off-balance sheet
entities of banks. - By pooling assets it was thought risk could be
diversified. - Investors could select tranches with preferred
return-risk combinations.
10Securitisation
- Yields on conventional assets were low, but
returns to investors in structured financial
products were high. Banks bought them through
conduits and Special Investment Vehicles (SIVs). - Demand for ABS, RMBS etc drove arrangers/issuers
to demand more financial assets to securitise. - Brokers and originators sought to expand the
number of mortgages by lowering the thresholds
for loan agreements this caused rapid growth in
sub-prime, Alt-A and jumbo mortgages.
11Subprime mortgage growth
12Securitisation
- The originate and distribute model meant
originators/arrangers did not hold these assets
on their balance sheets - Provided they could re-package the assets in
securitised form, and ratings agencies rated them
at appropriate attachment points investors
would purchase. - Rating agencies drew additional fees to advise
arrangers how to meet attachment points. - If securitised products were rated below these
points they could be combined with other low
rated ABSs to form CDOs or CDOs-squared.
13Securitisation
- Subprime mortgages are more risky than prime
mortgages, and eventually the extent of the risks
behind securitised products became apparent. - Sub-prime mortgages had higher default rates
because borrowers were often given low teaser
rates that would re-set after a period of time. - While house prices were rising, borrowers could
remortgage and attach to a new teaser rate, but
when prices stagnated and then fell, they could
not and defaults increased.
14Delinquency rates on US mortgages
15Sub-prime Mortgage Delinquency Rates by Originator
Source Bank of England, Bloomberg. (a) 60
days delinquent, including foreclosures for loans
originated in 2005 H2.
16Securitisation
- Originate and distribute model did not eliminate
the risks, if anything it concealed them. - There are many places where information can be
lost in the securitisation process. - Incentives of brokers/originators/arrangers are
distorted. - The modelling of risk by ratings agencies that
labelled the products was faulty, assuming house
prices would continue to rise.
17Information Asymmetries
18Securitisation
- Conduits and SIVs funded their purchase of ABSs
with short term paper such as Asset Backed
Commercial Paper (ABCP). - Funding for these products was rolled over
regularly, often weekly or monthly. - When it was know that the collateral assets
behind the ABSs was falling in value, and risks
were increasing, ABCP and ABS issuance dropped.
19Commercial Paper Issuance in the US
20Global Issuance of ABSs
Sources Bank of England, Dealogic and Sifma.
21Securitisation
- In the first phase, it was largely for this
reason that BNP Paribas (France), IKB (Germany),
and Bear Stearns (US) failed to find short-term
funding and needed to be rescued. - Banks used their own funds to finance their
SIVs/Conduits in the short-term but this meant
lending to other banks on the inter-bank market
dried up. LIBOR rose sharply. - Markets providing insurance against default also
showed signs of strain as CDS premia jumped.
22LIBOR-OIS spreads
23Feature 2 Leverage
- A defining feature of the crisis has been the
extent of leverage and its management in the
financial sector - Consider a comparison between the largely passive
household investors and active investors e.g.
investment banks, hedge funds etc
24Passive household investors
- Leverage and asset values are inversely related.
- Take a balance sheet as follows
25Evidence from US
26Active Investors
- Financial institutions actively manage balance
sheets so as to - meet performance measures such as return on
equity for shareholders - ensure they obtain good credit ratings
- meet regulatory requirements
- meet their own value at risk or capital targets
27Active Investors
- Suppose we start with a balance sheet such as
- If asset values rise by 1
- In the first case leverage is 10, but in the
second case leverage falls to 9.18 - If the active investor is seeking to maintain
leverage at 10 then it must increase debt by 9
and purchase securities worth 9
28Active Investors
- In an effort to maintain high leverage active
investors in the financial sector continue to
purchase assets using debt as asset values rise - Provided house prices rise, mortgage backed
assets will also rise in value and if mortgage
backed assets comprise a large share of the
portfolio this will expand the balance sheet on
both sides.
29Active Investors
30Active Investors
31Leverage
- In an effort to maintain high leverage, financial
institutions bought asset backed securities
composed of subprime mortgages, credit card debt,
uncollateralised loans etc - They funded this activity using short-term debt
using the assets as collateral in ABCP markets - 49 of sub-prime mortgages were held by the
leveraged financial sector - This explains how 1.2tr sub-prime mortgages
could exert such a large effect in a 12tr
mortgage market.
32Deleveraging the costs
- Leverage for investment banks was in the region
of 30 at the start of the crisis de-leveraging
has since become a major objective - Greenlaw et al illustrate how deleveraging
affects the available credit in the economy - They begin by creating a balance sheet for
individual banks and aggregating up.
33Greenlaw et al. (2008)
- Individual banks borrow and lend from each other,
but in aggregate (capitals) these cancel - Aggregate debt and equity equal total assets, and
by accounting identities are related to leverage
(H/A), deposit/asset ratio (A/E) and equity
values E.
34Greenlaw et al. (2008)
- Estimated contraction in credit based on losses
covered by a capital injection (k) and decline
in leverage. - Top panel total contraction including to fin.
intermed. (tr) bottom panel contraction for
end-borrowers (tr)
35Feature 3 - Transmission
- Functioning of financial markets has been
impaired by the crisis - Banks that relied on wholesale funding were
unable to obtain it, except at much higher rates - Uncertainty about the value of assets was
largely responsible for illiquidity in inter-bank
markets - Banks sought to conserve cash both to meet needs
of SIVs/conduits and to meet their own funding
needs - Mortgage defaults continued to rise and house
prices fell and the real economic situation
worsened. - Insurers that would have provided cover against
default could not deal with the scale of the
problem.
36Financial Accelerators and Decelerators
- The credit channel is critical to the story.
- In good times, rising asset markets raise balance
sheet valuations supporting new borrowing backed
by collateral. Financial accelerator. - In bad times, this goes into reverse. Falling
asset valuations undermine collateral value and
confidence, reducing access to credit as
suppliers limit lending. Financial decelerator.
37Two Other Factors
- Two other factors compound the problem in the
present crisis - Banks face a funding problem as a) interbank
markets have re-priced the cost of short term
liquidity, b) they attempt to deleverage, and c)
they seek true valuations of their assets. - A deterioration in the real economy reduces other
indicators of creditworthiness such as
profitability, buoyant order book, etc
38A Vicious Circle
- There is a vicious circle
- - Lending cannot be supported due to combination
of liquidity constraints, uncertainty and
economic conditions - Lack of lending adversely affects economic
conditions and uncertainty - CB provisions to increase liquidity and reduce
uncertainty break the cycle but take time. - the depth and length of a world recession
increases uncertainty.
39Policy Responses
- Central Banks
-
- Very quickly central banks converged on a common
short-term approach to the crisis through - the rapid adjustment of short term interest rates
- co-ordinated activity to provide liquidity to the
markets (c.f. swap arrangements between US
Federal Reserve and ECB, SNB, BoE and more
recently Asian central banks). - innovation in liquidity provision to the markets.
-
40Policy Responses
- Innovation in liquidity provision in the United
States (beginning with relatively conventional
and becoming more innovative) - Primary Dealer Credit Facility liquidity
directly to PDs - Term Securities Lending Facility weekly term
lending to offer Treasuries on 1-month loan - TAF (term auction facility) term lending in
fixed amounts via auctions against a wide range
of collateral
41Policy Responses
- ABCP-MMMF-LF (ABCP Money Market Mutual Fund
Liquidity Facility) funding to U.S. banks to
finance high-quality ABCP from MMMFs. - CPFF (Commercial Paper Funding Facility)
purchase of highly rated unsecured and ABCP as a
liquidity backstop to US CP issuers. - MMIFF (Money Market Investor Funding Facility)
provide liquidity to U.S. money market investors - TALF (term asset-based security lending facility)
direct lending facility to holders of ABS
backed by car loans, credit cards, student loans
etc.
42Policy Responses
- Purpose?
- - To provide liquidity at appropriate maturities
to reduce LIBOR-OIS spreads - - To facilitate price discovery in markets that
were not functioning i.e. markets for structured
products ABCP, ABS, RMBS. - Success? Limited.
43Policy Responses
- LIBOR-OIS spreads
- Provided liquidity but did not raise interbank
lending (much) 3m LIBOR-OIS spread peaked at 300
basis points in October 2008 and is currently
still over 150 basis points. Note prior to July
2007 it was 10 basis points. -
- The challenge for central banks is to determine
why wide spreads have persisted.
44Policy Responses
- Pass through of interest rates
- Governments and central banks have urged lenders
to pass on rate cuts, but in the UK and the
euroarea where we can measure pass through more
easily than in the US, there is little evidence
of pass through occurring. - Why the need for direct action? Why have
liquidity operations not been sufficient? - Near zero rates compress loan-deposit spreads
reducing banks ability to recapitalise.
45Policy Responses
- Price discovery.
- FRB Governor, Randy Kroszner suggests price
discovery will be improved with more data on
risks, better models, better understanding of
model properties and more transparency. - It is hard to disagree given that failure of
these aspects has been central in the recent
crisis. - Will they be sufficient or are these markets
unlikely to revive? And how long will it take?
46Issues
- The financial crisis has raised a number of
issues that need to be reconsidered over the
longer term - Asymmetric information
- Regulatory environment
- Standards for ratings agencies
- Accounting standards
47Information Provision
- As Randy Kroszner has said more information is
required. Not just more information structured
products were issued with 300 page prospectuses
full of information. Two issues - recognition that there were information gaps
where the vital details about the risk
characteristics of products, their structure etc
were not passed up the chain - need for regulation of the format of information
to ensure information is accessible and easily
digested. This should cover all kinds of
financial instruments not just structure products.
48Regulation of Banks
- - Competition between financial centres prompted
a move to a regulation-lite (principles-based
regulation) environment which will probably be
revisited - - Banks were not just moving to low regulation
environments by relocating their activities, they
were taking business into areas of low regulation
through use of off-balance sheet entities (SIVs
and conduits). - - There needs to be a review of the treatment of
capital requirements for off-balance sheet
entities as well as commercial and investment
banks
49International Co-ordination
- The Financial Stability Forum (BIS) has mooted
rule changes to capital requirements for - structured products
- warehoused assets awaiting sale
- liquidity provisions for off-balance sheet
entities - This is welcome, but need also to keep informed
of the market innovations to ensure rules
continue to adapt and do this without stifling
innovation. Better regulation, not just more.
50Ratings Agencies
- - Rating agencies will probably face regulatory
changes in the US. At present they defend their
activities as published opinions. - - The SEC in the US confers a nationally
recognised status, but stops short of setting
standards the FSF issues a code of conduct, but
we need more than this. - - In asymmetric information environment
provision of information and its interpretation
is key needs a framework and standards. - - Improvements in the modelling process needed
for rating structured products.
51Fair-Value Accounting
-
- The FASB standard requires fair value accounting
for derivatives, similarly EU since 2005 - market measure of asset values are current not
historical. - true prices are hard to discover when markets
have impaired function. - when prices fall, realised asset values can
trigger sales creating a downward spiral. - As a result
- FASB proposed 3-levels approach level-1 market
inputs level-2 some market inputs level-3 none.
- Alternative is intents approach if intention is
to sell then they should be marked to market, if
for investment then they need not be. - Consider the economic consequences of decisions
on accounting standards, and research their
impact.
52Conclusions
- The crisis has had three distinct phases Aug
07-Feb 08 Mar 08-Sept 08 and Oct 08 present. - There have been three unique features of this
crisis securitisation, leverage and
transmission that have altered the dynamics
compared to previous crises. - Policy has needed to respond quickly to unfolding
events, but some long term issues need to be
addressed at an international level.