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Title: A Trap Baited with 3 Kinds o


1
A Trap Baited with 3 Kinds oTasty Cheese REAL
Causes of Panic 2008
  • Michael C. Munger
  • Director, Philosophy, Politics, and Economics
    Program
  • Duke University

2
Why have private financial corporations in the
first place?
  • Liquidity
  • Prices
  • Intermediation --transactions costs

3
A Question
  • Should we bail out firms that are too big to fail?

4
The Question
  • Should we bail out firms that are too big to fail?

5
The Question
  • Should we bail out firms that are too big to fail?

6
The Question
  • Should we bail out firms that are too big to fail?

7
The Question
  • Should we bail out firms that are too big to fail?

8
Greenspan's Mea Culpa (10/23/08)
  • "Those of us who have looked to the self-interest
    of lending institutions to protect shareholder's
    equitymyself especiallyare in a state of
    shocked disbelief... I still do not fully
    understand why it happened and obviously to the
    extent that I figure where it happened and why, I
    will change my views. If the facts change, I will
    change."

9
Why was Greenspan Wrong?
  • The only reason we need a policy of bailing out
    losers is that we have a policy of bailing out
    losers.
  • Greenspan assumed a limited kind of rationality.
    A "rational" investor would recognize that
    bailouts allow large losers to play with house
    money.

10
Why was Greenspan Wrong?
  • Merton's distinction
  • Investors vs. Customers.
  • FDIC and FSLIC "bail out" customers of bad
    banks. Liquidity crisis protection
  • Moral hazard (I look for high returns, don't care
    if bank is solvent) is real, but manageable.

11
Why was Greenspan Wrong?
  • Merton's distinction needs to be expanded
    Investor/Owners vs. Customers vs. CUSTOMERS.
  • The bailout in 2008-9 was a bailout of
    investorsin other firms that were major
    counterparties in exotic products (derivatives,
    CDS, CDO). Unlike moral hazard for traditional
    depositors, this moral hazard problem is not
    manageable, but unlimited.

12
Some definitions
  • Bailout The use of taxpayer funds either to buy
    assets, or to guarantee the value of assets, of
    insolvent firms.

13
Definitions TBTF
  • Systemically Important Financial Institutions
  • SIFIs will always be bailed out
  • Two features
  • Solvency/Size
  • External effects of failure

14
Problem
  • Systemically Important Financial Institutions
    Externality more important than solvency
  • SIFI status is therefore endogenous. Yes,
    investors lose, but competitive advantage in
    selling to CUSTOMERS
  • My choices to select extra risk, and more
    leverage, make it more likely that my
    counterparties will be bailed out. Larger
    insolvency makes bailout MORE likely

15
Problem
  • The SIFI designation is found in the Dodd-Frank
    legislation, and the language in that law says
  • (a) Liquidation required--All financial companies
    put into receivership under this subchapter shall
    be liquidated. No taxpayer funds shall be used to
    prevent the liquidation of any financial company
    under this subchapter.
  • (b) Recovery of funds--All funds expended in the
    liquidation of a financial company under this
    subchapter shall be recovered from the
    disposition of assets of such financial company,
    or shall be the responsibility of the financial
    sector, through assessments.
  • (c) No losses to taxpayers--Taxpayers shall bear
    no losses from the exercise of any authority
    under this subchapter.

16
Problem
  • Mutual benefit Exists a contract, or agreement,
    under which everyone would be better off. Looks
    like this
  • Governments will not bail out firms
  • Therefore, firms choose best guess risk/leverage
    for portfolios
  • Insolvency reflects bad production choices,
    prices allocate scarce resources accurately

17
Problem
  • The Problem?
  • That agreement, on previous page, is
    unenforceable, because the incentives facing the
    enforcer (the state) are time-inconsistent
  • But we tried. Set up the Fed as a Lender of Last
    Resort
  • Bagehot (1897), Lombard Street.

18
Bagehot's Lender of Last Resort
  • Bail out only for liquidity crises, not equity.
    LLR Regs do 3 things
  • Lend as much money as necessary directly to
    troubled banks
  • At a penalty rate
  • And only for good collateral (the institution
    must be technically solvent)

19
Problem III
  • Lender of last resort Bagehot (1897). But our
    standard is different externalities!
  • The size of the externality has (at best) nothing
    to do with solvency, and may (at worst) be
    correlated with externality
  • In other words, using size of externality causes
    larger externalities

20
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21
Problem is Time Inconsistency
  • "what to do once there is a crisis?"
  • Answer there would be no crises if we could
    credibly commit to a policy of no bailouts.
  • (Might or might not be true, need empirical
    cases)
  • Ann is right, of course, in 2008-9. But what now?

22
  • Here is Circes dire warning to Odysseus (Chapman
    2000 Chap. XII, lines 56-89 emphasis added)
  • First to the Sirens ye shall come, that taint
  • The minds of all men, whom they can acquaint
  • With their attractions. Whomsoever shall,
  • For want of knowledge moved, but hear thcall
  • Of any Siren, he will so despise
  • Both wife and children, for their sorceries,
  • That never home turns his affection's stream,
  • Nor they take joy in him, nor he in them.
  • The Sirens will so soften with their song
  • (Shrill, and in sensual appetite so strong)
  • His loose affections, that he gives them head.
  • And then observe They sit amidst a mead,
  • And round about it runs a hedge or wall
  • Of dead men's bones, their wither'd skins and all
  • Hung all along upon it and these men
  • Were such as they had fawn'd into their fen,And
    then their skins hung on their hedge of bones.

23
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24
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25
Federal Trade Commission, Washington, DC
26
ButDid That Big Horse Get Loose, and Pull Us Off
a Cliff?
  • Youve heard it Worst economic downturn since
    the Great Depression (not remotely true, not even
    as bad as 73, or 81, in terms of GDP decline.)
  • Huge financial losses, bankruptcies of hundreds
    of companies
  • Government bailouts (unprecedented!)
  • Record postwar unemployment (okay, THATs true)
  • WHY a crisis? PricesNo Prices, No Liquidity

27
Document Problem House Prices
28
Stock Prices Volume, 04-09
29
Unemployment Rates, end 2008
30
Unemployment Rates, end 2011
31
Unemployment Rates, 11/074/09 2009
32
Three Deficits
  • Federal
  • Consumer
  • Trade

33
US Federal Debt/capita (07)
34
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35
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36
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37
110 is the Worry Line
38
Consumer Debt
39
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40
Student Loan Debt (US Govt)
41
Trade Deficit
42
Fiscal Deficit and Trade Deficit are CONNECTED
43
Competing Diagnoses
  1. Greed, Especially Predatory Lending
  2. Too Much Government Interference in Housing
    Markets
  3. Too Little Government Regulation of Financial
    Markets
  4. Too Much Debt, Not Enough Saving
  5. Death Throes of a Dying Capitalist / Consumerist
    Order
  6. Space Aliens (The Cordato Thesis)
  7. Normal fluctuations of business cycle,
    exacerbated by policy mistakes. Inherent in
    capitalism

44
The Answer (correct in all unimportant respects)
  • Problem Too much leverage, too little margin
    for error in investment and real estate markets.
  • To take an example, a company with a net worth of
    US 25 billion borrowed 26 times its net worth
    and creates leveraged funds of US 650 billion to
    invest or lend them.
  • When a small portion of the company's
    investments turns bad, as is the norm for the
    industry, the company's capital is under threat.
    To put things in perspective a 3.8 percent
    misjudgment in their books was enough to wipe out
    their shareholders' capital of US 25 billion.
  • And leverage ratios of 40, or 50, to 1 were not
    uncommon. Prudence? No more than 2 to 1. (May
    not be comparable, since derivatives seem
    different from borrowing outright)

45
The Answer (correct in all unimportant respects)
  • The reason this is correct in all unimportant
    respects is that it makes us want to ask WHY?
    WHY DID IDIOTS DO THAT? LETS KILL THEM ALL!
  • Well, even in the U.S. being an idiot is not a
    capital crime. In fact, if you are a BIG idiot,
    the government will bail you out!

46
My View A Trap Set by the US Government, and
Baited with three types of tasty Cheese
47
For the first time in history, you could be
trapped even if you never leave the house. Just
a computer was enough
48
Effective? Unfortunately Each trap could catch
many!
49
Hard Not to Feel Sorry for those poor mice.
  • But blaming markets for the financial crisis is
    a lot like blaming the CHEESE!
  • The Bush Administration, and Clinton
    Administrations, did not realize they were
    setting a trap.
  • But they were. This is a crisis where markets
    ran wild, and where government did nothing to
    control the problem. Government actually made
    things much worse than was necessary.

50
To Repeat A Trap Set by the US Government, and
Baited with three types of tasty Cheese
51
Many Traps--Three Kinds of Cheese, No
Waiting!!!!!
  1. Equity Purchase Subsidies
  2. Artificially Low Interest Rates
  3. Guarantee of Permanent Price Increases

52
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies Homes
  • Home ownership policy of Bush, also Clinton Pay
    low-income people to make a risky investment that
    they would otherwise rationally avoid.
  • Mortgage Agencies treated like public utilities
    (Bernanke, Paulson).
  • Banks/financial entities both threatened, and
    bribed, to make loans that could not possibly be
    paid back.
  • Community Development Block Grants subsidize
    the down payment.

53
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies Homes
  • PROBLEM Behavioral economics--people
    overestimate their prospects, poor people
    shouldn't take too much risk, because they have
    little to fall back on. The natural market
    tendency is too much home ownership, not too
    little.
  • BACKGROUND US Federal Reserve Bank Study on the
    dangers of Home Ownership Subsidies, (Published
    August of 2008!)
  • http//www.richmondfed.org/publications/research/r
    egion_focus/2008/fall/pdf/cover_story.pdf

54
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies Homes
  • Two New York Times Articles
  • I. Fannie Mae Eases Credit To Aid Mortgage
    Lending, By STEVEN A. HOLMES, September 30,
    1999
  • In a move that could help increase home
    ownership rates among minorities and low-income
    consumers, the Fannie Mae Corporation is easing
    the credit requirements on loans that it will
    purchase from banks and other lenders. In
    moving, even tentatively, into this new area of
    lending, Fannie Mae is taking on significantly
    more risk, which may not pose any difficulties
    during flush economic times. But the
    government-subsidized corporation may run into
    trouble in an economic downturn, prompting a
    government rescue similar to that of the savings
    and loan industry in the 1980's.
  • Why do it? Clinton Admin and House Democrats..

55
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies Homes
  • Two New York Times Articles
  • II. New Agency Proposed to Oversee Freddie Mac
    and Fannie Mae, By STEPHEN LABATON, September
    11, 2003
  • The Bush administration today recommended the
    most significant regulatory overhaul in the
    housing finance industry since the savings and
    loan crisis a decade ago...The plan is an
    acknowledgment by the administration that
    oversight of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac -- which
    together have issued more than 1.5 trillion in
    outstanding debt -- is broken.... (Oxley) ''The
    current regulator does not have the tools, or the
    mandate, to adequately regulate these
    enterprises. We have seen in recent months that
    mismanagement and questionable accounting
    practices went largely unnoticed by the Office of
    Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight,'' the
    independent agency that now regulates the
    companies. (CONTINUED ON NEXT SLIDE)

56
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies Homes
  • Two New York Times Articles
  • II. New Agency Proposed to Oversee Freddie Mac
    and Fannie Mae, By STEPHEN LABATON, September
    11, 2003
  • Among the groups denouncing the proposal today
    were the National Association of Home Builders
    and Congressional Democrats who fear that tighter
    regulation of the companies could sharply reduce
    their commitment to financing low-income and
    affordable housing.
  • ''These two entities -- Fannie Mae and Freddie
    Mac -- are not facing any kind of financial
    crisis,'' said Representative Barney Frank of
    Massachusetts, the ranking Democrat on the
    Financial Services Committee. ''The more people
    exaggerate these problems, the more pressure
    there is on these companies, the less we will see
    in terms of affordable housing.''
  • Representative Melvin L. Watt, Democrat of North
    Carolina, agreed.
  • ''I don't see much other than a shell game going
    on here, moving something from one agency to
    another and in the process weakening the
    bargaining power of poorer families and their
    ability to get affordable housing,'' Mr. Watt
    said.

57
1. Equity Purchase Subsidies
  • Government-guaranteed home mortgages, especially
    when a negligible down payment or no down payment
    whatever is required, inevitably mean more bad
    loans than otherwise. They force the general
    taxpayer to subsidize the bad risks and to defray
    the losses. They encourage people to buy houses
    that they cannot really afford. They tend
    eventually to bring about an oversupply of houses
    as compared with other things. They temporarily
    overstimulate building, raise the cost of
    building for everybody (including the buyers of
    the homes with the guaranteed mortgages), and may
    mislead the building industry into an eventually
    costly overexpansion. In brief, in they long run
    they do not increase overall national production
    but encourage malinvestment. (my emphasis)From
    Chapter VI "Credit Diverts Production" in Henry
    Hazlitt's "Economics in One Lesson," first
    published in 1946

58
Artificially Low Interest Rates
59
Another Way of Computing It
60
Artificially Low Interest Rates
  • Why would this matter? Reasons
  • Subsidy to long term borrowing
  • Subsidize risk-taking, lender of last resort
  • ARMs and Balloons Non-standard loans, because
    money was free

61
Guarantee of Permanent Price Increases
  • If there is no risk, people take too many risks.
  • Buy a house, zero down, 4 year lock-in of 4
    interest, then balloon payment or ARM
  • If house was 200,000, and it appreciates at 5
    per year, thats more than 40,000 capital gain.
    You can refinance, with a 40,000 down payment
    and a standard fixed rate mortgage. Its all
    free!
  • And so housing prices went up forever

62
Guarantee of Permanent Price Increases
  • Example Interview with Henry Paulson (T-Sec,
  • 2006-Jan 2009), in 2007
  • Paulson I think what were doing is avoiding a
    market failure that would have forced housing
    values down in a way that was not in the
    investors interest, and in a way that the market
    wasnt intended to work.
  • Interviewer How can you force values down? Why
    arent values finding their natural level?
  • Paulson The way values would go down is, as
    Ive said, youd have market failure. After
    Treasury Department intervention we wont have
    housing prices driven down in ways that distort
    the market.
  • The Guarantee Government SHOULD, and CAN,
    maintain orderly permanent increases in housing
    prices.

63
History Four Influences
  • How did it actually happen?
  • I have said that the trap was baited with
  • Equity purchase subsidies
  • Artificially low interest rates
  • Government guarantee of intervention to prevent
    market failure of housing price decline
  • But how did the trap close? How did it actually
    happen?
  • This is as simple as I can make it. Like any
    simple account, it leaves out a lot of important
    details.
  • But, it captures the primary moving parts of the
    crisis.

64
History 4 Influences, 4 Slides
  • SECURITIZED DEBT
  • Fannie Mae (1938) and Freddy Mac (1970) set up to
    rationalize the mortgage marketSecuritize.
  • At first, worked pretty well. Repackaged and
    commoditized mortgages, so that people with money
    could loan to people who wanted to borrow money.
    Didnt need banks, except as intermediaries.
  • Home ownership is highly illiquid debt more
    extensive loan market, with reselling, allowed
    for increased liquidity among both borrowers and
    lenders. Reduced transactions costs, lower rates
    for borrowers, higher rates for lenders.
  • Problems Risk status endogenous, increase
    asymmetric information about repayment rates

65
History 4 Influences, 4 Slides
  • INCREASE HOME OWNERSHIP, CONFIDENCE IN MANAGEMENT
    OF ECONOMY
  • It seemed home ownership was the stairway to the
    American dream. Encourage home ownership through
    (a) tax subsidies, (b) explicit subsidies, (c)
    pressure banks and regulatory agencies to certify
    subprime loans as conforming. Conforming
    loans require 20 downpayment and 30 cap on
    monthly income. Both relaxed by regulators,
    1994-1997.
  • Problems None, as long as home prices go up.
    But investors either didnt know, or didnt care,
    that regulators were expanding the definition of
    conforming loans. Appeared to be good loans,
    certified by government agencies as being
    investment grade assets.

66
US Homeownership Rates
The new loan products are known as the combo /
ballon loan, and have lower down payment
requirements. Combo loans are the contract of
choice for nearly 40 of new loans, explaining
much of the increase in homeownership rate since
1994.
67
Longer TermHome Owner Rates
68
US Homeownership Rates
At the same point in time, 1997, housing prices
started to skyrocket in real terms. Before,
housing had been a hedge against inflation, but
wealth was built through accumulating equity.
Now, with the new loan regime from the Congress
and the Clinton administration, and Fred and Fan
helping, there was a huge rush of cash chasing
houses.
69
Real Housing Prices
70
Housing Prices vs. CPI
71
Overall, Shiller Index
Not hard to figure out 1997
72
Buying vs. Renting
73
History 4 Influences, 4 Slides
  • COLLATERALIZED DEBT OBLIGATIONS
  • Collaterlized Debt Obligations (CDO)90
    repayment rate means an accurate price for
    bundles, even if no one security could be priced
    accurately.
  • Problems 90 repayment rate is endogenous,
    assumed old regulatory structure. And assumed
    steady increase in home prices. When repayment
    rates plummeted, no idea how to price these very
    complex assets. Imagine what the bankers
    thought they must have been incredulous! We
    can certify these lousy risks as investment
    grade, and then we can sell them in bundles at
    full price to FM/FM, and then bear NO
    responsibility for anything that happens later?
    COOOOOL!

74
History 4 Influences, 4 Slides
Billions
75
History 4 Influences, 4 Slides
  • DERIVATIVES, especially Credit Default Swaps
  • Similar to other hedging derivatives.
    Invented by JP Morgan analysts in 1997, in 2000
    became exempt from most regulation. (Pres.
    Clinton supported). Like insurance, but NOT
    insurance. Neednt own asset, not regulated, and
    no requirements for reserves or structures of
    hedged risk layoffs.
  • Problems Insurance aspect of these
    derivatives meant that no one cared about the
    underlying assets, and no one investigated
    repayment rates. And AIG (with its physicists)
    made huge amounts of money writing these
    contracts. But like a one-sided betting shop
    did not hedge the risk. For many companies,
    their only assets were these swap contracts after
    the primary assets defaulted.

76
Credit Default Swaps
77
Now, Just One Slide Cause?
  • Bad regulation Focus on identities rather than
    instruments. Market failure, government at least
    negligent, possibly complicit. CDSs are NOT
    insurance.
  • Really, really bad regulation Government caused
    the crisis, by subsidizing housing prices, and
    using government prestige to hoodwink small
    investors. Certified junk as conforming, allowed
    fast resale at full price, facilitated by Freddy
    and Fanny. Investment houses turned into
    Animal Houses.
  • The dilemma Bad regulation can be worse than no
    regulation. But good regulation is better still.
    Test When you say, Government should regulate
    markets, take out the word Government and
    substitute Politicians. You sure you still
    believe that?
  • Confidence, Transparency, Liquidity required for
    accurate pricing and functioning markets

78
What Has Obama Administration Done?
  • TARP (carried over from Bush Administration)
    3 Trillions of ?
  • Porkulus (Stimulus for Reelecting Congressmen)
    Again, 3 Trillion (If not temporary)
  • He is NOT George Bush, a positive worldwide
  • Proposed new regulations of executive
    compensation
  • Stress tests, not a bad idea, because they
    finesse mark to market valuation
  • Takeovers of large manufacturers, directing
    bankruptcy
  • Proposed Financial Product Safety Commission

79
What SHOULD have been done?
  • 1.  The George W. Bush presidency was not an era
    of deregulation, but overregulation and failed
    financial supervision. Sarbanes-Oxley, 10,000
    Commandments, attempts to prop up housing
    prices. So, Republicans were primary cause.
  • 2. Dont bail out! At most, offer lender of last
    resort function for banks, and liquidity of last
    resort function for CDOs. 40 cents on the
    dollar, take it or leave it. Bailing out AIG was
    just pouring money down a rat hole. Now, again
    for PIGS? Amazing.

80
What SHOULD have been done?
  • Stop changing things. Why is unemployment so
    high? Why wont banks lend? Its because no one
    knows what is going to happen to taxes,
    regulations, or health care.
  • Regime Uncertainty regime uncertainty pertains
    to the likelihood that investors private
    property rights in their capital and the income
    it yields will be attenuated further by
    government action. Such attenuations can arise
    from many sources, ranging from simple tax-rate
    increases, to the imposition of new kinds of
    taxes, to outright confiscation of private
    property. Many intermediate threats can arise
    from various sorts of regulation, for instance,
    of securities markets, labor markets, and product
    markets. In any event, the security of private
    property rights rests not so much on the letter
    of the law as on the character of the government
    that enforces, or threatens, presumptive rights.
    (Higgs, 1997, Independent Review)
  •  

81
What SHOULD have been done?
  • 4. Depend on greed and information to get us out
    of this. If banks are self-interested, not
    necessary to bribe them to make loans.
  • 5. Stop politically motivated industry
    take-overs. Buying debt may be justified (though
    Im skeptical.) But buying debt is WAY better
    than buying, or seizing, equity shares.
  • 6. Announce freeze on new regulations, and end
    constant threats of new taxes on profits.  

82
What Will Happen Now? US
  • Securities based on risky mortgages are what
    toppled financial institutions but it was the
    government that made the mortgages risky in the
    first place, by making home-ownership statistics
    the holy grail, for which everything else was to
    be sacrificed, including commonsense standards
    for making home loans.
  • Politicians and bureaucrats micro-managing the
    mortgage sector of the economy is precisely how
    today's economic disaster began. Why anyone would
    think that their micro-managing the automobile
    industry, or executive pay across a wide sweep of
    other industries, is likely to make things better
    in the economy is a mystery.
  • THOMAS SOWELL, Cheap Political Theater,
    http//townhall.com/columnists/ThomasSowell/2009/0
    3/24/cheap_political_theater
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