Title: JAPAN
1JAPANS BANKING SYSTEMFROM THE BUBBLE AND
CRISIS TO RECONSTRUCTION
- Masahiro Kawai
- Institute of Social Science
- University of Tokyo
- Japan
- Center for Global Partnership Conference
- Macro/Financial Issues and International
Economic Relations - Policy Options for Japan and the United States
- Tokyo, May 13, 2004
2PRESENTATION
- I. INTRODUCTION
- II. MACROECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND THE BANKING
SECTOR - CAUSES OF THE BANKING SECTOR CRISIS AND
DIFFICULTIES - IMPACT OF BANKING SECTOR DISTRESS
- POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND ITS
PROGRESS - CONCLUDING REMARKS
3I. INTRODUCTION
- What are the factors behind the recent banking
sector difficulty, particularly the 1997-98
systemic crisis, in Japan? - Why did the government fail to address the
problem early, quickly and decisively? - Since the crisis, has the FSA formulated and
implemented a comprehensive policy to resolve
banking sector problems? - Has there been sufficient progress on financial
sector and corporate sector restructuring? - Is the worst over in the Japanese banking system?
Is the banking sector solvent? What are risks? - What should be done to transform the Japanese
banking system into a competitive market-based
system?
4II. MACROECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND THE BANKIG
SECTOR
- 1. Macroeconomic Performance and Policy
- Output stagnation (Figure 1) The average annual
growth rate of real GDP was 1.1 percent during
the last decade, 1992-2002. Near-zero growth
(0.1) in 1998-2002. In addition, nominal GDP has
been more stagnant (-1.2 in 1998-02). - Price deflation (Figure 2) The average annual
inflation rates during 1992-2002 were low or
negative at 0.2 for CPI and -0.1 for GDP price
deflators. The GDP deflator fell in 1995-2002
(except 1997) at 1.0 per year and CPI fell in
1999-2002 at 0.7 per year. - High unemployment rate, reaching a peak of 5.5.
- Keynesian fiscal spending in 1992-2002, rising
from the average size of 32 of GDP in 1991 to
39 in the early 2000s, with a declining fiscal
revenue (from 34 of GDP in 1991 to 31
recently).
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7II. MACROECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND THE BANKIG
SECTOR (contd)
- 2. Asset Prices
- There was an asset price bubble in the late
1980s. The increases in asset prices were much
faster than nominal GDP (Figure 3). - The equity price reached its peak in December
1989 and has since then declined as a trend. - The urban land price for six major city areas
reached its peak in September 1991 and since then
has been declining persistently. - Relative to nominal GDP (1980100), the land
price became lower in 1996 and the equity price
in 2002.
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9II. MACROECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS AND THE BANKIG
SECTOR (contd)
- 3. Banking Sector Conditions
- Expansion of bank loans in the late 1980s,
together with the expansion of bank deposits
(Figure 4). Loans were extended to firms with
assets such as land as a collateral. - Loans were concentrated in wholesale and retail
trade, real estate, finance and insurance, and
construction (Table 1). - The bursting of the bubble in the early 1990s
made highly indebted firms in these sectors
unable to repay due to the decline in collateral
values, thus creating non-performing loans
(NPLs). - But bank exposure to certain sectors, such as
real estate and construction, continued to expand
until the second half or the middle of the 1990s. - As a result, NPLs rapidly increased in the
banking sector, and the banking system fell into
a systemic crisis in 1997-98.
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12III. CAUSES OF THE BANKING CRISIS
- 1. Overextension of Loans during the Bubble
Period - Several factors led to loan overextension in the
second half of the 1980s. - Financial liberalization and greater
opportunities for risk-taking Financial
liberalization in the mid-1980s allowed small
financial institutions to venture into new areas,
particularly funding housing finance companies
(Jusen) and other real estate investments. - Shifts in bank clients to non-manufacturing
firms With large firms increasingly having
access to capital markets, major banks began to
direct their loans towards non-manufacturing
firms, like in real estate, construction and
SMEs, - Unwarranted expectations of high economic growth.
- Low interest rate policy.
- Weak corporate governance on the part of banks.
13III. CAUSES OF THE BANKING CRISIS (contd)
- 2. Severe Negative Impact of Asset Price
Deflation - Rapid credit growth had been accompanied by a
doubling of stock prices and a massive rise in
commercial estate prices, particularly in major
cities. - A sharp increase in interest rates and the
introduction of credit ceiling on bank loans to
real estate-related activity led to the bursting
of the asset price bubble. - The bursting of the bubble created substantial
losses for firms that held equities and had
borrowed from banks with real estate as a
collateral. - This transformed overextended loans into
non-performing loans, and the large build-up of
capital investment and labor employment during
the bubble period into excesses. - Asset price deflation has continued for more than
ten years.
14III. CUASES OF THE BANKING CRISIS (Contd)
- 3. Policy Failure to Contain the Problem Quickly
- Policymakers initially had a strong bias against
the bubble and continued to suppress asset prices
even after the price collapse. - Hesitation in taking decisive measures for fear
that it might touch off a banking sector panic. - The initial approach was based on the expectation
that a resumption of economic growth would
restore financial health of banks and their
clients. - Keynesian fiscal policy sustained minimum growth.
- There was no domestic or external pressure to
accelerate the resolution of banking problems.
15IV. IMPACT OF BANKIG DISTRESS
- 1. Collapse of the Traditional Convoy System
- Until the 1990s, the process for managing bank
failure was largely ad hoc, based on the informal
convoy system. - Using its branch licensing authority, MOF
encouraged stronger, healthier banks to absorb
insolvent institutions through informal,
administratively orchestrated, bank PA
transactions. - In addition, BOJ often provided liquidity
assistance to prevent systemic crises. - But it became increasingly difficult to persuade
banks to provide assistance to other troubled
banks because even relatively strong banks faced
serious NPL problems. - Major shareholders and firms associated with
Hokkaido Takushoku Bank, Yamaichi Securities and
Sanyo Securities refused to help them. Relatively
strong banks also refused to provide assistance. - Temporary nationalization of the Long-Term Credit
Bank of Japan in October 1998 signified the end
of the convoy system.
16IV. IMPACT OF BANKIG DISTRESS (contd)
- 2. Downsizing of Bank Business
- One response to the banking crisis has been
further deregulation, rather than stopping it,
along with the principle of Financial Big Bang,
and the encouragement of mergers and
consolidation. - The temporarily nationalized LTCB was sold to
foreign stakes. - Commercial banks have been forced to rethink
their business strategies by downsizing their
operations - -End of quantitative targets (maximization of
deposit collection and loan extension) - -Focus on core competency
- -Retreat from foreign operations
17IV. IMPACT OF BANKIG DISTRESS (contd)
- 3. Impacts on Monetary and Fiscal Policy
- Commercial banks with large NPLs have not been
expanding loans, and indebted firms have had no
appetite to borrow, and instead have been
repaying their bank loans to reduce debt. - Weaker monetary transmission mechanisms
- -Under the zero interest rate policy, BOJ
switched to quantitative easing (March 2001)
providing liquidity to the banking sector.
Monetary base has been growing relatively fast,
but M2CD has not been growing as fast (Figure
5). - -Absence of banks normal financial intermediary
function weakens monetary policy transmission
mechanisms. - Fiscal worsening Rise in government spending,
decline in tax revenue, large budget deficits and
mounting public debt.
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19V. POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND
ITS PROGRESS
- 1. Stabilization of the Banking System
- The banking sector was in systemic crisis in late
1997 to 1998. The banking sector has been
stabilized since then due to more decisive policy
actions. - Means of stabilizing the banking sector
- -Blanket deposit guarantee
- -Extension of emergency liquidity assistance to
troubled banks - -Financial assistance to promote mergers among
troubled financial institutions - -Decision to inject capital to weak but viable
banks - -Temporary nationalization of non-viable banks
20V. POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND
PROGRESS (contd)
- 2. Bank Restructuring
- Public recapitalization (March 1998, March 1999,
May 2003). See Table 2. - Recognition of NPLswith tighter loan
classification and loan loss provisioninghelps
not only identify the size of NPLs but also
prompts faster NPL disposals - Disposal of bank NPLs, close to 90 trillion yen
in the last ten years. Despite disposals, bank
NPLs have not declined fast due to the emergence
of new NPLs (Table 3). - Exit of a number of inefficient deposit-taking
institutions. - Establishments of public AMCs (RCC, IRC) has
encouraged the carving out of NPLs.
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23V. POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND
PROGRESS (contd)
- 3. Bank Business Strategies and Consolidation
- Consolidation of city banks into four major
financial groups and one weak group (Table 4). - -Mizuho Financial Group (January 2003)
- -Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (December 2002)
- -Mitsubishi Tokyo Financial Group (April 2001)
- -UFJ Holdings (April 2001)
- -Resona Holdings (December 2001).
- Banks strategic objectives
- -Gaining maximum market power in a niche market
- -Attaining economies of scale
- -Investing in IT
- -Investment banking, asset management, fee-based
business
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25V. POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND
PROGRESS (contd)
- 4. Linkages with Corporate Restructuring
- Corporate sector restructuring is the mirror
image of bank NPL resolution. Resolution of bank
NPLs requires real operational restructuring and
revitalization of corporations. - Market-based restructuringlike direct sales of
NPLs to the marketis key. - Three frameworks to accelerate corporate
restructuring - -Legal insolvency procedures (Table 5),
particularly the Civil Rehabilitation Law (April
2000) - -A framework of voluntary out-of-court
negotiations for corporate restructuringbased on
the London rules of INSOLincluding debt-equity
swaps - -Restructuring through the RCC and IRC
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27V. POLICY FRAMEWORKS FOR BANK RESTRUCTURING AND
PROGRESS (contd)
- 5. Regulatory and Supervisory Reforms
- Overhauling of the regulatory system and the
creation of the FSA (June 1998). - Prudential norms
- -Loan classification and LLP tightened (Program
for Financial Revival, Oct. 2002) - -Quality of capitaltreatment of deferred tax
credits - -Prompt corrective action fully in place
- -After a delay, planned reintroduction of a
limited (partial) deposit insurance in April 2005 - Resolution of 50 percent of NPLs within a year,
and 80 percent of NPLs within two years.
28VI. CONCLUDING REMARKS
- The bubble in the late 1980s and its collapse
were largely responsible for the emergence of
NPLs and the banking sector problem over the last
10 years. - But the root cause of the problem lied in the
lack of prudent risk management by banks. - The government failed to tackle the problem
because of underestimation of the seriousness of
the problem optimistic expectations of growth
sustained fiscal spending and lack of domestic
hardship lack of domestic and external
constraints. - A more comprehensive framework for bank
restructuring put in place since the 1997-98
crisis temporary nationalization and subsequent
sales of non-viable banks recapitalization of
weak banks tighter bank regulation and
supervision new institutions for bank
restructuring. -
29VI. CONCLUDING REMARKS (contd)
- Sufficient progress has been made stabilization
of the banking system, restructuring and
consolidation of bank businesses and new
incentives for corporate restructuring - Restoration of a healthy banking system requires
adequate capital base and loan loss provisions
reestablishment of profitable banking business
prudent risk management. - Recapitalization of banks using public money in
itself does not resolve bank NPL problems.
Sustained improvements of cash-flows and
profitability are needed through better bank
management and focus on core competency. - The banking sector is largely solvent. The risks
are concentrated in regional, vulnerable banks to
weak local conditions and hikes of the long-term
interest rate. -