Paths Taken and Paths Forward Ivan J Kirov Fed Challenge Feb 4 2010.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
10-1 Financial Innovation and Banking Industry Structure Responses to Changes in Risk 1.Adjustable-rate mortgages 2.Financial Derivatives Responses to.
Advertisements

FIBI FIRST INTERNATIONAL BANK OF ISRAEL O verview
Financialization and Policy Responses Presentation to Americans for Financial Reform Damon Silvers Policy Director, AFL-CIO June 28, 2011.
Basel III and Indian Banking System By Prof. (Dr.) Divya Gupta IMIS, Bhubaneswar.
MACROECONOMICS MACROECONOMICS and the FINANCIAL SYSTEM © 2011 Worth Publishers, all rights reservedPowerPoint® slides by Ron Cronovich N. Gregory Mankiw.
An Overview of the Financial System chapter 2. Function of Financial Markets Lenders-Savers (+) Households Firms Government Foreigners Financial Markets.
Copyright © 2004 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill /Irwin Chapter One Introduction.
Banks You will be able to describe the functions of commercial banks and central banks Money encouraged specialization by making trade easier. Specialization.
© The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., 2008 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 14 Regulating the Financial System.
Asymmetric Information
When Wall Street Fell: The Financial Crisis of 2008 BADM 381: Multinational Management October 14, 2008 Angela Grossi Devin Kelly Eric Slehofer Laura Beschorner.
Chapter 14. Regulating the Financial System
Cass – ESSEC Conference Business models in banking by François Longin Department of Finance, ESSEC Cass Business School , London December 2, 2009.
Asymmetric Information and Bank Regulation
An Overview of the Financial System Chapter 2. 2 Function of Financial Markets To bring lenders and borrowers together to make both of them better-off.
International Banking
1 Lecture 3: Financial Intermediaries Mishkin chapter 2 – part B Page
Financial Collapse Destruction of Wealth Collapse of Banks Falling Housing Prices Freezing Credit Markets Attributable to Credit Default Swaps?
SUOMEN PANKKI | FINLANDS BANK | BANK OF FINLAND On the size and the structure of the banking sector Governor Erkki Liikanen Chairman of the High-level.
Agency theory: how asymmetric information affects economic behavior
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2006 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Money and Banking Lecture 28.
Joseph E. Stiglitz Shanghai May 14, 2009 Keys to Future Stability and Growth : LESSONS FROM THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS.
Introduction to the Financial System. In this section, you will learn:  about securities, such as stocks and bonds  the economic functions of financial.
1 The Alphabet Soup of the Sub-Prime Crisis Marti Subrahmanyam Charles E. Merrill Professor of Finance, Economics and International Business Stern School.
The Volcker Rule: Addressing Systemic Risk Gerald Epstein Department of Economics, Political Economy Research Institute (PERI) and SAFER University of.
Financial Crisis Activity * Thanks to Curt Anderson, University of Minnesota, Duluth.
 Protects stability of individual bank  Not a requirement to hold or reserve funds.  Affects balance between debt and equity.  Requirement to hold.
University of Palestine International Business And Finance Management Accounting For Financial Firms Part (3) Ibrahim Sammour.
International Financial Regulatory Reforms: Are We on the Right Track? Patrick Leblond CERIUM Summer School June 30, 2010.
KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP* 26 Margaret Ray and David Anderson Module The Federal Reserve System: History and Structure.
1 Money and Banking Introduction. Week 1 Learning Goals By the end of the week, you should … Be familiar with the different types of financial instruments.
ALOMAR_212_4 1 Financial Market Instruments. ALOMAR_212_42 What are the securities (instruments) traded in the financial market? 1- Money Market Instruments:
An Overview of the Financial System
Function of Financial Markets
1 Lecture 20 Economic Analysis of Banking Regulation.
The Four Basic Areas of Finance
MBF-705 LEGAL AND REGULATORY ASPECTS OF BANKING SUPERVISION OSMAN BIN SAIF Session: Two.
The Boom in Leveraged Corporate Finance and its Implication for the Public Interest Presentation of Damon Silvers Associate General Counsel AFL-CIO June.
1 Lecture 19: Evolution of banking industry in the U.S. Mishkin Ch 10 – part A page
Chapter 2: The Financial System 1. Evil and Brilliant Financiers? Financiers are not innately good or evil but rather, like other people, can be either,
Chapter 11: The Economics of Financial Regulation.
Finance Banking regulation and supervision.
Introduction to Basel Norms BCBS –Committee of Central bankers from across the world Tier 1 Capital and Tier 2 capital Risk Weighted Assets.
1 Chapter 2 An Overview of the Financial System Eco 2154 PPP #1.
© 2004 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved 1-1 ECON 304 Money and Banking Instructor: Bernard Malamud –Office: BEH 502 Phone (702) 895 –3294 Fax:
Topic 1. Part 3A. The Growth of State Banking to 1860.
1 Post-crisis Banks’ Corporate Governance Xavier Freixas Universitat Pompeu Fabra and CEPR 1.
Financial Crises, Panics, and Unconventional Monetary Policy
 Financial Crises:  Chapter 9  Regulation and Capture  Calomiris and Johnson.
Chapter 3 Banks and Other Financial Institutions © 2003 John Wiley and Sons.
How Banks Work CHAPTER TWO. The Role of Banks A bank is a financial intermediary that accepts deposits from savers and makes loans to borrowers. By making.
MGT 470 Financial Crises (cs3ed) v1.0 Oct 15 1 The Need for Regulation  The Great Depression of the 1930’s  The world-wide recession  Numerous.
An Overview of the Financial System chapter 2 1. Function of Financial Markets Lenders-Savers (+) Households Firms Government Foreigners Financial Markets.
Banking, Investing and Insurance BUSINESS AND BANKING AND PROFITABILITY.
Money Management in the Organizations 1- Accounting activities: Recording and analyzing monetary information 2- Financial activities: Fund (money) raising.
Finance (Basic) Ludek Benada Department of Finance Office 533
Monitoring the Business + - x ÷ ÷ x x ÷ : : : : Ratio Analysis C. O' Brien Chanel College.
Risk Management Challenge for Basel Ⅱ & Ⅲ Chau-Jung Kuo Professor, Department of Finance, NSYSU The 19 th Annual Conference on PBFEAM.
Haircuts Gorton and Metrick (G&M) 2010 Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Review A very influential article with compelling explanation of crisis.
An Overview of the Financial System
An Overview of the Financial System
Capital Regulations and Management Chapter 6
Introduction to Banking & Finance
An Overview of the Financial System
Economic Analysis of Banking Regulation
الأساسيات والاتجاهات الحديثة
Class 6- The Failure of Regulation? November 6, 2010
An Overview of the Financial System
An Overview of the Financial System
Presentation transcript:

Paths Taken and Paths Forward Ivan J Kirov Fed Challenge Feb

Capital Savers Investment vehicles Financial Intermediation Banks Financial Markets Investment Firms Entrepreneurs  Financial Institutions  Solve informational asymmetry  Leverage economies of scale

 Bank “Self-Regulation” ◦ At sign of trouble:  Creditors pull out  Depositors withdraw  Difficult to raise money in capital markets  Hence capital kept on hand Discipline DepositorsCreditors Money Markets

 Finance is systemically important to the functioning of the economy Real Economy Transmission Banks Financial Distress - I - Y- ΔY Credit tightens Less Profitability and Growth

 Liquidity (Lender of last resort) ◦ Traditional purview of central banks  Deposit insurance ◦ In US, from Depression  Creditor guarantees ◦ Mostly from last crisis ◦ AIG ◦ Citi

 Guarantees reduce risk in holding bank debt  Moreover, they insulate creditors from loss ◦ Risk-taking proliferates  Financial institutions’ incentives become out of line with those of regulators Source: Economist Banks’ Equity as % of Assets

 To avoid moral hazard implicit in support, governments impose financial regulatory structures Capital Structural security Asset buffer Liquidity Rapid- response Psychological buffer Pay Align incentives “Micro” buffer Accounting Trans-border coordination Transparency

 Basel-2: Current main international regulatory framework  Financial institutions must keep on hand at least 4% of risk-weighted assets ◦ “On hand”: Tier-1 capital ◦ “Risk-weighted”: According to GAAP, but in practice a firm-specific definition  Problems ◦ Tier-1 capital includes debt-like instruments ◦ Low capital margin ◦ Limited regulation of leverage

 Tobin Tax  Britain’s Bonus Tax  Obama’s Bank Levy  The Volcker Rule  Basel-3

 Originated by James Tobin in 1973  FX transactions above “optimal level” – tax to bring them in line with public optimum.  Financial Tobin Tax is not strictly a form of regulation; more like enforced downsizing.  Problems: ◦ How do governments know finance’s “optimal size”?

 Dec. 10, 2009: UK gov’t imposes 50% tax rate on bank bonuses exceeding £25,000  Largely politically motivated

 Tax on financial firms with >$50 billion in assets  Would raise $90bn over 10 years  To cover TARP fund  Applies mostly to risky activities ◦ Proprietary trading desks  In practice: small, symbolic  Principle? Source: New York Times

 Semi-reinstatement of Glass-Steagall  Banks (or just deposit-taking institutions?) cannot engage in proprietary trading or invest in hedge funds or PE funds  Details still pending Congressional crucible InstitutionEstimated Revenue Loss Goldman Sachs$4.5 bn JPMorgan$2 bn Citigroup~ $500 mil Source: New York Times

 Work-in-progress: refinement of Basel-2 rules  General thrust ◦ Safe “Tier 1” capital more narrowly defined (mostly only equity) ◦ Financial institutions cannot use proprietary risk models ◦ Liquidity: banks must withstand 30-day credit freeze ◦ Capital requirements increased to 6-8% of risk- adjusted assets

 Liquidity regulation  Institutions pay for not-so-implicit guarantees  “Convertible capital”  Balance between institution-specific and system-wide regulation

 Julian Simon: The Dismal Science?  “One can hardly imagine, I think, how poor we would be today were it not for the rapid population growth of the past to which we owe the enormous number of technological advances enjoyed today.... If I could re-do the history of the world, halving population size each year from the beginning of time on some random basis, I would not do it for fear of losing Mozart in the process.” -Edmund S. Phelps