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Understanding the crisis

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Presentation on theme: "Understanding the crisis"— Presentation transcript:

1 Understanding the crisis
Francesco Giavazzi Università Bocconi Triennio Cles October 13, 2008

2 U.S. : relative house prices since 1880
Source: S&P, Case-Shiller Index

3 U.S. nominal house prices

4 U.S. foreclosures: actual and predicted

5 How large is the shock? October 1987 Today, Fall 2008
S&P 500: % (in a single month) Today, Fall 2008 an additional 10% fall in home prices would imply total residential mortgage credit losses $636 billion equivalente to an S&P 500 fall of about 4%

6 Leverage Leverage = Assets/Equity Assets Liabilities Equity Debt

7 Why so much amplification?

8 Leverage of some financial institutions U.S. 2008
Commercial Banks 9.8 Credit Unions 8.7 Finance Companies Brokers and Hedge funds Fannie and Freddie

9 Increase bank capital to
Two problems Increase bank capital to absorb losses and allow de-leveraging minimizing asset sales Reactivate the interbank market

10 Three-month LIBOR minus geometric average of expected daily policy rates

11 Banks’ leverage and the amplification of asset price changes
assets liabilities securities 100 equity 10 debt 90 leverage = assets = 100/10 = equity

12 Banks’ leverage and the amplification of asset price changes
assets liabilities securities 101 equity 11 debt 90 leverage = assets = 101/11 = 9, equity

13 Banks’ leverage and the amplification of asset price changes
assets liabilities securities 110 equity 11 debt 99 leverage = assets = 110/11 = equity

14 Banks’ leverage and the amplification of asset price changes
assets liabilities securities 109 equity 10 debt 99 leverage = assets = 99/9 = 10, equity

15 Banks’ leverage and the amplification of asset price changes
assets liabilities securities 100 equity 10 debt 90 leverage = assets = 100/10 = equity

16

17 Leverage and the slope of asset demands
targetting leverage implies an upward sloping demand for assets: when asset prices ↑ demand for assets ↑

18 Leverage and the slope of asset demands
Banks increase leverage Balance sheets strengthen: E Balance sheets expand: A Asset prices rise

19 Reducing leverage assets liabilities securities 109 equity 10 debt 99
Selling assets Raising equity assets liabilities securities 100 equity 10 debt 90 assets liabilities securities 109 equity 10,9 debt 99 leverage = 10

20 Reducing leverage assets liabilities securities 109 equity 10 debt 99
Swapping assets with the Fed (no haircut) assets liabilities securities 110 equity 11 debt 99 leverage = 10

21 Losses and recapitalization so far

22 Is leverage kept constant as asset prices change?

23 Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

24 Balance sheet size and leverage: non-financial corporations
Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

25 Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

26 Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

27 Is why is banks’ leverage pro-cyclical?
Var (value at risk) Prob (A < A 0 ─ Var) < 1 ─ c Var is the equity capital the bank must have to stay solvent with prob c Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

28 Is why is banks’ leverage pro-cyclical?
K = λ * Var K is the capital the banks holds to meet its Value at Risk for λ = 1 the bank uses up all its K to face a loss of amount Var thus in general λ > 1 Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

29 Pro-cyclical leverage
L = (A / K) = (1 / λ) * (A / Var) as Var ↓ L ↑ Source: Tobian Adrian and Hyun S. Shin, 2007

30 Leverage: commercial and investment banks
Source: Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs, BPEA, September, 2008

31 Losses, deleveraging and lending contraction
Relation between leverage after (A*/E*) and before (A/E) adjustment to reflect losses (A*/E*) = μ (A/E) (A*/A) = μ (E*/E) = μ [1 – (L(1-k) / E)] where L: losses K: percent of recapitalization

32 Plans to cut leverage: 6 large banks
Source: Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs, BPEA, September, 2008

33 New capital raised so far
6 large banks New capital raised so far $83 billion (Citi $41 billion) Current Tier 1 capital ratio (ratio of sharholders’ equity to risk-weighetd assets) 8,5% – 11, 5% (Citi 8,6%) Excess capital in normal times + $14 billion Excess capital under current plans to shrink balance sheets - $460 billion Source: Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs, BPEA, September, 2008

34 Estimated effect of bank lending in the US
Normal trend growth of lending 5% per year (like nominal GDP) = $500 billion per year Estimated cut in lending (all banks) $ 2 trillion over 2 years Reduction in annual lending $500 billion per year Estimated effect on US growth - 2% per year for 2 years Source: Jan Hatzius, Goldman Sachs, BPEA, September, 2008

35 Increase bank capital to
Two problems Increase bank capital to absorb losses and allow de-leveraging minimizing asset sales Reactivate the interbank market

36 U.S. three-month LIBOR minus geometric average of expected daily policy rates

37 Three-month LIBOR minus geometric average of expected daily policy rates


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