the financial crisis: who’s to blame?

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The Financial Crisis: Who’s to blame? Howard Davies Director, LSE Confederation of Indian Industry New Delhi, 9 April 2010

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The Financial Crisis: Who’s to blame?. Howard Davies Director, LSE. Confederation of Indian Industry New Delhi, 9 April 2010. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

The Financial Crisis: Who’s to blame?

Howard Davies

Director, LSE

Confederation of Indian Industry

New Delhi, 9 April 2010

Page 2: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Rolling Stone described Goldman Sachs as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”

Page 3: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

44

58

38

41

39

46

41

57

16

83

89

79

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

Economic policies of your country

Economic policies of the US

Economic policies of China

Consumers in your country taking on moredebt than they should

Bankers in your country taking excessiverisks

International bankers taking excessiverisks

India UK

Who is to blame for the current financial crisis?

% of respondents answering “a lot” to the given statement: “For each one please tell me if you think it has contributed a lot, some, or not at all to the downturn”

Source: WorldPublicOpinion.org. Public Opinion on the Global Economic Crisis, 21 July 2009.

Page 4: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

•economists - “if anything needs fixing, it’s the sociology of the profession” – Dani Rodrik (Harvard)

• business schools – the Guardian

•testosterone – Scientific American: “risk-taking in an investment game with potential for real monetary pay-offs correlates positively with salivary testosterone levels and facial masculinity”

•video games – Professor Susan Greenfield of Oxford

• human greed – Rowan Williams

•Jews

Some suspects

Page 5: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Who blames “the Jews” for the financial crisis?

Source: N Malhotra, Y Margalit: State of the Nation. Boston Review, May/ June 2009.

Page 6: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

% blaming

49 US banks

29 Investment banks

29 Credit Rating Agencies

28 US regulators

25 Hedge funds

23 EU banks

6 EU regulators

……and the answer?

Views of Members

of the European Parliament

Page 7: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

…66% recommend deeper political union in Europe, as a key response

to the crisis

Page 8: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

“ Bank failures are caused by depositors who don’t deposit enough money to cover the losses due to mismanagement”.

Dan Quayle

Page 9: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Act One: Subprime

Act Two: Liquidity

Act Three: Unravelling

Act Four: Meltdown

Act Five: Pumping

The Credit Crisis: A Five-Act Shakespearian Tragedy

Page 10: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

-6

-5

-4

-3

-2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

France

Germany

Japan

UK

US

The IMF forecast a modest recovery next year

Source: IMF World Economic Outlook Database, October 2009.

Gross domestic product forecast (% change), constant prices, 2007-2014

Page 11: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

But global unemployment is likely to continue to rise

Unemployment (Million) and unemployment rate (%), 1999 - 2009

Source: ILO, Trends Econometric Models, December 2008.

Page 12: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

•global imbalances

•loose monetary policy, leading to•mispricing of risk•credit bubble

•‘excess’ leverage, facilitated by procyclical regulation, and regulatory arbitrage

•‘excess’ unmanaged growth of the financial sector, which magnified risks, rather than diversifying them

What are the underlying causes?

Page 13: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Global current account imbalances grew rapidly from 2003

Estimates of account balances for selected countries ($ Billion), 1993-2007

Source: Datastream, FSA Calculations.

Page 14: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Source: Bank of England, Speech of Charles Bean at the Annual Conference of the European Economic Association, 25th Aug 2009.

Monetary policy was loose, especially in the US

Deviation of policy rates from Taylor rule (%), 2000-2009

Page 15: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?
Page 16: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Household debt as % of GDP, 1987-2007

Source: FSA, ONS, Federal Reserve, Eurodata, Datastream

Household debt rose sharply

Page 17: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Case-Shiller Home Price Index (2000 Q1 = 100), Jan 1987 - 2005

Source: Silverlake, Case-Shiller Price Index.

US house prices doubled in five years

Page 18: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Source: ECB, National Statistical Offices, IMF, EMF, Italian Ministry of Infrastructure, Morgan Stanley Research.

House prices rose rapidly in much of Europe also

Real house price changes over the last ten years (%), 1996-2006

Page 19: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Bank Balance Sheets expanded

Source: Silverlake, Capital IQ.

Large-cap banks’ aggregate assets rose to 43x tangible book equity

Page 20: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

UK banks leverage grew sharply from 2003 onwards

Source: Bank of England, Financial Stability Report, Issue 24, 28 October 2008.

Major UK banks’ leverage ratio, %, 1998 - 2008

Note: Leverage ratio defined as total assets divided by total equity excluding minority interest. Excludes Nationwide due to lack of interim data.

Page 21: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Source: The Turner Review, March 2009.

ABS – volumes outstanding, $ Billion, 1996 - 2007

As did the securitised credit market

Page 22: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Resecuritisation magnified credit creation

BBB

A

AA

AAA

Residual/Equity

SUPER SENIOR

AAA

AAA

AA

A

BBB

Equity

Capital Structure Containing Subprime Loans

Subprime Mezzanine CDO Containing BBB Subprime Bonds

100%

28%

20%

11%

7%

0%

11%7%

11%

8.6%

7%

100%

40%

0%

CUMULATIVE LOSSES

Source: Morgan Stanley.

Page 23: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Private Equity Leverage Multiples grew

Source: Silverlake, Morgan Stanley, Capital IQ.

44.6 4.8

5.3 5.4

6.2

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007

Debt/EBITDA, 2002 - 2007

X

Page 24: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Growth in Hedge Fund Assets & Leverage accelerated

Source: Silverlake, Through Q308 – HFR industry report; Q408 projections based on CS analysis.

Page 25: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

This points to the need for monetary policy to focus more on

- credit growth- financial intermediation, and- asset prices

…with a stronger emphasis on the risk of financial instability

Page 26: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?
Page 27: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Weak regulation may not have been the main cause of the crisis, but it is important to reform it

• trust in markets, and in regulation, has been affected, which damages investment and economic growth

•the global system does not meet the needs of global markets

Page 28: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

The crisis revealed problems with the existing regulatory architecture:

• Hopelessly complex global structure

• Lacking a central authority to drive co-operation and make changes happen

• US system balkanised and ineffective

• European system a fudge – neither truly European nor truly national

• No two national systems the same

Page 29: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Global Committee Structure - A Regulator’s View

G-20(Gov’ts)

Financial Stability Board

WTOOECD

(Gov’ts)

FATF (Money Laundering) IASB

(Accounting IASC

Bank for International Settlements

(Central Banks)

G-10(Central Banks)

CGFS CPSS

Basel Committee(Banking)

IOSCO(Securities)

Joint Forum

IAIS

(Insurance)

Monitoring Group

IAASB(Audit)

PIOB

IMFWorld Bank

(Gov’ts)

IFIAR(Audit)

Source: Adapted with permission from Sloan and Fitzpatrick in Chapter 13, The Structure of International Market Regulation, in Financial Markets and Exchanges Law, Oxford University Press, March 2007.

Page 30: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

National Regulatory Structures

Tripartite Dual 'Twin Peaks' Unified regulator

Source: How Countries Supervise their Banks, Insurers and Securities Markets 2007: Central Bank Publications.

57

35

2

493

54

28

739

10

Other bank regulators

Central banks as banking regulator

Central bank as one pillar

No Central Bank interest

Non-Central Bank

Central Bank

Page 31: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

And there were a number of regulatory failures

US Financial markets regulation was uncoordinated and overlapping

- Promoted regulatory “competition”

European Regulation also at fault: complex mix of European and national rules

In the UK, weak FSA regulation of Northern Rock, and the Bank of England too distant from financial markets

Page 32: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

More regulatory failures

Key markets were unregulated– Non-bank private mortgage industry– Credit Default Swaps

• No exchange, central clearing or capital requirements

Insurance industry in the US was lightly regulated– No federal regulator– Missed “one-sided” credit insurance & CDS risks taken on by

AIG and others

Basel II capital requirements were flawed– Allowed too much leverage, over-reliance on credit ratings, and

didn’t encompass liquidity– Pro-cyclical: as asset prices rose, banks seemed to need less

capital

Page 33: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

G20 Summits

“Reshaping the global financial and regulatorySystem”

• Enhance corporate governance and risk management

• Strengthen prudential regulation, but with a ‘managed transition’ to avoid exacerbating the downturn

• Regulate financial activities according to their economic substance and ensure regulation is consistent in all jurisdictions

Page 34: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

“Reshaping the global financial and regulatory system”

• Financial Stability Board with standing committees• Membership of FSB, Basel etc extended to BRICs and

others• Expanded coverage of regulation to include systemic

hedge funds• Tighter controls on offshore centres• Tighter regulation of credit rating agencies• More and better quality capital in the banking system• Macro-prudential mechanism to respond to asset price

bubbles• Regulatory controls on bank remuneration

G20 Summits

Page 35: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

What about the bankers themselves?

Page 36: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

• Poor risk management– excessive reliance on Value at Risk Models– herding behaviour– inadequate hedging

• Flawed capital allocation mechanisms– trading strategies under-capitalised

• Incentive structures which reward short-term risk-taking

• Weak corporate governance: boards ignorant of the risks management were taking on

Failures in the financial firms themselves may have been even more important

Page 37: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

Much of the past 30 years of macroeconomics was “spectacularly useless at best, and positively harmful at worst”

Prof. Paul Krugman, Princeton

“The unfortunate uselessness of most ‘state of the art’ academic monetary economics”

Prof. Willem Buiter, LSE

“The modern risk management paradigm held sway for decades. The whole intellectual edifice, however, collapsed in the summer of last year”

Alan Greenspan

And, finally, there are major problems with Economics – and efficient markets

Page 38: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

• Macro imbalances, loose monetary policy and financial innovation

• Rapid credit growth, asset price bubbles, overborrowing

• Global finance without global government

• Flawed assumptions about market efficiency and investor rationality

Such a complex failure has many parents

Page 39: The Financial Crisis:  Who’s to blame?

The Financial Crisis: Who’s to blame?

Howard Davies

Director, LSE

Confederation of Indian Industry

New Delhi, 9 April 2010