When the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve left a crucial sentence out
of its post-meeting commentary in early May—one meant to alleviate worries about
long-term inflation—the markets hit a wall. When it discovered and rectified its
mistake a short while later, the markets rallied. It was the first communication
mistake of its kind for Alan Greenspan and his rate-setting compatriots. For
good reason, it seems, does the Sphinx-like Fed chief usually keep a tighter
rein on his communiqués.The Newest class of derivatives are in some cases extremely
complex and have not been tested in a downturn. | In light of this, it is interesting that one of the country’s top banking
regulators—not Greenspan, but Timothy Geithner, president of the New York
Federal Reserve—was able to ring alarm bells as loudly as he did in a mid-April
speech to a financial industry trade group without precipitating a complete
meltdown—indeed without any noticeable market reaction whatsoever.
Geithner, who also sits on the Fed’s Open Market Committee (the group that sets
the nation’s monetary policy) essentially said that bank mergers had left the
bulk of the industry in the hands of a few titans, and that “an event large
enough to threaten the solvency or liquidity of one of these core institutions
could have more severe impact on the stability of the system than was the case
in a less concentrated market.”
“A severe impact on the stability of the system” is not a phrase one normally
expects to hear from New York Fed presidents, who are considered moderately
Sphinx-like themselves.
The banking sector was less concentrated, and therefore perhaps more flexible,
when the Latin American debt crisis of the 1980s savaged the results of such
firms (known then) as Citibank and Chase Manhattan; when the Tequila Crisis did
the same to a broad array of banks a decade later; when Salomon Brothers flirted
with insolvency after its bond trading scandal; when the New York Fed stepped in
to avert the collapse of Long-Term Capital Management the list goes on.
Government intervention in many of these episodes bolstered the common
assumption among bankers and analysts that the government regarded the largest
financial institutions too big to fail. This belief often led to further unwise
risk taking and further losses down the road.While more numerous, banks were less complicated back then. As Geithner pointed
out, these institutions now use sophisticated risk management tools that have
allowed them to weather more recent shocks—the Argentine debt default, 9/11, the Enron/WorldCom/Parmalat fiascos—without much pain. While these advances, along
with external phenomena like low credit losses and less uncertainty about
inflation and interest rates, are obviously welcome, he warned banks not to be
complacent. In a phrase that one cannot imagine passing the august lips of
Greenspan, Geithner said, “There is a self-reinforcing character to this
pattern, with past stability seemingly increasing confidence in future
stability, and this dynamic itself can magnify the risk of a more damaging
reversal.” The untested nature of many of the sector’s financial innovations and products
is at issue, Geithner argues. But he is no demagogue. Unlike, say, Warren
Buffett’s self-serving 2003 tirade about derivatives being “financial weapons of
mass destruction” (from a man who just lost his shareholders tens of millions of
dollars by speculating incorrectly in the currency derivatives markets), the Fed
chief knows these instruments are the tools that have kept the financial system
flexible enough to weather recent crises. However, he raised concerns that the
newest class of derivatives, those based on credit, are in some cases extremely
complex and have not been tested in a downturn. “The risk-reducing benefits of
these innovations, for individual institutions and for the system as a whole,
are substantial, but these benefits are to some extent qualified by the limits
of our knowledge of how they will perform in conditions of stress,” he said. Our financial system is so tightly integrated it often resembles one large
organism. One bank’s largest customers are likely to be its competitors down the
street. Ripples from a disaster at one firm will affect them all. Geithner and
other regulators are urging banks to take steps to ensure they can survive such
a financial contagion, unlikely though it may be. For individual investors of
substantial means, it would be wise to heed the same advice.
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