3/29/2013

Benefit of clearinghouse

(1) It economizes collateral.
(2) A reduction of the "replacement" losses in the event of a default.
the ccp typically has a better picture of each member’s overall position risk than any dealer in a bilateral market possesses.

It is important to note that many of the benefits of clearing are captured by the members of a clearinghouse. The member firms benefit from declines in the amount of collateral they must hold, reductions in replacement costs, and improvements in the terms of trade and reductions in collateral that result from increases in the amount of information available. Thus, the benefits of a clearinghouse are largely private, and profit-motivated firms have an incentive to take them into
account when deciding whether to form a clearinghouse

 
Clearinghouse
A modern futures clearinghouse is a “central counterparty” (CCP). That is, the clearinghouse becomes the buyer to every seller, and the seller to every buyer, through a process sometimes known as “novation.”
Once the details of the contract between S and B are confirmed by the clearinghouse, the clearinghouse creates a contract to buy from S and a contract to sell to B. S still has a contract to sell, and B has a contract to buy, but the clearinghouse is substituted as the counterparty to each contract. With clearing, if B defaults, the CCP bears the loss. It draws on its financial resources to pay S what he is owed.
Clearinghouses almost always have members who are large trading firms, including brokerages and banks.
The clearing members provide the financial resources for the clearinghouse to cover the losses that result from a default of another member.

Require CCP members to post collateral, called margin, with the clearinghouse. The collateral amounts reflect the risk of the members’ trading positions.
Buyers must post more margin when prices decline, to offset the risk that a buyer might walk away from a futures contract in which the agreed-upon price now seems too high; sellers must post more when prices rise to offset the risk that the seller might walk away from an agreed-upon price that now seems too low.
Default risks arise from two sources. The first is the risk of the positions that the trader holds. A default occurs only if the losses on a member’s positions are larger than his capital.
The financial intermediaries who are clearinghouse members invest in other risky assets, and they may default if the losses on the other assets on their balance sheets are sufficiently great to make it impossible for them to cover their obligations to the clearinghouse.
It is often overlooked, but essential to remember, that default risks are also shared in “bilateral” over-the-counter markets.
Over-the-counter market participants often require their counterparties to post collateral. Dealer firms usually adjust their collateral demands to reflect their assessment of both the position and balance sheet risks of their counterparties.
(Indeed, one of the factors that brought the Lehman Brothers crisis to a head was the decision of J.P. Morgan Chase to demand an additional $5 billion in collateral based on its appraisal of Lehman’s deteriorating financial condition; J. P. Morgan’s demand for collateral from Merrill Lynch was reportedly the catalyst for Merrill’s sale to Bank of America.)
It is typically the case that the margining process in over the- counter markets is less mechanically rule driven than at clearinghouses.
A consideration of the nature of credit derivatives and the firms that trade them demonstrates that the potential for information asymmetries is particularly acute for those products.
In particular, it is highly likely that dealer firms have far better information on the risks and values of CDSs than a clearinghouse, and also have better information on the balance sheet risks that they impose on the clearinghouse.
It is difficult to assess the risk of and value credit derivatives because of their complexity. Dealer firms use “rocket science” quantitative models to assess risks and value derivatives. The dealers have a strong incentive to develop accurate models because the models enable the dealers to quantify and manage their market risk more effectively, price their derivatives more accurately and earn trading profits as a result, and evaluate the default risk posed by their customers.
A clearinghouse doesn’t have much incentive to develop a more accurate model. Public good problem. It is true that current models of these firms are flawed, but the question I want to pursue is whether clearinghouse could have a better model.
Given the lack of trading activity in many CDS products, determination of market values for the purpose of updating margins is not a trivial task. Indeed, many products have to be “marked to model” rather than marked to market, because of the lack of market prices.
Information-intensive financial intermediaries have substantially better information about the risks on their balance sheets than outsiders. In particular, they have better information than a CCP could obtain.
This has important implications. Recall that futures CCPs do not explicitly price member balance sheet risks. This reflects the prohibitive information costs that they incur to do so, and the strains that any attempt to discriminate between members would place on a cooperative organization. CCP members do not pay a cost for adding balance sheet risk, which creates an incentive to take on additional amounts of such risk. This creates a potential moral hazard that reduces the benefits of sharing risks.
In contrast, dealers that supply information-intensive intermediation have a comparative advantage in appraising the balance sheet risks of their counterparties. Dealer firms expend considerable effort and money to determine and manage counterparty risk, including that of other dealer firms they trade with. Recall, moreover, that dealers do adjust collateral levels to reflect their estimates of counterparty balance sheet risks.
In sum, complicated products traded by complex, information-intensive intermediaries pose serious challenges to central clearing.
Advocates of cds clearing argue that it is necessary to reduce systemic risk, that is, the risk that the failure of a large dealer will threaten the stability of the wider financial system.
Over-the-counter derivatives dealers are so interconnected, the argument goes, that the failure of one can trigger the failure of many others. Multiple failures would jeopardize the payment system and create economic chaos. The threat to the payment system is an externality, which provides a justification.
If interconnectedness among big financial institutions is the source of a systemic risk problem, creating a central counterparty is an odd way to “solve” it.
“Interconnection” is a synonym for “risk sharing mechanism,” and as noted above, bilateral markets and a ccp are just different ways of sharing that risk.
Indeed, the lack of pricing of balance sheet risks in ccps (in contrast to the fact that such risks are priced in over-the-counter markets) creates a moral hazard that encourages greater risk taking in a cleared market than in a bilateral one. Moreover, reductions in collateral that would likely accompany the formation of a clearinghouse would actually tend to encourage firms to trade more, as with a clearinghouse the netting of positions saves collateral, allowing a larger scale of trading activity for a given amount of liquid capital. Thus, the support for the view that a clearinghouse would reduce systemic risk is shaky, at best.\
Balance sheet risks are a matter of particular concern in evaluating the pros and cons of clearing of credit derivatives.
Severing the derivatives market-making part of dealer firms from their other intermediation activities would sacrifice those scope economies. Compulsory separation of market- making activities from the other forms of intermediation performed by big financial institutions could only be justified by the existence of some externality from joining them together that imposes social costs that exceed the private scope economies.


3/26/2013

3/26/2013 Banking notes

The origin of the banking system emerges in two functions
(1) money changes
it becomes convenient for money exchangers to accumulate a lot of coins denominated in different currencies and then they started the warehouse bank (it is more convenient for them to set up a place to change the money)
(2) payment system
save keeping and protect people's asset

Warehouse banks (100% reserve "banks")----custodian of savers
Assets               Liabilities
gold 200$          Rachel 10$
                          Mike 10$
                          Other 180$
in this case, the warehouse bank is the bailee of the savers
there is no liability for warehouse to depositors

How for warehouse bank to make money? Charge a rent

The origin of fractional reserve banks
The money deposited there is never all withdrawn. Huge cost for all money to stay in the warehouse.

What makes fractional reserve banks feasible
(1) money is fungible
(2) law of large number

Fractional reserve banks
Asset                                      Liabilities
gold 40$                                Rachel 10$
loans 160$                             Michael 10$
                                              others 180$
the bank becomes a debtor to lenders, and savers are now investors
Banks make profits from this system and thus they begin to look for more depositors. Interest payment on deposits emerges. The effective money supply increases. When banks are able to loan out, depositors become more valuable to them.

The emerge of fractional reserve banking system creates a synergy between having banks serve only as places to execute payments and as places where intermediation process to happen. The reason is that the deposited funds that are not needed as reserves and possibly be lent out.

The synergy makes the financial system unstable. That is the reason why it needs to be regulated.

Some people may say that fractional reserve bank is fraudulent, when would that be true?
Answer: when depositors are led to believe that banks do hold all of their money.

Why would people put money in fractional reserve banks?
Answer: they get benefit (interest on their depositors, or free checks. Both of these are possible only when the banks are fractional.

Innovation in the payment system:
At first the reserve ratio is high, because every time a person wants to execute a payment, he goes to the bank and withdraw the deposits.

How to discourage the withdrawn? The creation of the money itself by the banks
(1) bank notes
anybody who has them can get base money at anywhere that accepts them
issued by the bank, payable to the bearer

(2) checks (demand deposit)
Two people who have accounts in the same bank. Person A write a check to order the bank to move a certain amount of money to B's account.

They are called bank money or inside money. They are used to reduce the reliance on species of payment, and they only work when people accept them. When they are widely accepted, they can become money.

How do they improve the efficiency of the payment system?
Before we had inside money, it is really costly to engage in transaction.
For example:
Rachel sells chairs, Mike wants to buy it. Mike goes to bank with his deposit slip to get money. Then he gives money to Rachel for the chair. Then Rachel goes to bank to deposit the money.

Bank's sheet
Assets                                      Liabilities
gold - 10                                  Mike - 10
gold +10                                  Rachel +10
net=0                                       net = 0

One way to make it cheaper is to let them meet in the bank. It can lower the transaction cost.

If Mike gives Rachel a check, and Rachel goes to the bank, transaction is even lower.
But Rachel still has to go to the bank!

Electronic funds transfer (telegraph and electronic devices)

Bank money are not feasible without fractional reserve banks system
For payment by account transfer, FRB offers a more economic way of providing payment services. A money warehouse or 100% reserve institution could also offer payments by account transfer, but its services would be significantly more expensive. The other bank payment instrument, redeemable banknotes circulating in round denominations, simply cannot exist without fractional reserves. Banknotes are feasible for a fractional-reserve bank because the bank doesn’t need to assess storage fees to cover its costs. It can let the notes can circulate anonymously and at face value, unencumbered by fees, and cover its costs by interest income. An issuer of circulating 100% reserve notes would need to assess storage fees on someone, but would be unable to assess them on unknown note-holders. There are no known historical examples of circulating 100% reserve notes unemcumbered by storage fees

Loans are still given out as actual coins rather than bank notes. Why?
A lot of loans are given out to merchants that trade all around the world, and foreign bankers may not accept the bank notes.

Fractional reserve bank expand money supply. (loaning in the form of notes and checks expand the money supply)

A                                L
gold 0                   R 10
loan 200               M 10
                            Other 180
i= 10%
profit 20$ peryear

A                               L
gold 40                                 R 5
loan 160                     M 5
new loans                    O 90
100000                                 note $100
                                    new loans 100000
If you can convince people not to come to bank, you can issue bank notes to make profits. (Inflation can occur) Overconfidence in financial industry can lead to high price level
Bank can create bank note (private money), or issue new loans
(google that)

Difference between checks and notes
Notes are payable to anyone who bears it, checks are payable to the person whose name is on it.
Risks with checks
(1) does the person who wrote you the check have that amount of money in his account? (Creditor risk)
(2) even if the person who writes the check has the money, does the bank have that amount of money? (Institutional risk)


3/21/2013

3/21/2013 Banking notes

Interest rate risk
Bank
Asset                Liabilities
10 million         10 million
7 years               1/2 year

positive duration gap
When interest rate goes up, asset value and liabilities value both fall, but since asset maturity is longer, assets value falls more. Net equity is hurt.

Why does Wall Street lobby for low interest rate? Interest rate, asset value, liabilities value ,duration gap

Interest risk is a major concern of commercial banks because most commercial banks have positive duration gap.

Why is positive duration gap attractive to banks?
Yield curves typically slope upward, the cost of attracting loans (short term interest rate) will be very low, and if banks loan long-term, they can get higher interest rate.

2 risks banks will face
(1) interest rate risk
(2) reinvestment risk
After six months, the bank has to pay back its investors 10 million dollars, how bank continue to fund their investment?
a. attract new fund from others in order not to liquidate the investment (short-term commercial paper market)
b. if investors don't want to save money in the bank, the bank has to either liquidate the investment or borrow money at a higher cost. (that is, higher interest rate) Issue stock for example, go to the long term market.

Interest rate might change from time to time.
suppose bank earns 6% from investment, pay 2% for deposits, net is 400$
if investors don't save money in the bank and the bank goes to long-term market for loans, the interest rate will be higher, say 5%. Net is 100$
If interest rate jumps to 8%, bank has to pay 8% for the new fund. Bank loses money

Now Fed has a very low interest rate. If the interest rate goes up, Fed may not like it. Why?
Fed has 3 trillion dollars asset, most of which are long-term, on its balance sheet. If it decides to increase interest rate, the value of its portfolio will plummet.

So the Fed faces problem in interest rate policy. IF it is low, it cannot stifle inflation, but if interest rate increases, its asset will blow. 

Government can tax to compensate the loss of the assets. 
Treasury's assets are mostly short-term. 
IF the Fed really raise the interest rate, the Fed will see its assets value plummet and the government has to pay more interest for its short-term debt. In this case, the Fed cannot be very independent. 

  Maybe the solution is to borrow long-term money. 

How do banks do about these risks Use derivative
Futures market

What is a Bank? Financial intermediary and payment service
(1) Financial intermediary:
take deposits & make loans
(2) provide payment services
there must first be a reliance on commodity money, then the evolvement contains three steps
(a) payment system emerges
the development of money transfer services
(b) the emergence of inside money (any debt that is used as money)
assignable and negotiable
(c) system of clearing

banking seems to emerge for the ease of transfer services particularly by the international merchants and traders. (Counting and transporting are very inconvenient)
Demand deposit lowers transaction costs. (Using balance sheet lowers the transaction cost of transferring money)
People use various institutions to protect their golds. Goldsmiths


3/19/2013

3/19/2013 Banking notes

Cyprus bankruptcy
If a government cannot pay the debts back, it can:
(1) default
(2) inflate (print more money)
(3) go bankrupt and restructure the contract (low cost to roll over the debt today at the expense of higher interest rate in the future)

Balance sheet of Cyprus bank
Assets                                  Liabilities
Cyprus bonds                      Deposits
(value decreases)                (50% domestic citizens, 50% foreign institutions, especially Russia)
Greek bonds
(value decreases)

Requirements of IMF to bail out
Cyprus should raise some money by itself. Government then imposes taxes from depositors

The cause is that  government are borrowing bonds that they cannot pay back
Control of capital flow? Will it work?

Why bonds have different interest rates?
(1) risk
(2) liquidity
(3) tax treatment
(4) maturity
(5) currency risks

(4) maturity
Yield curve
Expectation theory doesn't make perfect sense because it assumes that future inflation expectation will only rise. It also cannot explain why current and future interest rates tend to move up together.

Preferred habitat: based on expectation theory, adds term premium---reward for holding long-term bonds
(a) People care about flexibility
If an amount of money is locked in for a long time, investors demand a premium to compensate for the lack of flexibility
(b) Long -term bonds are prone to more uncertainty, so investors demand a premium for holding the bond

Yield curve
(a) normal curves slope up: expected inflation will rise
(b) inverted curves slope down: expected inflation will decrease. When money supply is tightened, current interest rate goes up and people expect that future inflation will not be high because there isn't much money flowing around.
(c) U-shaped curve

(5) currency risk
Japanese 10 year bond: 0.63%, US 10 year bond: 1.89%
r(US) = r(Japan) +e (expected appreciation of yen against dollar)

Now 1$=93.2yen, and I have 100$ to invest:
Buy 100$ bonds                                            convert to 9320 yen, and after one year
After one year: 101.89%                                9320*1.0063=9378.7 yen
                                                                      9378.7/93.2 = 100.62 <101.89
 Based on no-arbitrage principle, yen should appreciate against dollar
different expected inflation in different countries

Interest rate risk and realized (actual) rate of return
2 year zero coupon bond with the par value of $10000. Buy it at $8573 today
8573 = 10000/(1+r)^2; r = 8%
Suppose in one year:
(a) interest rate rises to 10%, PV= 10000/1.1 = 9091
realized return: 9091-8573 / 8573 = 6.04%
(b) interest rate decreases to 6%, PV = 10000/1.06 = 9433
realized return: 9433 - 8573 / 8573 = 10%
If interest rate rises at time when you sell the bond, then you are worse

Buy 30 year zero-coupon bond at par value of $100000, r=8%
PV= 100000 / 1.08^30 = 9938
Suppose one year later, you are forced to sell the bond when interest rate is 10%
PV = 100000/ 1.1^29 = $6304

One year bond, r=8%, Two year bond, r=8%, par value of both bonds are 1000$
PV = 1000/ 1.08 = 925.9                    PV = 1000 / 1.08^2 = 857.3
suppose the interest rate rises to 10 %,
PV = 1000 /1.1 = 909.1                   PV = 1000 / 1.1^2 = 826.4
Capital loss: 925.9 - 909.1 / 925.9 = 1.8%                     857.3 - 826.4 / 857.3 = 3.6%

A bank's balance sheet
Assets                                                 Liabilities
loans/mortgages                                 deposits
(long-term)                                         (short-term)

Timing of the coupon payment
front-loaded example                                                   back-loaded example
$10000 par value       r=10%                                       $10000 par value    r=10%
2 year bond,   coupon rate 10%                                   2 year zero-coupon bond
PV= 1000/1.1+1000/1.1^2+10000/1.1^2=10000      PV = 10000/1.1^2 = 8264
interest rate falls to 8%
PV = 10357                                                                PV = 8573
realized return= 10357-10000 / 10000 = 3.57%        realized return = 8573-8264 / 8264 = 3.7%
                                                                                   Subject to more interest rate risk
Interest rate risk: maturity, timing of coupon----------durations
Larger the durations, more interest rate risk

Check bank's balance sheet, there is a positive duration gap between assets and liabilities, and assets are more volatile

If interest rate goes up, asset value goes down, but liabilities won't fall much \This means that net equity will fall

Institutions that have negative duration gap: insurance company

3/16/2013

Fault lines

current account
CA = NX + NFP + one-sided transfers of money across national boundaries
page 240

As a measure of a country's overall health, the current account can be misleading. (JAPAN)
Money flows from countries that run current account surpluses to those that run current account deficits.

National savings - National investment = CA

P243-245

Forces that played a big role in the rising current account deficit:
(1) recession and tax cut in Bush administration leads to higher fiscal deficits
(2) issue too much debts, which are bought by Chinese
(3) FED: plenty of easy money and little supervision of financial market

Much of the investment was financed with savings from other countries, but the Fed helped create the unsustainable boom that attracted these savings in the first place. 

page 253 Problems within China
page 260 

Repairing gaping holes in the balance sheets of banks, corporations, and households is a time-consuming process, and this process of "deleveraging" helps keep the economy in the doldrums for some time.

The biggest obstacles to recovery in the US may well be the dire condition of individual states' finance. IN theory, the federal government could step into the breach and bail out the states. But this theory ignores the fact that the debt load of the US is already approaching dangerous levels.

Radical remedies

What are the significant obstacles of banking regulation?
(1) regulatory arbitrage
the purposeful movement of financial activity from more regulated to less regulated venues. (Shifting banking activities to shadow banks system)

Some people think that only the big shadow banks should be regulated, but from the author's perspective, it can be a profound mistake because it opens the doors to MORE regulatory arbitrage. (213)

page 214 highlighted
The argument that regulators should establish a robust set of simple rules governing key features of the financial system reminds me of Hayek's idea in The Road to Serfdom. (capital ratio, reserve ratio, capital buffer, leverage ratio)

But the question is how to administer the regulation. (page 215)
regulatory shopping (page 216)
Different areas have regulations of different levels, banks search for the most lenient, incentivizing regulators to loosen their regulation to attract more banks.

I agree with author on page 217 argument. (see highlighted)
The existing system offers firms plenty of regulatory nooks and crannies where they can dodge effective oversight. (218)

Who will regulate the regulators?\(bureaucratic theory)
The author said that we should encourage more clever people to be regulators and enhance their welfare. (I have question on that)

Maybe SEC can recruit veteran trades and bankers who may be nearing retirement. (moral hazard since they are connected with former banks) [Regulatory capture]

page 222

page 223 break the big firms up
page 224 for too big to fail discussion
page 227 for argument of TBTF players and author's opinion on them
break up all the big banks?
page 231
My concern is that: if all financial intermediaries all stuck with their own core businesses, will it slow down the capital raising?
Will there be black market of interconnected financial services?

3/15/2013

First steps

The problems with the compensation on Wall Street is its structure rather than its amount.
The entire financial system is riddled with agency problems, in which one group delegates responsibility to another, which in turn delegates to another group.

 There are times when shareholders and traders align to destructive effect. 186
187 for remedies of compensation problem
(1) mandate a longer period of holding the shares of the firm
(2) when paying out the bonus, take into consideration the long term return of the securities
(3) let the bonus be what traders sell

ways to fix System of securitization
(1) force financial intermediaries to hold some of the MBSs and CDOs that they create (it is proven to be not very effective)
(2) standardization of securities page 193

Rating agencies are now paid by issuers of debts
page 197

A derivative is simply a bet on the outcome of some future event.
Counterparty risk: the chance that the institutions that had sold credit default swaps would be unable to make good on their promises, particularly during a systemic crisis. In effect, the risk created a financial system that was not only too big to fail, but also too interconnected to fail.

Basel I (Basel Capital Accord) asked banks to differentiate between the various classes of assets they held in order to better assess the relative risk posed by holding them.

Basel 2 has serious flaws: it assumed that the world's financial system is more stable than it actually is.

The crisis underscored several realities:
(1) banks need more higher-quality capital
(2) the "capital buffer" that many banks have established is not large enough to shelter them from the crisis
(3) the quality of the assets may deteriorate fast

page 210 important

Spend more, tax less

In the succeeding decades, fiscal policy became the weapon of choice when dealing with economic downturns, whether caused by crises or not.

Fiscal policy:
(a) direct fiscal stimulus
(b) tax cuts and rebates
(c) transfer payment

Fiscal policy is not a free lunch.
crowding-out effect, and Ricardian Equivalence, certain kinds of fiscal measures can spur demand in the present at the cost of demand in the future.

gov.t guarantee
(1) deposit insurance
A systemic crisis in the banking system can easily overwhelm funds set aside to meet the occasional failure

page 167

capital injection (page 169) how the banks function
Banks raise money by issuing shares and borrowing money from a range of lenders. Bank loans money to accumulate assets.

How much is the bank worth? The difference between the value of the assets and the value of the debt liabilities. (page 170)

page 173-175 for ways to cope with asset problems

page 179 highlighted

The last resort

The Fed, in its rush to prop up the financial system, rescued both illiquid and insolvent financial institutions. That precedent may be hard to undo and over the long run, may lead to a collapse of market discipline, which in turn may sow the seeds of bigger bubbles and even more destructive crises.

Read page 137 for government's manipulation on interest rates

In recent crisis, deflation showed up.
In most cases, deflation isn't caused by a technological revolution; it is caused by a sharp fall of aggregate demand relative to the supply of the goods and the productive capacity of the economy.

Irving Fisher believed that depressions became great because of two factors:
(1) too much debt in advance of a crisis
(2) too much deflation in its wake

Page 140 for Fisher's argument of deflation and "great paradox"
deflation increases the real value of nominal debts. 
Debt deflation and debt inflation

The upshot of debt deflation is that debtors---households, firms, banks, and others---see their borrowing costs rise above and beyond what they originally anticipated. (page 141)

When economists talk about the futility of ordinary monetary policy, they refer to a "liquidity trap".
Open market operations (page 143)

A liquidity trap happens when the Fed has exhausted the power of open market operations. (page 144)
 Banks had money, but they did not want to lend it: uncertainty bred by the crisis, and concerns that many of their existing loans and investments would eventually sour, made them RISK AVERSE.

A glimpse of the liquidity trap (page 145)
TED spread: the difference between the interest rate on the short-term government debt of the US and the three-month LIBOR, the interest rate that banks charge one another for three-month loans.

To cut the spread, the Fed set up a series of new "liquidity" facilities that made low-cost loans available to anyone who needed them. Government made loans directly to ailing financial institutions. (page 146)

In this crisis, central banks ended up providing support to virtually all banks.

Quantitative easing: have the central bank intervene in markets for long-term debt in the same way that it does in market for short-term debt. (page 151-152)

page154
page 155 unintended consequences


3/14/2013

Global pandemics

The webs of debt and credit have always been fragile in times of panic, spreading problems from one part of the global economy to another. The reason is that: when one link in the very elaborate chain breaks and defaults on some debt, it can leave creditors dangerously short of funds, unable to guarantee the credit of other firms. In this way, the consequences of one failure can spread throughout the entire money market.

When Lehman Brothers failed, the hundreds of billions of dollars in short-term debt it had issued became worthless, triggering panic among the various investors and funds that held it.

A classic mechanism for spreading crises is the otherwise unremarkable fact that investors in multiple countries hold identical assets. When the bubble behind the securities popped, investors worldwide simultaneously saw their portfolio go up in smoke. Invariably, they curtailed credit, hoard cash and triggered a panic.
About half of the securitized sausage made on Wall Street--CDOs and MBS--were sold to foreign investors. The largest portion of these securities ended up in the asset portfolios of European banks and their subsidiaries.

The loss sustained by these banks caused considerable collateral damage to the corporate sector in Europe. Unlike American firms, which rely more on capital market for their financing, European firms depend heavily on bank financing.

The subsidiaries of European banks had pumped significant amounts of credit into emerging European countries like Ukraine, and once the parent banks suffered massive losses, they became risk averse and withdraw credit across the board, starving their foreign subsidiaries. The resulting collapse of credit in emerging Europe helped plunge these countries into recession.

Normally banks issue "letters of credit" to guarantee that goods in transit from China to US will be paid for when they reach their final destination. Once the credit markets seized up, banks stopped providing this essential financing.

Commodities and currencies: page 123, read 124 for capital flight

page 126 for reason why housing prices go up.
Low savings and high investment rates implied that the current account balance---the difference between a country's total savings and its total investments---was veering into negative territory. Countries that run a deficit need savings from other countries to underwrite their investments.

Reasons of the financial crisis:
Housing bubbles; An overreliance on easy money and leverage; an embrace of high-risk assets and financial innovations

Similar crisis occur in different places with synchronization because of shared weaknesses. 

Things fall apart

read page 92 for hedge funds
page 95 libor

In the recent crisis, the Fed and other central banks couldn't immediately bring the crisis under control.
(1) the size and scope of the meltdown made many of the usual tools useless
(2) investment banks and shadow banks lacked ready access to the lifelines that had served central banks so well in previous crises.

Investment banks, like ordinary banks, borrow short and lend long, but they don't have access to lender of the last resort, and their creditors cannot rely on deposit insurance if thing go awry. Being less regulated, they tend to be much more leveraged.They are also highly dependent on short-term financing in the repo market.

The interpretation that reducing a crisis to one spectacular failure simplifies an extraordinary complex chain of events is misleading.

page 106, 108

By 2008 both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae had great loss
(1) the insurance premiums no longer covered the losses
(2) investment portfolios burst with subprime mortgages and subprime securities.

page 111, Fed purchased all AIG's tranches with full value. (moral hazard)

The existence of toxic securities make people panic about the commercial paper market. Corporations found it hard to borrow money. The collapse of the commercial paper market posed the risk that otherwise solid corporations would go insolvent because of ta run on their short-term liabilities. As a result, the Fed set up another lending facility to make loans to firms with an A rating or better. 

3/13/2013

Plate tectonics

While the housing bubble rested in part on subprime mortgages, the problems were more pervasive and widespread. The problems were rooted in deep structural changes in economy that date back many years.

So the securitization is just the beginning. Long-standing changes in corporate governance and compensation schemes played a role, too. Government is to blame for the monetary policies and its subsidy on housing sectors.

Many bubbles begin when a burst of innovation or technological progress heralds the dawn of a new economy. In the 1970s the Ginnie Mae put together the first mortgage-backed securities. Thanks to securitization, illiquid assets like mortgages could now be pooled and transformed into liquid assets that were tradable on the open market. The bank or firm originating the securities have little incentive to conduct the oversight and due diligence necessary to confirm that the underlying loans would be paid off.

read page 66

In recent crisis, even unsecured creditors did not impose market discipline. The reasons:
(1) the unsecured claims were too small to make a difference
(2) the unsecured creditors were treated mostly like secured creditors and did not experience losses as they were bailed out
(3) the lender-of-the-last-resort support of central banks prevented the working of market discipline

page 73

page 75 claims for too much regulations

It is common that shadow banks have a profound maturity mismatch.

page 81

Crisis economists

The work of Shiller and other suggests that capitalism is not some self-regulating system that hums along with nary a disruption; rather, it is a system prone to 'irrational exuberance' and unfounded pessimism.

Bubbles, as John Stuart Mill believed, begin when some external shock or "some accident" --a new market, for example--"sets speculations at work".
Credits and debt play an essential role.
Invariably, the boom ends when the unexpected failure of a handful of firms causes a "general distrust" in the marketplace, spreading uncertainty and making credit next to impossible to secure, except on onerous terms.

Mill's model:\
(1) an external shock for a boom
(2) a speculative mania driven by psychology
(3) a feedback mechanism that sends prices skyward
(4) easy credit available to everyone
(5) inevitable crash of the financial system, followed by plenty of collateral damage on the 'real economy' of factories and workers.

Karl Marx was the first thinker to see capitalism as inherently unstable and prone to crisis.

Keynes believed that what really determines employment levels is aggregate demand; if wages are cut and workers are fired, people will consume less and demand will falter. As demand drops, entrepreneurs will become more reluctant to invest, which incurs more wage cut. People save more and spend less, decreasing more demand. (Deflation) The way to cope with is government intervention.

Friedman believes that instability within any given economy can be explained by fluctuations in the money supply.

According to Minsky, instability of capitalism originates in the very financial institutions that make capitalism
Three types of borrowers
(1) hedge borrowers
(2) speculative borrowers
(3) Ponzi borrowers

Austrian economists:
skepticism toward government intervention
a focus on individual entrepreneurs as the unit of economics analysis

The white swan

A speculative boom and an excessive accumulation of debt stood at the center of many of crises. Governments, corporations, individual households borrowed too much money, much of it denominated in foreign currencies. At the same time, banks and other financial institutions lent too much against collateral of shaky value. This situation was unsustainable, and eventually doubts about the viability of all those loans triggered a panic. The resulting crisis necessarily hit both excessively indebted borrowers and excessively leveraged lenders.

Over the previous two decades, bankers and traders had increasingly been rewarded with bonuses tied to short-term profits, giving them an incentive to take excessive risks, leverage up their investments, and bet the entire bank on astonishingly reckless investment strategies.

Shadow banking system:
(1)borrow from the "depositors" (like purchasers of commercial paper) who lent these entities money on a short-term basis.
(2)then shadow banks sank money into illiquid, risk, long-term securities: MBS, CDOs, etc.
(3)when panics struck, "depositors" demand money or refuse to renew loans, forcing shadow banks to liquidate their securities at fire-sale prices.

3/11/2013

Structure of central banks and the federal reserve system

Federal reserve banks:
12 Federal Reserve banks in 12 Federal Reserve districts
characteristics:
(1) quasi-public (part private, part government)
partly owned by the private commercial banks in the district who are members of the Federal Reserve system
(2) nine directors, chosen by member banks (6) and Board of Governors (3)
One president among nine directors

Member banks

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
7 members, appointed by president and confirmed by the Senate

Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
meet eight times a year and makes decisions regarding the conduct of open market operations

A fair characterization of the Federal Reserve System as it has evolved is that it functions as a central bank, headquartered in Washington, D.C., which branches in 12 cities.

The independence of the Fed
(1) members are appointed for a 14-year term, which is not renewable
(2) independent and substantial source of revenue from its holdings of securities and from its loans to banks
(3) still subject to the influence of Congress because the legislation that structures it is written by Congress and is subject to the change at any time

The theory of bureaucratic behavior suggests that the objective of a bureaucracy is to maximize its own welfare.
(1) Fed has continually counterattacked congressional attempts to control its budget.
(2) Fed tries to avoid conflict with powerful groups that may threaten to curtail its power and reduce its autonomy.

The case fro an independent Fed rests on the view that curtailing the Fed's independence and subjecting it to more political pressures would impart an inflationary bias to monetary policy. An independent Fed can afford to take the long view and not respond to short-run problems that will result in expansionary monetary policy and a political business cycle.

The case againset an independent Fed holds that it is undemocratic to have monetary policy controlled by an elite that is not accountable to the public. An independent Fed also makes the coordination of monetary and fiscal policy difficult.

3/06/2013

The risk and term strcture of interst rates

One attribute of a bond that influences its interest is its default risk. The spread between the interest rates on bonds with default risk and default-free bonds, called the risk premium, indicates how much additional interest people must earn to be willing to hold a risky bond.

Another attribute of a bond that influences its interest rate is its liquidity. US treasury bonds are the most liquid of all long-term bonds because they are so widely traded that they are the easiest to sell quickly and the cost of selling them is low. A bond with low liquidity is not as desirable as the one with higher liquidity, with all other conditions being equal. Thus people demand a liquidity premium, that is an extra amount of interest to hold them.

Interest payments on municipal bonds are exempt from federal income taxes.

Summary: more risk---higher interest rate, less liquid---higher interest rate,  exemption from tax payment----lower interest rate

Yield curves can be classified as upward-sloping, flat and downward-sloping
(1) When yield curves are upward-sloping
the long-term interest rates are above the short-term interest rates
(2) Flat
short- and long-term interest rates are the same
(3) Inverted
Short-term interest rates are higher than the long-term interest rates

The expectation hypothesis: The interest rate on a long-term bond will equal an average of short-term interest rates that people expect to occur over the life of the long-term bond. The explanation provided by the expectation theory for why interest rates on bonds of different maturities differ is that short-term interest rates are expected to have different values at future dates. The key assumption is that buyers of bonds do not prefer bonds of one maturity over another, so they will not hold any quantity of a bond if its expected return is less than that of another bond with a different maturity.

The preferred habitat theory: interest rate on a long-term bond will equal an average of short-term interest rates expected to occur over the life of the long-term bonds plus a liquidity premium that responds to supply and demand conditions for that bond. The key assumption is that bonds of different maturities are not perfect substitutes.

Three facts of yield curves:
(1) interest rates on bonds of different maturities tend to move together over time
(2) yield curves usually slope upward
(3) when short-term interest rates are low, yield curves are most likely to have a steep upward slope

3/05/2013

Banking notes 3/5/2013

Why do yields change over time
(1) real interest rate changes (supply and demand curve in loanable funds market)
(2) credit risk
*(3) inflation and expected inflation rate
Fisher equation:  real interest rate = nominal interest rate - inflation rate

interest rate changes because people's expected inflation changes all the time

Why different bonds have different yields
(1) credit risks
 concern of default
people would demand a higher interest rate for to compensate the potential loss
risk premium
AAA has the highest safety
government treasures are nominally risk-free
junk bond and traditional bond


Revolving credit cards come branded with two important numbers - the maximum available credit and the interest rate. The credit line tells you how much money that you can borrow at once without paying off the balance. The interest rate is the portion of the balance that gets charged to your account as a financing fee when you have not paid off the balance in full at the end of every month.

Credit cards are unsecured, meaning that there is no collateral for your borrowing.
 The interest rate of credit card is high

Suppose a bank loans you $100, interest rate is 10%, and 4.5% of the loan is never paid back.
Bank needs 110$ next year, but statistically the bank can get back 110*(1-4.5%) = 105.56
So the bank will have to increase the interest rate to get it back.
Suppose the interest rate imposed is A, then 100*(1+A)*(1-4.5%) = 110
a kind of negative externalities

(2) liquidity
Liquidity premium:
A premium that investors will demand when any given security can not be easily converted into cash, and converted at the fair market value. When the liquidity premium is high, then the asset is said to be illiquid, which will cause prices to fall, and interest rates to rise.

For example, assume an investor is looking at purchasing one of two corporate bonds, each with the same coupon payments, and time to maturity. Assuming one of these bonds is traded on a public exchange, while the other is not, the investor will not be willing to pay as much for the non-public bond. The difference in prices, and yields, the investor is willing to pay for each bond is called the liquidity premium.
The measurement of liquidity is difference in asks and bids. 

People are willing to pay a higher price and demand a lower interest rate for liquid bonds and stocks. US treasury securities are one of the most liquid securities on earth, that is the major reason why Fed actually use them to conduct the open market operations.  We don't want interest rate be fluctuated greatly.

(3) taxes
if tax on interest is low, then interest rate is low
The reasons why municipal bond has higher interest rate than US treasury bonds are that (1) municipal bond are more illiquid (2) US treasury bonds are exempt from tax payment

One reason not to tax the rich: some people gain wealth from buying stocks and bonds, and if government tax on securities, it will have to have higher interest rate and these payment will be paid by the poor.

(4) maturity
Why is the yield curve normally upward sloping: expectation and preferred habitat
 lenders are concerned about a potential default (or rising rates of inflation), so they offer long-term loans for higher interest rates than they offer for shorter-term loans.

Expectation theory:  The hypothesis that long-term interest rates contain a prediction of future short-term interest rates. Expectations theory postulates that you would earn the same amount of interest by investing in a one-year bond today and rolling that investment into a new one-year bond a year later compared to buying a two-year bond today. This theory is sometimes used to explain the yield curve but has proven inaccurate in practice as interest rates tend to remain flat when the yield curve is normal. In other words, expectations theory often overstates future short-term interest rates. Another term-structure theory, preferred habitat theory, expands on expectations theory to explain why longer-term bonds tend to pay more interest than two shorter-term bonds that add up to the same maturity. It says that investors prefer short-term bonds and are only interested in longer-term bonds if they pay a risk premium. While expectations theory assumes that investors only care about yield, preferred habitat theory assumes they care about maturity as well as yield.

The reasoning behind the expectations theory is that bond investors only care about yield and are willing to buy bonds of any maturity, which in theory would mean a flat term structure unless expectations are for rising rates.
Preferred habitat: A term structure theory suggesting that different bond investors prefer one maturity length over another and are only willing to buy bonds outside of their maturity preference if a risk premium for the maturity range is available. The theory also suggests that when all else is equal investors prefer to hold short-term bonds in place of long-term bonds and that the yields on longer term bonds should be higher than shorter term bonds.\

If expected inflation rate is high, then the inverse yield curve will occur, if there is no inflation rate, then the yield curve will be flat. 

(5) currency risk 

3/04/2013

Banking regulation


Depositors lack information about the quality of these private loans.Unable to learn if bank managers were taking too much risk or were outright crooks, depositors would be reluctant to put money in the bank, thus making banking institutions less viable.

A government safety net for depositors can short-circuit runs on banks and bank panics, and by providing protection fro the depositors, it can overcome reluctance to put funds ion the banking system. One form is deposit insurance.

The most serious drawback of the government safe net stems from moral hazard, the incentives of one party to a transaction to engage in activities detrimental to the other party. Depositor won't monitor the bank. Banks may have more risky investment.

One problem with the too-big-too-fail policy is that it increases the moral hazard incentives for big banks. The result of the too-big-to-fail policy is that big banks might take on even greater risks, thereby making bank failures more likely.

Nonbank financial institutions

Insurance company:
Because death rates for the population as a whole are predictable with a high degree of certainty, life insurance company can accurately predict what their payouts to policyholders will be in the future. Consequently, they hold long term assets that are not particularly liquid.

Insurance companies use the premiums paid on policies to invest in assets such as bonds, stocks, mortgages and other loans; the earnings from these assets are then used to pay out claims on the policies.

Ways to reduce moral hazards and adverse selection:
(1) information collection (reduce adverse selection)
(2) risk-based premiums, risk classification (reduce adverse selection)
(3) restrictive provisions (reduce moral hazard)
(4) prevention of fraud (reduce moral hazard)
(5) deductibles: the fixed amount by which the insured's loss is reduced when a claim is paid off. A 250$ deductible on an auto policy means that if you suffer a loss of 1000$ because of an accident, the insurance company will pay you only 750$. (reduce moral hazard)
(6) coinsurance: works exactly the same as deductible
(7) limits on the amount of insurance

Pension funds:
Because the benefits paid out of the pension fund each year are highly predictable, pension funds invest in long term securities,with the bulk of their asset holdings in bonds, stocks, and long term mortgages.

Private pension funds are administered by a bank, a life insurance company or a pension fund manager.
Public pension plans: social securities. Unlike a private pension plan, paid-out benefits are not tied closely to a participant's past contributions, so typically they are paid out from current contributions. This "pay-as-you-go" system can leads to great underfunding, which means that a person's contribution and earnings do not cover what he gets from the pension fund.

Mutual funds:
financial intermediaries that pool the resources of many small investors by selling them shares and using the proceeds to buy securities. Mutual funds allow the small investors to obtain the benefits of lower transactions costs in purchasing securities and to take advantage of the reduction of risk by diversifying the portfolio of securities held.

Federal Credit Agency:
Housing sector: Ginne Mae, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
Farm: Farmer Mae
Student loans: Sallie Mae

Government loan guarantees; acts like insurance: it insures the lender from any loss if the borrower defaults.
Housing: FHA, Veterans Administrations, Urban Development
Farm and education

Securities market institutions:
Investment banks: When a corporation wishes to borrow funds, it hires the services of an investment bank to help sell its securities.
(1) They advise the corporation whether it should issue bond or stock
(2) underwriters--investment banks that guarantee the corporation a price on the securities and then sell them to the market

Securities brokers and dealers: conduct trading in secondary market.
Brokers: match buyers with sellers (don't own securities themselves)
Dealers: link buyers and sellers by standing ready to buy and sell securities at given prices, They hold inventories of securities and make their living by selling these securities for a slightly higher price than they paid for them.


Managing credit risk and interest risk

Adverse selection in loan markets occurs because bad credit risks (those most likely to default on their loans) are the ones who usually line up for loans; that is, those who are most likely to produce an adverse outcome are the most likely to be selected.

Moral hazard exists in loan markets because borrowers may have incentives to engage in activities that are undesirable from the lenders' point of view.

Ways to prevent the above two problems:
(1) Screening and monitoring:
Lenders should screen out the bad credit risks from the good ones so that loans are profitable to them.
Information collection

Specialization in some market loans makes banks easier to collect relative information

(2) Long-term customer relationships
(3) Loan commitments:
a loan commitment is a bank's commitment (for a special future period of time) to provide a firm with loans up to given amount at an interest that is tied to some market interest rate.
(4) Collateral and compensating balances:
a firm receiving a loan must keep a required minimum amount of funds in a checking account at the bank
(5) Credit rationing:
Lenders refuse to make loans even though borrowers are willing to pay the state interest rate or even a higher rate.
Two forms
(a) a lender refuses to make a loan of any amount to a borrower, even if the borrower is willing to pay a higher interest rate
(b) a lender is willing to make a loan but restricts the size of the loan to less than the borrower would like

Managing interest risk:
If a bank has more rate-sensitive liabilities than assets, a rise in interest rates will reduce bank profits and a decline in interest rates will raise bank profits.

We can use gap analysis (in which the amount of rate-sensitive liabilities is subtracted from the amount of rate-sensitive assets) to measure the sensitivity of bank profits to changes in interest rates

Duration analysis: examines the the sensitivity of the market value of the bank's total assets and liabilities to changes in interest rates.
% change in market value of security = -% change in interest rate * duration in yrs
 

Strategues for managing bank capital

To lower the amount of capital relative to assets and raise the equity multiplier (that is ASSETS / EQUITY CAPITAL), do three things
(1) reduce the amount of bank capital by buying back some of the bank's stocks
(2) reduce the bank's capital by paying out higher dividends to its stockholders, thereby reducing its retained earnings
(3) keep bank capital constant but increase the bank's assets by acquiring new funds, say, by issuing CDs, and then seeking out loan business or purchasing more securities with these new funds.

To increase the amount of capital, do the reverse.

Equity multiplier:
EM = assets / equity capital

Return on assets (ROA) :
ROA = net profits after taxes / assets

Return on equity (ROE) :
ROE = net profits after taxes / equity capital

ROE = ROA * EM

The banking firm and the management of financial institutions

The bank balance sheet:
Total assets = total liabilities + capital

Liabilities (sources if funds)
(1) checkable deposits:
bank accounts that allow the owner of the account to write checks to third parties. They are usually the lowest-cost source of bank funds because depositors are willing to forgo some interest in order to have access to to a liquid asset that can be used to make purchases.

(2) Non-transaction deposits
owners cannot write checks on them, but the interest rates are usually higher than those on checkable deposits.
(a) savings account
(b) time deposits, which are also called certificate of deposit, or CD

(3) Borrowings
funds borrowed from the Fed, other banks and corporations/ Borrowing from the Fed is called discount loans (or advances). They also borrow overnight in federal funds market from other US banks and financial institutions to have enough deposits at the Federal Reserve to meet the amount required by the Fed.

(4) Bank Capital
a cushion against a drop in the value of its assets

Assets (Uses of funds)
(1) reserves
All banks hold some of the funds they acquire as deposits in an account at the Fed. RESERVES are these deposits plus currency that is physically held by banks (called VAULT CASH because it is stored in bank vaults overnight)

The reasons to hold reserves (a) required reserves are mandated by law (b) additional reserves, called excess reserves, are the most liquid of all bank assets and can be used by a bank to meet its obligation when funds are withdrawn, either directly by a depositor or indirectly when a check is written on an account.

(2) securities

(3) loans
less liquid than other assets because they cannot be turned into cash until the loan matures.

(4) other assets (physical)

In general terms, banks make profits by selling liabilities with one set of characteristics and using the proceeds to buy assets with a different set of characteristics. (asset transformation) Transform the saving asset (asset held by the depositor) to a mortgage loan (asset held by the bank)

When a bank receives additional deposits, it gains an equal amount of reserves; when it loses deposits, it loses deposits, it loses an equal amount of reserves.

IF a bank has ample reserves, a deposit outflow doesn't necessitate changes in other parts of balance sheets

liquidity management: the acquisition of sufficiently liquid assets to meet the bank's obligation to depositors

asset management: pursue an acceptably low level of risk by acquiring assets that have a low rate of default and by diversifying asset holdings

liability management: acquire funds at low cost (negotiable CDs and federal fund market)
a bank maintains bank capital to lessen the chance that it will become insolvent
net profit after taxes/equity capital = net profit / assets * assets / equity capital
(given the return on assets, the lower the bank capital, the higher the return for the owners of the bank)
bank capital requirements

capital adequacy management: the amount of capital should maintain and capital needed


The reasons why banks hold excess reserve:
When a deposit outflow occurs, holding excess reserves allows the bank to escape the cost of (1) borrowing from other banks or corporations (2) selling securities (3) borrowing from federal (4) selling loans. Excess reserves are insurance against the costs associated with deposit outflows. The higher the costs associated with deposit outflows, the more excess reserves banks will want to hold.