1 / 43

A New Capital Regulation For Large Financial Institutions

A New Capital Regulation For Large Financial Institutions. Oliver Hart Harvard University Luigi Zingales University of Chicago. Motivation . If there is one lesson to be learned from the 2008 financial crisis, it is that large financial institutions (LFIs) are too big to fail. Why?

hop
Télécharger la présentation

A New Capital Regulation For Large Financial Institutions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A New Capital Regulation For Large Financial Institutions Oliver Hart Harvard University Luigi Zingales University of Chicago

  2. Motivation • If there is one lesson to be learned from the 2008 financial crisis, it is that large financial institutions (LFIs) are too big to fail. • Why? • Economic rationale • Fear of Armageddon • Possibility of creating value (ex post) • Political rationale • Time inconsistency • Asymmetric loss

  3. Motivation - 2 • A regime in which LFIs won’t be allowed to go fail can impose large costs on society. • large future taxpayer losses to cover bail-outs. • moral hazard • We already see signs of problems: • Large banks, which before the crisis could borrow at 29 basis points below small banks, can borrow at 78 basis points below today. • For the 18 bank holding companies with more than $100 billion in assets the 49bps advantage corresponds to a $34.1 billion subsidy a year. • Given that society will bear the ex post costs of LFI failures there is a strong argument for regulating them ex ante.

  4. How to regulate? • Many suggestions have been made: • limit the size of LFIs; • restrict the kinds of activities an LFI can undertake; • encourage LFIs to issue convertible debt • write living wills; • constrain executive pay; • require contingent capital insurance, etc. • Rather than micro-managing an LFI, we propose an early warning system that will alert the regulator to the fact that an LFI is in trouble. • Regulator can intervene before the damage spreads to other institutions and social costs are incurred. =>We propose a market-based mechanism that achieves this goal.

  5. Idea • We distinguish between • “systemically relevant” obligations, e.g., short-term interbank borrowing • “non-systemically relevant” ones, e.g., long-term debt. • Long-term debt mostly held by mutual funds and pension funds, which can absorb losses on this debt in the same way that they can absorb the losses on equity investments. • Our approach is to protect the systemic obligations in all circumstances but leave open the possibility that the non-systemic obligations will be unprotected.

  6. Our Mechanism • We would require banks to hold two layers of capital below fragile, systemic obligations. First, as currently, a layer of equity. The second layer would consist of long-term debt that is junior to the systemic obligations. • Our mechanism mimics the way margin calls function. • Describe • LFIs will post enough collateral (equity) to ensure that their debt is paid in full. • If the fluctuation in the value of the underlying assets puts junior debt at risk, LFI equityholders will be faced with a margin call and they must either inject new capital or face intervention by the regulator.

  7. Some important differences from standard margin calls: LFI assets are not easily valued, and creditors are dispersed and cannot easily act. So how do we know when the second cushion of long-term debt is in trouble? One can exercise political pressure on a credit rating agency or a regulator. But it’s hard to influence a market. Therefore we use price of CDS on LFI junior debt as a trigger, and regulator to coordinate action. • Trigger mechanism: CDS price. A CDS is a contract that promises to exchange a bond with an amount of cash equal to the bond’s notional value in the event of default. The price of this contract in basis points is the insurance premium paid every year on a notional amount of $100 of debt. By arbitrage the price satisfies where πis the (risk neutral) probability of default and the recovery rate is the proportion of the value of the debt recovered in the event of default.

  8. The trigger is activated if the CDS price rises and stays above a threshold for an extended period of time. During this period the LFI can raise equity to bring the CDS price back down. If this effort fails and the CDS price stays above the threshold for a predetermined period of time ( say its average over the preceding month exceeds 100 basis points),the regulator intervenes. • If the regulator intervenes, she first inspects the firm—in effect, carries out a stress test– and :

  9. If she decides the debt is not at risk, she declares the firm adequately capitalized and injects some government funds that are paripassu with existing financial debt. • If she decides the debt is at risk, she replaces the CEO with a receiver ( trustee). • The trustee eliminates all the debt except for the systemic obligations and runs the new “debt-lite” firm until he can find a cash buyer (alternatively, he may raise cash by recapitalizing the firm and carrying out an IPO). • Any cash raised is used to pay off creditors partially—however, they receive a haircut of at least 20%. Shareholders are wiped out . Any remaining funds go to the taxpayer. • The stress test is important to eliminate the incentive to carry out bear raids. • The haircut is important to ensure that the CDS price is informative about the risk of default on the junior debt.

  10. 1) The Model • Our model focuses on the agency benefits of debt. We assume that the LFI manager can “steal” a fraction of the cash flow available after having paid down the debt. • Idea: managers can pay themselves large bonuses as long as the firm does not become insolvent afterwards. • In the basic model we do not distinguish between systemically relevant and non-systemically relevant debt. Relax later. • A two-period model with the following structure—it is as much a model of GM as Bank of America or Goldman Sachs.

  11. 0 1 2 p2 V1 p1 (1 – p2) V2 p3 V3 (1 – p1) (1 – p3) V4

  12. Assumptions • The firm’s capital structure consists of a choice of long-term debt D due at time 2. • Capital structure is set in a value maximizing way at time zero • At time 1, the LFI manager can modify the capital structure by issuing equity only if he has shareholders’ approval. • At time 2, the company pays out the cash flow V and terminates. • The market is risk neutral, and the interest rate is zero.

  13. In the absence of any debt, the market value of the LFI (which we label VU, i.e., value of the unlevered firm) would be If we introduce a debt D such that V4 < D < V3, then the market value of the debt VD at issue will be and the total value of the levered LFI (VL) will be

  14. The Unregulated Outcome • Since there is a benefit, but not a cost, of debt, the value of a LFI is monotonically increasing in the level of debt. • An unregulated value-maximizing LFI will pick a debt level that would lead to bankruptcy with probability one. • A regulator could impose a debt level less than or equal to V4. • This would eliminate bankruptcy risks, but impose a high cost for the LFI. • Can we do better with a contingent capital structure?

  15. The Regulated Outcome • Consider a time-zero debt level D such that V4 < D < V3. • At time 1, if the realization is good -> debt not at risk • If the realization is bad, then debt becomes risky => LFI receives a margin call, i.e., it is forced to raise more equity. • The LFI must raise y≡D – V4.

  16. The Regulated Outcome -2 By diluting the entire value of existing equity, LFI can raise Hence feasibility requires which implies that for a debt level D to be made riskless through a margin call it must satisfy

  17. The Regulated Outcome -3 • LFI value Substituting the value of y, we obtain (1) • Since (1) is increasing in D, it will be optimal for the LFI to set D at the maximum level compatible with the financing constraint. • Substituting in (1) and rearranging we obtain: • (2)

  18. Above supposes that states of world are verifiable. We propose a mechanism that works when states of world are not verifiable. • Trigger mechanism: CDS price. A CDS is a contract that promises to exchange a bond with an amount of cash equal to the bond’s notional value in the event of default. The price of this contract in basis points is the insurance premium paid every year on a notional amount of $100 of debt. By arbitrage the price satisfies where is the (risk neutral) probability of default and the recovery rate is the proportion of the value of the debt recovered in the event of default.

  19. The trigger is activated if the CDS rises and stays above a threshold—in the model, zero-- for an extended period of time. During this period the LFI can raise equity to bring the CDS price back down. If it does not, the regulator intervenes. • If the regulator intervenes, she first inspects the firm—in effect, carries out a stress test-- and • If debt is not at risk, she declares the firm adequately capitalized and injects some government funds that are paripassu with existing financial debt. • If debt is at risk, she replaces the CEO with a receiver ( trustee), who recapitalizes and sells the firm for cash, ensuring in the process that shareholders are wiped out and creditors receive a haircut—say 20%.

  20. Timing

  21. Key Result Proposition 1: Assume Then the equilibrium price of a CDS, pCDSwill be greater than zero if and only if the lower branch of the tree is followed and the LFI raises equity with value less than D – V4 at date 1. Proof: A) Suppose lower branch and LFI raises less than D – V4 in equity => it cannot be a rational expectations equilibrium for the regulator not to intervene: there is a positive probability that the debt will not be paid at date 2, and the CDS price will reflect this.

  22. Suppose instead that market expects regulator to intervene. • The regulator will find that the LFI is under-capitalized and so he will reorganize, imposing a creditors’ haircut => the CDS price will be positive. • Thus the unique rational expectations equilibrium is for the CDS price to be positive and for the regulator to intervene.

  23. B) Lower branch and LFI raises equity equal to D – V4. If the regulator intervenes he will find that the debt is not at risk, and so he will do nothing. The debt is also not at risk if the regulator does not intervene. Thus the unique rational expectations equilibrium in this case is for the CDS price to be zero and for the regulator not to intervene. C) Upper branch of the tree is followed. Then the debt is not at risk, and so the unique rational expectations equilibrium is one where the CDS price is zero and the regulator does not intervene.

  24. Systemic vs. non-systemic debt • Suppose that systemic debt can be issued at a lower interest rate than non-systemic debt. • If our CDS mechanism works perfectly, the regulator should not fear 100% systemic debt • If concerned about “out of equilibrium” sequence: • manager does not, issue equity at time 1; • regulator is also unable to issue equity; • regulator is unable to sell the company. • If occurs, the firm will default on its systemic debt, possibly leading to a public bail-out.

  25. How can this be avoided? • (a) limit the fraction of total debt that can be systemic; • (b) make the systemic debt senior. • In the model the most systemic debt that can always be paid back at date 2 is , and so the fraction of systemic debt should be limited to

  26. Requiring that an LFI issue non-systemic junior long- term debt has another benefit. • For CDS prices to provide useful information, the underlying instrument should face the risk of default, at least out of equilibrium. • Junior long-term financial debt plays this role. • In theory, it is irrelevant how much junior long-term debt there is, as long as there is some. • In practice, the amount is important because it determines the thickness of the market for the security underlying the CDS.

  27. Why the CDS? Equity not good because Affected by the upside Other debt-like instruments (bonds, yield spreads) good as long as Liquid Not easy to manipulate Easily observable CDS is where price discovery first occurs It leads the stock market (Acharya and Johnson, 2007), the bond market (Blanco et al, 2005) and even the credit rating agencies (Hull et al, 2004). CDS should be traded in a regulated market and properly collateralized

  28. Layer of junior debt The junior long-term debt cushion has a double function: 1) It provides a security that can support the CDS 2) It provides an extra layer of protection for the systemic obligations Minimum amount of long-term debt should be mandated by regulation Hardly a problem, today it is 19%

  29. Injection of government funds The injection of government funds is designed to Make it politically costly to say that the LFI debt is not at risk Protect systemically relevant contracts (which are senior) from the regulator’s mistakes Political cost maximized by making the government claim junior to financial debt But we want to reduce lobbying pressure from claimholders -> debt senior Paripassu debt strikes a reasonable balance.

  30. Endogenizing LFI activities • Investment has a cost of i and return R with probability π and r otherwise. • Realization of this investment opportunity is perfectly correlated with the value of the underlying assets. • This introduces an additional agency cost: • manager captures a fraction of the upside of any investment (in the form of stealing), he suffers no downside cost.

  31. Proposition 3: Under the CDS trigger mechanism, no negative NPV investments will be undertaken. • Manager better off if • Investment is positive NPV (he can steal a fraction of it; • or new equity is issued (he can steal a fraction of it). • In second case shareholders do not approve

  32. Our rule eliminates all the agency costs of debt. • It eliminates incentives to undertake negative NPV investments for risk-shifting reasons. • It eliminates debt overhang problem by forcing equityholders to issue equity when debt becomes risky. • It eliminates any discretion in the decision to issue equity, removing any signal associated with it.

  33. Would This Rule Have Worked? (Bps of premium to insure against default)

  34. False vs. True Positives

  35. The Main AlternativesCoco bonds ( Squam Lake Report) • Debt that converts into equity when a trigger is set off. • Advantage: This does not require any resolution authority • Disadvantages: 1) Which trigger? • Market price of equity -> manager can talk down value of the bank to obtain equity on the cheap • Accounting numbers -> possibility of manipulation • Political decision -> lobbying, influence

  36. Coco bonds -2 2) They do not enhance protection of systemic obligations, only delay bankruptcy • Our mechanism forces equity issues, boosting the protection offered to systemic claims

  37. Bail In (Debt for equity swap) • equity -> warrants • preferred & sub debt -> new equity • senior unsecured debt -> 15% new equity (85% no change) • No impact on customer positions, repo, swaps or insured deposits • Management is removed • What triggers it? • Huge political return from delaying pulling the trigger.

  38. How does mechanism compare with the Dodd-Frank Bill? • Resolution authority useful step but • Not clear what the rules of impairment are • What triggers intervention? • Too late • Too clumsy • Our mechanism could be implemented in the context of Dodd-Frank • Possible private response to Government Regulation

  39. Does It Help to Avoid Systemic Crisis? • 2 reasons why an LFI failure has systemic effects: • Losses on the credit extended to the insolvent LFI can make other LFIs insolvent. • Our mechanism eliminates this problem since no LFI will become insolvent. 2) The failure of an LFI can force assets’ liquidation leading to downward spiral in asset prices • Our mechanism does not force any asset liquidation, thus avoiding a downward spiral in assets prices.

  40. Other Advantages • Easy to apply across different institutions (banks, hedge funds, insurance companies). • Except for the new resolution and trigger mechanism, not very far from existing capital requirements. • Easy to implement in an international setting. • The mechanism encourages early action: banks must issue equity well before they are close to default. A crisis is nipped in the bud.

  41. A Recent Application:How Not to Be Systemically Relevant • Fed can establish a lower CDS threshold saying that if you • stay below • have the required amount of junior long-term debt you are deemed non systemic • As soon as you violate one, you become fully regulated

  42. Conclusions • The too-big-to-fail problem arises from a combination of • an economic problem : cost of default on systemic obligations is very large • a political economy problem: time inconsistency induces the government/regulator to sacrifice the long-term effect of permitting default to avoid the short-term costs • Our mechanism addresses both these problems. • It is similar to existing and proposed capital requirements: • two layers of protections for systemic obligations: equity capital and junior long-term debt.

  43. Conclusions -2 • It differs in • trigger mechanism (based on CDS) • resolution mechanism. • Very importantly, our mechanism encourages early action: banks must issue equity well before they are close to default. • Credit default swaps have been demonized as one of the main causes of the current crisis. It would be only fitting if they were part of the solution.

More Related