Riding for a fall? Concentrated banking with hidden tail risk Marcus Miller, Lei Zhang and Han Hao Li University of Warwick 1 Independent Commission on Banking (ICB): background and mandate • ‘The global financial crisis that began in 2007 has exposed fundamental weaknesses in banking systems and related financial markets. Major financial institutions, including in the UK, were saved from failure only by massive government support schemes. Others were taken over by competitors, or collapsed. ‘ • ‘Securing a stronger and better functioning financial system is the goal of a range of public policy initiatives.’ • ICB established June 2010 to make recommendations by Sep 2011 on ‘measures to promote stability and competition in banking for the benefit of consumers and businesses 2 ICB :Call for Evidence • Warwick group of 5 – including Sayantan Ghosal, Peter Hammond and Michael Waterson as well as two of the current authors - responded to the ‘Call for Evidence’ last year. • 150 Submissions available on ICB website. • What follows is based on the paper attached to our Evidence - revised for presentation at RES Conference in April. • Comments and suggestions welcome ! 3 Financial crisis and support packages, Haldane (2009) UK GDP in $ is $2.28 trillions approx. Exchange rates used: FSR Euro / US dollar exchange rate of 0.710. Sterling / US dollar exchange rate of 0.613. 4 How UK banking sector grew from half to five times annual GDP 5 How leverage has increased from 20 to 40 Total Assets Risk W Assets 0.08 Capital Total Assets 6 Evidence of a “productivity miracle” in finance? The share of banking in Gross Value Added rose from 5% in 1970 to 8% in 2008, but the share of profits in economy-wide profits rose 10 fold (from 1.5% to 15%). 7 Outline of argument UK Banks Excess risk-taking (‘gambling’) Concentration Franchise Value Too Big To Fail ? ‘Skin in the game’ Capital buffers + Competition 8 Money Matters – how and why? I. Fisher 1847-1947 K. Marx 1818-1883 M. Friedman 1912-2006 J. Stiglitz, born 1943 J. M. Keynes 1883 – 1946 Diamond & Dybvig / Allen & Gale workhorse model of competitive banking – and bank runs Two period endowment economy, short and long assets and early and late consumers with preference uncertainty. Proposition 1: The optimal competitive banking contract satisfies the first order condition for inter-te mporal efficiency, satisfies the zero profit condition, This contract has the feature that: , . . (for convenience, we assume risk aversion to be greater than 1). NOTE : The Modigliani-Miller Theorem applies : so capital structure may be varied without any implications for the asset side of the balance sheet: 10 Inter-temporal efficiency Competitive banking Market equilibrium R A Iso-EU Participation constraint 1 Figure 1. Competitive banking: Diamond & Dybvig, Allen & Gale 11 Inter-temporal efficiency Competitive banking Market equilibrium R A Iso-EU y x 1 Figure 3. Competitive banking: Portfolio allocation 12 Monopoly bank that does not gamble but widens its spread on intermediation Proposition 2: The optimal monopoly banking contract satisfies the FOC for inter-temporal efficiency, satisfies participation constraint, This contract exists if and only if , . and it must satisfy . 13 Inter-temporal efficiency Competitive banking Market equilibrium S R A B ‘Monopoly Profit’ Monopoly bank Iso-EU Participation constraint 1 Figure 2. Competitive and monopoly banking with no gambling 14 Monopoly bank: comparative statics Proposition 3: (1) An increase in will increase the value of the outside option. Consumption at date 2, increases, with a rising spread between and , . (2) An increase in , the fraction of early consumers, has no effect on the outside option. So down and goes goes up. (3) An increase in the utility, , associated with the outside option will result in an increase in consumption in both dates. In their chapter entitled ‘ What is the contribution of the financial sector? in The Future of Financ, Haldane et al (20100 consider two different interpretations of the` sharp rise in value added in banking: Miracle or Mirage? 15 A positive productivity shock! Inter-temporal efficiency with R’>R Inter-temporal efficiency with R New market equilibrium R’ N’ Productivity miracle A’ B’ N R New participation constraint A B’’ B Participation constraint 1 16 Monopoly bank that gambles with “fake alpha” investment* Proposition 4: (1) If the bank uses the risky technology, and if contract is a solution to (2) If and , then the optimal . , the optimal deposit contract is the same as that in Proposition 1. Note: Because it assumes no tax distortions, transactions costs, agency problems, or asymmetries of information, Modigliani and Miller theorem (1958) does not apply. * As in Rajan (2005, 2010), and Foster and Young (2010). 17 A productivity ‘mirage’: monopoly banking with tail risk S Market equilibrium Inter-temporal efficiency condition A’ N R B’’ Monopoly with tail risk A B Participation constraint 1 18 Mixture of miracle and mirage Inter-temporal efficiency with R’>R Inter-temporal efficiency with R New market equilibrium R’ N’ Productivity mirage Productivity miracle A’ B’ N R New participation constraint A B’’ B Participation constraint 1 19 Rising incomes in financial services and inequality 1 P Cumulative fraction of income O Cumulative fraction of population from lowest to highest incomes 1-σ 1 Figure 4: Gambling and Gini Coefficient: Miracle or Mirage 20 No Gambling Condition: and ‘mimicking’ as in Foster and Young (2010) Taking on ‘tail risk’ Gambling Figure 4. No-gambling-condition (NGC) and the mimicking constraint 21 Capital Buffers, Franchise Value and Gambling Capital buffers L No Gambling Higher tail risk Gambling N' M Franchise value 22 Impact of “Too Big To Fail” R Capital Buffers No Gambling L Gambling N' Gambling UK TBTF Concentration Figure 6. How bailouts increase the risk of imprudent banking 23 Steps to promote competition and stability R Capital Buffers Gambling No Gambling L Resolution N' Gambling Re-regulation TBTF UK Concentration Figure 6. How bailouts increase the risk of imprudent banking 24 Martin Hellwig et al. (2010) • Banks’ high leverage, and the resulting fragility and systemic risk, contributed to the near collapse of the financial system. Basel III is far from sufficient to protect the system from recurring crises. If a much larger fraction, at least 15%, of banks’ total, non-risk-weighted, assets were funded by equity, the social benefits would be substantial. And the social costs would be minimal, if any. 25 David Miles et al (2010) • It is remarkable to note that our central estimate for the marginal cost and benefit of higher capital suggests an optimal capital ratio of about 50% of risk weighted assets – which might mean a capital to total assets ratio of around 17% and leverage of about 6. This would be about 5 times as much capital – and one fifth the leverage – of banks now. (Setting aside risk of GDP fall, our central estimate of optimal capital is 19% of risk-weighted assets. ) 26 Need for reform: Diane Coyle (2011). • ‘The truth is that banks are again doing well out of banking, but businesses and consumers are not... Bonuses are back... they are a measure of monopoly rents in the business, it does not take great talent to make a profit by taking excessive risk, safe from effective competition and sure of a bail-out if needed.’ 27 Haldane on the history of banking* • ‘In the Middle Ages… the biggest risk to the banks were from the sovereign. Today, perhaps the biggest risk to the sovereign comes from the banks.’ Andrew Haldane is Director of Financial Stability at the Bank of England *P. Alessandri and A. Haldane (2010) ‘Banking on the state’, Bank of England 28 Structure of paper Market conditions This paper Market structure Usual assumptions (DD&AG) Competition Concentration Information Symmetric Asymmetric Liabilities Competition – and monopoly Symmetric – and Asymmetric Retail Deposits: short and long Retail or wholesale Retail Deposits: short Deposits: retail and and long interbank deposits Loans Retail lending (Household and SME) and Wholesale Bank runs Bank runs (e.g. Bank runs Northern Rock) N/A Excessive risk taking Gambling with asymmetric information N/A Low capital buffers, Insolvency, bailouts insolvency followed and capital buffers by bailout and/or nationalisation Assets Market failure: multiple equilibria Market failure: agency problem Policy Footnote: liquidity problems sidestepped 29 Banks v Hedge Funds : battle of the giants Deposits Banks Insured deposits Hedge funds Investment by qualified investors with limited partnership Liability Limited Liability Leverage High: 30 -40 Profits (net, 2010 H2) FT Wed March 2, 2011. $26b (Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Citi, Morgab Stanley, Barclays, HSBC) Partners with unlimited liability Low: less than a tenth of that of the largest global banks* $28b top 10 (inc Quantum, Paulson) * Source: Haldane (2009, p. 9)’Banking on the state’, Bank of England, who comments: (a) the structure of the hedge fund sector has emerged in the absence of state regulation and supports ; (b) it might be that the structure of this sector [has]delivered greater systemic robustness than could be achieved through prudential regulation. 30 Karl Marx Mike Artis 31