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International Exposure to U.S.-Centered Credit Market Turmoil. Stijn Claessens Assistant Director, Research Department, IMF Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Conference Financial Innovation and Crises Jekyll Island, Georgia, May 11-13, 2009.
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International Exposure to U.S.-Centered Credit Market Turmoil Stijn Claessens Assistant Director, Research Department, IMF Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta Conference Financial Innovation and Crises Jekyll Island, Georgia, May 11-13, 2009
International Exposure to U.S.-Centered Credit Market Turmoil • “Causes” of the current crisis • Many commonalities with previous crises • Some new dimensions • International dimensions • Interventions • Policy actions • Medium term reform options • General national & international financial architecture • Cross-border banking: specific options 2
“Causes” of the Current Crisis: Many Commonalities with Previous Crises • Asset price bubbles: housing, equity, .com • Ex-post clear, ex-ante always less • Credit booms • With deteriorating lending standards • Now too, but this time more households • Systemic risk buildup • Subprime and loans in FX, became correlated • Regulation and supervision failures • Do not keep up, this time especially derivatives
“Causes” of the Current Crisis: Some New Dimensions • Increased opaqueness • Securitization: poorer risk assign, monitoring • Harder to value once crisis started • Increased role of leverage • In many sectors and markets • Central role of households • Complicating restructuring • Financial integration & interconnectedness • Larger capital flows /cross-border positions • Greater connection between markets
International financial integration increased sharply in last few years
International lending and interbank exposures grew Growth in International Claims, by Bank Nationality 1/ (in year over year percent change) Foreign Exposures 4/ 5/ (in trillions of U.S. dollars) 07Q4 1/ Foreign currency claims on home country residents are excluded. 2/ Danish, Finnish, Norwegian and Swedish banks. 3/ Total international claims excluding those booked by Japanese, Nordic and US banks. 4/ On an ultimate risk basis and excluding inter-office transfers. 5/ Foreign claims vis-à-vis entities (banks and non-banks) in advanced economies, booked by banks headquartered in the countries shown.
Dispersion of players increased (top 50 banks across countries)
U.S. is largest economy and financial center, leading easily to spillovers • US size/interconnectedness bound to global effects/spillovers • U.S. = 31 percent of global financial assets • U.S. dollar = 62 percent of reserve currency assets • U.S. financial assets perceived to offer safety and liquidity attractive for private and public investors • United States is major financial intermediary with large gross (two-ways) cross-border capital flows • Large size also means large real sector shocks, as US recession affects global demand
Crisis spread through lack of liquidity, then solvency, confidence, now subsiding
Timeline of events • August 1-17, 2007—German bank IKB. BNP Paribas; ECB, other central banks inject overnight liquidity; Sachsen LB. • September 14-19 — Northern Rock • December 12, 2007— Fed, ECB, SNB, Bank of Canada; Fed (TAF). • March 11-16, 2008— Bear Stearns • September 7— Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac • September 15-16—Lehman Brothers and AIG. • September 20—$700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program • September 29—Fed currency swap lines; Fortis; Iceland • October 7-8—Coordinated interest rate cuts; CPFF Iceland; U.K. provide capital to banks and issues debt guarantees. • October 13-14—Euro governments provide capital; U.S. Capital Purchase Program (up to $250 billion) under TARP. • November 23-25—Citigroup’s. Fed $200 billion new facility. • December 4— Large joint interest rate cuts in Europe
International spillovers:phases and mechanisms • Direct links • Exposure to the US subprime, CDOs, etc • Hitting European banks, IKB, BNP • Triggered turmoil in similar housing boom markets, bank run on UK Northern Rock • Liquidity • Liquidity shortages, freezing of credit markets, stock markets declines • Affected many markets (UK Sterling, Euro, SwFr) • $-shortage swaps between major central banks
International spillovers:phases and mechanisms • Solvency concerns • Recapitalization (SWFs) fallen short • Deficiencies in resolution frameworks • Lehman, AIG spillovers • October 2008, solvency concerns affecting systemically important global financial institutions • Much government interventions • Real and financial sector links • Perverse feedback loops in Q4 2008 and Q1 2009
Interventions create spillovers • Liquidity provision • Not always well coordinated, e.g., shortage of dollars • Some countries left out, e.g., emerging markets • Guarantees of wholesale, retail deposits, others • Difference in coverage, terms, led to capital flows, large differences in spreads, sovereign risks (e.g., Ireland) • Regionally more coordinated (EU), globally not • Purchases or exchanges of assets • Much direct purchases and indirect support • Rules vary across countries
Interventions create spillovers • Capital injections and other support to banks • Favoring national financial institutions (due to fiscal) • Ring-fencing of assets (UK-Iceland; Germany-Lehman) • Few cross-border (Dexia, Fortis), but largely national (also legal, e.g., US domestic depositor preference) • Purchases of non-performing assets • Little NPAs so far, but rules do differ, create distortions • Exit: to come, many coordination issues • Unwinding of guarantees, sale of state-ownership/assets • Distortions: unfair competition, weaken market discipline
As crisis ongoing, government interventions continue • Financial sector and monetary/fiscal actions • Measures did not prevent adverse feedback, recessions • Conventional monetary has limits; fiscal stimulus, but slower • More financial sector actions still likely (needed) • Covering financial sector more comprehensively • Including housing and corporate sectors • Means interventions will continue to distort • Emerging markets have specific problems • Have worse coping mechanisms, more at risk • External official financing can soften somewhat
What to do in the medium-term regarding cross-border activities? • Cross-border generally problematic • Hard to coordinate, design and implement global or even regional solutions • Many global public good aspects • Still, some “predictable” events could be averted • What to do? • Improve foremost national regulation and supervision • Medium-term: adopt specific options for cross-border • Enhance international financial architecture
Directions for the medium-term: national regulation and supervision • Regulatory perimeter • Broadened to ensure that all financial activities that pose systemic risks are adequately captured and covered by information collections • Micro-prudential regulation • Individual risks and systemic potential • Macro-prudential regulation • To dampen procyclicality
Directions for the medium-term: national regulation and supervision • Information and market discipline • Enhance market discipline, improve corporate governance, reduce conflict of interests • Organization of regulation and supervision • Greater coordination within and across countries in design of regulation and systemic risk monitoring
Sharing of benefits and costs of financial integration ultimately relate to public goods • Negative externalities • Poor regulation/supervision, limited ability of home countries to stand behind their institutions • Positive externalities (“spill-ins”) • Stability benefits accruing to others, by importing services from well-regulated, well-funded markets • Coordination issues in general large but worse in crises • Regulatory competition: common denominator • Ex-post burden-sharing: very hard to do ex-ante • Institutional uncertainties, e.g., resolution, create turmoil
Current approach for cross-border banking • Current approach (BCBS): home-host principle • Has its limits, especially since foreign banks penetration increased sharply • Intragroup already many possible conflict of interests and governance issues • Many subsidiaries are large in host, but not always important for home, conflict of interests • Improvements are possible • But EU/EMU experience show limits (e.g., most foreign banks remain subs)
Options for cross-border banking • First best: World Financial Authority? • International financial regulator: very demanding, not attainable (or desirable?) • Hard to govern given fuzzy mandate • E.g., how to set the voting structure: assets or liabilities, financial or economic impact? • Needs to be complemented in many ways • Lender of last resort, liquidity, deposit insurance, recapitalization fund
Options for cross-border banking • Second (or third best) solutions • International bank charter—a new regime • Increased convergence in rules and practices without increased coordination • Increased coordination with less or no harmonization or convergence in rules
1. A new regime: International Bank Charter (IBC) • International banks can choose (or are forced) to charter with (new) international agency • New agency has all usual tools, much is rules bound • Complemented by LoLR, liquidity, deposit insurance, recapitalization fund facilities (hard to do) • In exchange, banks can operate in “member” countries with no extra oversight • lower compliance costs, more certainty • Countries could opt-in, but with sanctions for exit
2. Decentralized, but converged approach • Rules and practices (in all dimensions) converge • Regulation, supervision, accounting, resolution • By acting similar, coordination issues are reduced • E.g., same PCA, prepackaged bankruptcy, etc. make for fewer differences of opinion in financial crises • Needs backup up of enhanced monitoring of practices • Still requires enforcement of ex-post burden sharing • Very hard in practice • “Cross-border in life, but national in death”
3. Enhanced coordination approach • Rules and practices need not converge fully • But actions to be coordinated • At individual financial institution’s level (colleges) • At regional/global levels (ECB, De Larosiere, FSB, IMF,?) • Ex-post actions and somewhat ex-ante (rulings) • Still much to be sorted out • E.g., colleges do not consider systemic risks • Information needs to be shared more • And could risk complacency • Coordination is a nice word
Complementary, international financial architecture changes needed, regardless • Information on exposures/risks • Surveillance of countries, systems • Mandatory compliance, less voluntary assessments • Regulatory governance, national/international • Understanding of macro-financial links • Early vulnerabilities’ warning systems • International liquidity provision