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Nayantara D. Hensel is Assistant
Professor at the US Naval Postgraduate School. Her expertise includes
mergers, IPO’s, derivatives, domestic and international banking and
venture capital. |
Twin Crises: In Public
Confidence and in the Housing Market
The underpinnings of the financial crisis of 2008 in the United
States and globally have been linked to a variety of potential factors.
Possible causes that have been discussed in the press include the
liberal lending policies of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the investment
of banks in mortgage-backed securities and collateralized debt
obligations (CDO’s), significant counterparty risk involved with credit
default swaps in the absence of a clearing house, the dependence of
European banks on short-term lending markets, and, in general, a
significant mismatch between income and steeply rising housing prices
that led to the demand for non-traditional types of mortgages. While the
financial crisis was rooted in issues such as these, the crisis would
not have grown to its current magnitude if the public had not become
increasingly anxious and lost confidence in the financial markets.
The public lost confidence in the financial system
largely because so many financial institutions, such as
Lehman Brothers, AIG, and Bear Stearns, collapsed with
little warning. Such unanticipated failures caused consumers
to doubt the quality of the information that they were
receiving. Was the top management misinformed in the months
prior to their collapse? Did they not understand the risk
involved in their holdings of mortgage-backed securities or
the counterparty risk involved in credit default swaps? Or
was information withheld from the public? For example,
Lehman Brothers’ conference call to investors on September
10, five days prior to its bankruptcy, did not suggest the
disastrous nature of its condition. Moreover, investigators
are examining whether Lehman accurately valued its
commercial real estate holdings on its balance sheet, as
well as whether it accurately portrayed the auction-rate
securities that it sold to investors.
As the crisis proceeded, it became clear that banks did
not trust each other, and the public did not trust banks.
Indeed, the collapse of Washington Mutual, which became the
largest bank failure in U.S. financial history, was
precipitated by rapid withdrawals by investors—$16.7 billion
in deposits over 9 days—while IndyMac’s collapse over the
summer was precipitated by depositor withdrawals of $1.3
billion over two weeks. Wachovia experienced increased
pressure to obtain a buyer when customers withdrew $5
billion in deposits in one day. Following the collapse of
Lehman Brothers, the three month dollar LIBOR—a key rate at
which banks lend to each other—skyrocketed. The spread of
the three month LIBOR over the three month Treasury bill
rate reached 464 basis points, one of the largest spreads in
history. These high rates were a result of banks’ mistrust
of each other as borrowers. The high rates themselves made
banks reluctant to borrow, and credit markets froze. The
commercial paper market, which involved short-term debt
issued by companies to meet payroll, etc.—also contracted
since few institutions were willing to buy commercial paper
because of fears of default. During the week ending October
1, the commercial paper market contracted by the largest
amount since the Federal Reserve began tracking it in 2001.
Even companies with a limited involvement in the finance
sector, such as AT&T, were forced to borrow at higher rates
as concerns over the rapid failures of institutions extended
beyond the financial sector. The increase in rates caused
problems for firms reliant on commercial paper as a source
of short-term funding.
In order to work, any policy intended to eliminate the
credit crisis would have to restore confidence. The Paulson
plan, as originally understood when it passed, did not
contain many of the key measures to restore confidence that
were later undertaken. Indeed, when the original $700
billion asset repurchase plan, in which the government would
purchase mortgage-backed securities from financial
institutions, was finally passed on October 3, the Dow Jones
fell by 157 points. By the end of the following week, the
Dow had fallen by 18.2%—its worst weekly percentage decline
in history. Fortunately, markets responded more favorably to
steps taken the following week. The US and European
governments announced greater protection of consumer
deposits at banks, guarantees on money market funds,
sovereign guarantees on bank debt, purchases by the U.S.
government of commercial paper issues, and FDIC guarantees
in the U.S. on loans made by banks to each other. Markets
responded very favorably because these measures protected
banks and the public from the rapid collapse of other banks.
On the day that the European governments agreed to guarantee
the loans that banks made to each other, European markets
staged a historic rally and the S&P 500 rose 11.6%, which
was its biggest one day gain since the Depression. These
measures were not as directly linked to the mortgage-backed
securities as the original Paulson plan, but rather were
more of a solution for the other, non-housing crisis—the
crisis in confidence.
The relationship between the crisis in confidence and the
crisis in the housing market is complex. The crisis in
confidence can worsen the crisis in the housing market. For
example, homeowners with mortgages that have a floating rate
based on LIBOR may be in trouble if the high LIBOR rates
that result because banks don’t trust each other persist. If
these homeowners cannot pay the new floating rate linked to
LIBOR, they may have to go into foreclosure. At the same
time, steps to address the crisis in confidence may worsen
the housing crisis. For example, when the Treasury announced
that it would buy bank equity and guarantee bank debt in an
effort to calm the crisis in confidence, investors began
buying the existing bank debt. Then, investors began selling
the securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac because
they had lower yields. These sales depressed the prices and
increased the yields on Fannie and Freddie’s debt, which
increased mortgage rates. If this continues higher mortgage
rates could worsen the underlying housing crisis and limit
refinancing of existing homes and new home purchases.
In many ways, the crisis in confidence is a crisis in the
quality of information reaching consumers and, as such,
parallels the informational challenges facing consumers
during the corporate scandals of 2002 involving companies
such as Enron, WorldCom, and Tyco. In those crises, as in
this one, complicated financial instruments were a major
cause. This crisis, however, is even more severe because it
involves the financial institutions with which most
consumers do business. As long as financial institutions
collapse with little warning, consumers will worry about the
quality of their information. Tighter regulations, such as
Sarbanes Oxley, in the wake of Enron have helped in this
regard, but more needs to be done. In the meantime, the
market and the banks are likely to respond to policies that
will protect them if a key financial institution collapses
without warning. The U.S. and the global economy are facing
twin crises now, and, hopefully, despite the significant
financial costs, these crises will provide us with a
positive legacy of more transparent information flows and
greater oversight.
Additional Articles in Special Issue of
Economists Ink November 2008
Financial Crisis: What Went Wrong?
The Role of Mark-to-Market Accounting in the Current Financial Crisis
Auctions for Mortgage-Backed Securities
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