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Crisis Management and Resolution
Sergio Lugaresi, Public Affairs
Milan, 15 November, 2012
AGENDA
 The issue: taxpayers’ money
 Endogenous systemic risk
 Liquidation and bail-outs
 Essential bank functions
 From bail-out to bail-in
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The main issue: crisis management and resolution
 In Toronto (2010) the G20 Leaders identified the third pillar of financial reform in
“resolution and addressing systemic institutions. We are committed to design and
implement a system where we have the powers and tools to restructure or resolve all
types of financial institutions in crisis, without taxpayers ultimately bearing the burden,
and adopted principles that will guide implementation.”
 This need international coordination, legal expertise, trust among authorities.
Crisis management
 Bankruptcy: Lehman Brothers, New Century Financial, CIT e al.
 Liquidation with government financing: General Motor, Chrysler
 Receivership: IndyMac, Washington Mutual
 Government blessed/guaranted/financed M&As: LTCM (1998), CountryWide Financial,
Bear Sterns, Dresdner, Merrill Lynch, HBOS, Wachovia
 Split along national lines and bailed-out by governments: Dexia, Fortis
 Bail-out (guarantees, loans, capital): Northern Rock, West LB, IKB, Commerzbank, AIG,
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, JP Morgan, Bank of America, Citigroup. Loyds, RBS, ING
 Haphazard, lack of transparency, taxpayers’ money
Bailouts’ political legitimacy has been damaged
Moral hazard: public aids to the financial sector in percentage of
GDP (June 2007–June 2009)
Guarantees
Recapitalisation Troubled asset
purchase
Total
Countries
Euro Area
15.8
1.9
1.1
18.7
Japan
-
0.0
0.0
0.0
Switzerland
-
1.1
7.9
8.9
10.9
2.2
38.9
52.0
2.2
3.2
3.6
9.0
United Kingdom
United States
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Systemic risk
 Endogenous: Idiosyncratic crises may propagate through contagion and be amplified by
interconnection and so generate a systemic crisis
 Exogenous: systemic risks generated by macro-imbalances and unexpected events
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Endogenous systemic risk
 = The risk that individual firms’ failure will result in a socially unacceptable impact on the broader
economy”
 Systemic risk is NOT contagion per se
 Creditor substitutability?
 Information (good/bad)?
Competition policy
Transparency
 Socially unacceptable is the contagion to certain creditor categories (savers, employees, national
creditors) or “bystanders” (e.g. through the stop of the payment system or the collapse of market
confidence)
 The resolution of failed business is an inherently distributional exercise (losses)
 Socially unacceptable: it is a political rather than an economic matter
 When the distribution of losses through liquidation preset rules is socially unacceptable then there is
a bail-out. Not only banks (Chrysler, auto industry in Sweden, etc.)
 The cross-border dimension add complexity: the decision of one country may have effects on other
countries’ creditors.
Liquidation and bail-out
 Liquidation: compulsory rules to distribute assets according to preset priorities: this
means that some creditors will bear some losses (“haircut” on their assets). This affect
LGDs.
 Priorities in liquidation are an ex ante political decision (Rawlsian)
 Bail-out: haphazard management of a failed company with government support without
preset rules. Creditors do not take losses unless there is an agreement.
 Bail-out inconveniences:
 Taxpayers’ money
 Political decision
 Moral hazard (no LDG)
 However, in presence of systemic risk the choice between liquidation and bailouts is
illusory
To address systemic risk
Prevention:
 Macro-prudential supervision (European Systemic Risk Board and US Financial Service
Oversight Council)
 countercyclical buffers (Basel 3)
 Recovery and Resolution Plan
 Additional capital requirements for SIBs
 Firewall and ring fencing (Volker, Vickers, Liikanen)
 National ring-fencing
 Systemic risk can be mitigated but not eliminated
 Therefore, what to do ex post?
Bank specific resolution issues
 Usually, general insolvency procedures for non-financial companies allow stakeholders
adequate time to reach an agreement which, if necessary, may include an amount of
public support. In any case, when sufficient time is available, an agreement is easier to
reach and there is less risk to revert to an inefficient liquidation.
 However, three factors distinguish bank-specific proceedings from general corporate
insolvencies.
1. Banks’ liabilities are essentially short-term and highly liquid. Bank creditors cannot
accept a long, drawn-out resolution process to wait for their claims.
2. Banks’ essential functions (such as payment systems) cannot be disrupted.
3. The number of bank creditors makes coordination and reaching a rapid insolvency
agreement extremely difficult. Thus, bank insolvencies require speed yet lack a
swift procedure to reach a creditor agreement.
Crisis management and resolution: essential bank functions
 For the FSB, authorities should have the tools to intervene “to ensure the continued
performance of the firm’s essential financial and economic functions, including
uninterrupted access of depositors to their funds wherever they are located” and
avoiding “panic or destabilization of financial markets”.
 In its proposal on crisis management and resolution the European Commission included
also “large bank lending activities” among the essential financial functions whose
performance authorities should be able to ensure. This makes sense particularly with
reference to the activities linked to the payment system and to the supply of working
capital, particularly to small and medium size enterprises.
Crisis management and resolution: ex ante effects
 Rules to orderly resolve SIFIs, but not only…:
 They have effects on PD and LGD and therefore on lending decisions
 Market confidence: definitive loss allocation is required to cut off uncertainty
 Ex ante regulatory role
From bail-out to bail-in
 To re-legitimise bail-out:
 De-politicisation of decision: a Resolution Authority
 To reduce moral-hazard and minimise taxpayers’ money:
 Separation of essential functions from “bad assets”
 hair-cut imposed by the Authority
 Issues:
 Who is taking over the bad assets?
 The principle of “no creditors worse-off” (par conditio creditorum or pari passu) limits
the hair cut to the estimated “normal” LGD.
 Removing the moral hazard increase the cost of debt. If the PD is higher than
its “normal” value” (i.e. the bail-in occurs before insolvency) and is not
compensated by a certain equal reduction in the LDG, the cost of debt may be
higher than its “normal” level.
 Will the bail-in LGD restore market confidence?
 The hair cut is effective in protecting “bystanders”, but not necessarily enough to
protect critical creditors
 How to distribute losses among different jurisdictions?
The EU proposal
 Resolution tools should include forced sales of business activities, a temporary bridge
bank and an asset separation tool.
 Resolution powers should include:
 the power to transfer shares, assets, rights or liabilities;
 the power to impose a temporary moratorium on the payments of claims; but also
 the power to write down debt or convert it into equity (bail-in).
 National resolution authorities should be established
 Hair-cuts on a large set of debt instruments (except one-month)
 Implicit burden-sharing criteria (art. 92)
The EU proposal: issues
 Issues:
 Only for banks: sectoral disparities
 No European Resolution Authority
 In Italy bank bonds held by households are savings
 Minimum bail-inable capital requirement
 No delayed hair cut
How will it work?
 The Resolution Authority will decide if the failure of a company has a systemic risk (SIBs
are included ex ante)
 In case, the Authority will tentatively assess the losses (during the week-end…)
 If there are no private purchaser and the Authority assess that it is unable to split the
company between a good one and a bad one…
 …on the basis of this assessment the Authority will decide the hair-cut on non
collateralised and non-insured creditors. The critical function will not be discontinued
(access to deposits, payment system)
 The Authority will intervene to bail-out critical creditors.
References
 Levitin, Adam J., “In Defence of Bailouts”, Georgetown Law Journal, 2011.
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Next
 Th. 11 Oct. h 10.30-12.15, aula 3
1. Introduction. Cross-border banking and regulation
 Wed. 17 Oct. dalle 14.30 alle 16.15, aula seminari
2. Prudential Regulation: Lessons from the Crisis
 Fri. 26 Oct. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
3. From Basel 2 to Basel 3
 Thu. 8 Nov. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
4. Moral hazard
 Thu. 15 Nov. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
5. Crisis Management and Resolution
 Thu. 22 Nov. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
6. Shadow Banking
 Thu. 29 Nov. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
7. Rules and supervision
 Thu. 6 Dec. h 10.30-12.15 aula 3
8. Overall assessment of the regulatory reform
 Thu.13 Dec. h 14.30-16.30 aula 20
9. The Euro debt crisis and the Banking Union
 Mon.17 Dec. 10.30-12.15 aula seminari
10. Wrap-up and conclusion
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