Chapter 12. The Financial Collapse of These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook

Similar documents
1. What was life like in Iceland before the financial crisis? 3. How much did Iceland s three banks borrow? What happened to the money?

2008 STOCK MARKET COLLAPSE

1 U.S. Subprime Crisis

Historical Backdrop to the 2007/08 Liquidity Crunch

b. Financial innovation and/or financial liberalization (the elimination of restrictions on financial markets) can cause financial firms to go on a

Lecture 12: Too Big to Fail and the US Financial Crisis

Reflections on the Financial Crisis Allan H. Meltzer

The Mortgage Debt Market: A Tragedy

Chapter 2: Government Policies and Regulation Test Bank Solutions Principles of Bank Management 8th Edition by Koch Multiple Choice

Money and Banking ECON3303. Lecture 9: Financial Crises. William J. Crowder Ph.D.

Causes Of The Actual Global Financial Crisis. While many argue that this is the main cause of the global savings glut, the opposite is the

APPENDIX A: GLOSSARY

Black Monday Exploring Current Financial Crisis

International Finance

Implications of the Dodd-Frank Act on Too Big to Fail A presentation for Washington University s Life-Long Learning Institute

SUB PRIME CRISIS & EUROZONE CRISIS. Presented by Amitesh Kumar Sinha, Dir. Fin (Accounts)

Test Bank all chapters download

Interest Rate Risk Management Refresher. April 29, Presented to: Howard Sakin Section I. Basics of Interest Rate Hedging?

STATEMENT OF GARY GENSLER CHAIRMAN, COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION BEFORE THE FINANCIAL CRISIS INQUIRY COMMISSION.

Introduction... 3 Definitions... 3 Subprime loan... 3 Mortgage loan... 3

The Great Recession How Bad Is It and What Can We Do?

IT Can Happen Again: A Global Financial Crisis This time a Gringo Pathology?

The Financial System: Opportunities and Dangers

The Financial Systems Complexity

How Curb Risk In Wall Street. Luigi Zingales. University of Chicago

Bank of america prime rate increase

Introduction and Economic Landscape. Vance Ginn Spring 2013

The Causes of the 2008 Financial Crisis

Chapter 8. Why Do Financial Crises Occur and Why Are They So Damaging to the Economy? Chapter Preview

Lecture 10: The Hitchhiker s Guide to Economic Policy Debates

WikiLeaks Document Release

Econ 330 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

SAFER. United States Senate Washington, DC May 14, 2010

IMPLICATIONS OF THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS

TESTIMONY OF BRUCE MARKS. Chief Executive Officer. Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America (NACA)

Chapter 12 Nonbank Finance

4) The dark side of financial liberalization is. A) market allocations B) credit booms C) currency appreciation D) financial innovation

Why Regulate Shadow Banking? Ian Sheldon

Global Financial Crisis. Econ 690 Spring 2019

Chapter 2 Government Policies and Regulation

Fannie, Freddie, and Housing Finance: What s It All About?

Chapter 11 11/18/2014. Mortgages and Mortgage Markets. Thrifts (continued)

Interest Rate Risk Management Refresher. April 27, Presented to: Section I. Basics of Interest Rate Hedging?

Did Poor Incentives Cause the Financial Crisis? Should Incentives and Pay Be Regulated?

Capital Market Trends and Forecasts

Too Big to Fail Financial Institutions The U.S., the Crisis and Beyond Cirano & Ecole Polytechnique Montreal September 16, 2011

COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL.

THE FINANCIAL CRISIS AND THE GREAT RECESSION

OUTLINE November 1, Review: PPF & AD. How close an output gap? Output Gap & Multiplier 10/31/2017 1:25 PM. Overview of Policy

Written Testimony of Mark Zandi Chief Economist and Cofounder Moody s Economy.com. Before the House Financial Services Committee

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 15. Money, Banking, and Central Banking

Week Eight. Tools of the Federal Reserve

The Global Financial and Political Crisis of 2007 to 20??

Real Estate Loan Losses, Bank Failure and Emerging Regulation 2011

Overview of Mortgage Lending

Economics. Worksheet 6.3. Wall Street, Used Cars and the Market Failure of Asymmetric Information

Counterparty Credit Risk Management in the US Over-the-Counter (OTC) Derivatives Markets, Part II

Why Regulate Shadow Banking? Ian Sheldon

Economics of Money, Banking, and Fin. Markets, 10e (Mishkin) Chapter 9 Financial Crises. 9.1 What is a Financial Crisis?

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Joseph Dashevsky, Nicole Davessar, Sarah Nicholson, and Scott Symons

Recourse vs. Nonrecourse: Commercial Real Estate Financing Which One Is Right for You?

Final Rules & Studies (by DFA Section) April 30, 2012

FINANCE, SAVING, AND INVESTMENT

GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS 2008

I. Learning Objectives II. The Functions of Money III. The Components of the Money Supply

Understanding the 2008 Financial Crisis

Regulatory Proposals for Money Market Funds and Current Topics Affecting the Short-Term Investment Marketplace

Mike Lombardi, FCIA, FSA, MAAA, CERA

A View From the Street

Financial Crisis 101: A Beginner's Guide to Structured Finance, Financial Crisis, and Market Regulation

CHAPTER 31 Money, Banking, and Financial Institutions

Guaranteed to Fail Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Debacle of US Housing Finance

Status of US Financial Reform Legislation: Protection and Investment Advisers. Alan Avery April 6, 2010

Don t Blame the Messenger or Ignore the Message. Ray Ball. The message? Highly leveraged institutions gambling heavily on risky, low-transparency

The Mortgage Industry

10 Years After the Financial Crisis: Where Do Shareholder Rights Stand?

The Financial System. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () The Financial System 1 / 52

The Search for the Real Causes of the Current Global Financial Crisis: Role of Financial Innovations

The Financial Sector Functions of money Medium of exchange Measure of value Store of value Method of deferred payment

A Fistful of Dollars: Lobbying and the Financial Crisis

Articles Authored by Michael S. Barr January 20, 2009 October 31, 2009

The Business of an Investment Bank

The Financial Crisis and the Bailout

Chap. 15. Government Securities

Why Are Financial Intermediaries Special?

Financial Institutions and Markets 9TH EDITION

Making Securitization Work for Financial Stability and Economic Growth

11/9/2017. Chapter 11. Mortgages and Mortgage Markets. Traditional and Modern Housing Finance: From S&Ls to Securities. Thrifts (continued)

How has money changed over the centuries? What are the functions of money? Where does our money come from?

Real Estate Loan Losses, Bank Failure and Emerging Regulation 2010

Continental Law and the Global Financial Crisis

Ira G. PEPPERCORN. The Tragedy of the Mortgage Commons. President IRA PEPPERCORN INTERNATIONAL, LLC

Bailout Tally Report

BARACK OBAMA: RESTORING CONFIDENCE IN OUR MARKETS AND CHANGING OUR ECONOMIC COURSE

FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS, MARKETS, AND MONEY

BTO s: The new CDO s?

Are derivatives the cause of a financial crisis?

Group 14 Dallas Hall, Chuck Dobson, Guy Tahye, Tunde Olabiyi

Brenda Hughes. American Bankers Association. Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs United States Senate

WHAT THE REALLY HAPPENED...

Transcription:

Chapter 12 The Financial Collapse of 2007-2009 These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook 1

Why is Growth important? If we do not grow there is less goods and services as things deteriorate over time 2

Where do we begin? The role of government free markets vs. a planned economy 3

Does the Keynesian policy of increasing government spending lead to more growth or less growth? Keynesians believe that it increases growth by shifting the aggregate demand curve to a full employment equilibrium 4

Does the Keynesian policy of increasing government spending lead to more growth or less growth? The Austrian viewpoint is that in the short run it could lead to more growth, but in the long run it will lead to less growth 5

Why does an increase in government spending lead to less growth? Higher taxes More debt More regulations Diminishes private investments Choices made because of politics rather than economics 6

What is the upshot to the story of our financial collapse of 2007-2008? Policies of the government and the Federal Reserve distorted markets 7

What was the policy of Alan Greenspan, chair of the Fed from 1987-2006? The easy-money policies of the Fed during Greenspan's tenure has been suggested to be a leading cause of the subprime mortgage crisis 8

Why were the easy money policies of the Fed a factor in the mortgage crises? People borrowed money to buy homes, the price of homes increased, equity increased, and many people borrowed against the home s equity 9

Why is excessive debt a problem in an economic downturn? People cannot meet their debt obligations and a dominoes affect sets in 10

When was Fannie Mae founded? It was founded in 1938 as a government sponsored enterprise (GSE), privately owned but publicly chartered, which went public in 1968 11

What is the purpose of Fannie Mae? Its purpose is to expand the secondary mortgage market by securitizing mortgages in the form of mortgage backed securities (MBS) 12

What is a Security? A financial instrument representing financial value such as mortgages, bonds, banknotes, stocks, future contracts, and derivatives 13

What does Securitizing securities mean? The financial practice of pooling debts, like mortgages, and selling the consolidated debts as bonds (securities) which pay the investors principle and interest regularly 14

What is the purpose of Securitizing securities? Its purpose is to allow lenders to reinvest their assets into more lending and in affect increase the number of lenders in the mortgage market 15

What are some problems with securitizing debt? The complexity can limit investors ability to monitor risk, and make it more difficult to standardize the market 16

What are some other problems with securitizing debt? Off-balance sheet arrangements and excessive leverage 17

What is an off-balance sheet arrangement? Financial institutions can have responsibility for assets (often securities) for clients without actually owning the securities 18

What is leverage? Leverage is the practice of investing with borrowed money. For example, in 2004 the SEC authorized investment banks to leverage with ratios as high as 40 to 1 19

What is Freddie Mac? Authorized by Congress in 1972 to purchase private mortgages on the secondary market to compete with Fannie Mae 20

Why did Fan and Fred defraud investors? To increase market share in the subprime loan market and to meet the demands of the Housing and Community Development Act of 1977 21

What is the Housing and Community Development Act of 1977? Banks were required to make substantial loans to low income persons even with bad credit ratings 22

What is the Housing and Community Development Act of 1992? Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac were required to meet a goal of 30% mortgages bought should be from low and moderate income families, raised to 55% in 2007 23

What pressure was put on Fannie Mae in 1999? The Clinton Administration encouraged an increase in loan purchases stemming from inner city areas and pressed for an easing of standards in the primary mortgage market 24

Who is Angelo Mozilo and what is Country Wide Mortgage? Angelo Mozilo founded Country Wide, a mortgage company that specialized in subprime mortgages 25

What role did Country Wide Home Loans play? Country Wide, partnered with Fannie and formed a reduced documentation loan program, Country Wide found the customers and Fan provided the money 26

What is an Alt-A Loan? Sometimes called Liar Loans they required less documentation than traditional subprime loans 27

What is the Private Securities Litigation Act of 1995? This act protected Wall Street firms from legal suits and restricted investors from suing banks for fraud 28

What was the result of the secondary mortgage market and the Private Securities Litigation Act of 1995? They gave banks and mortgage related companies a free hand to engage in high levels of speculation and fraud 29

What is the Financial Crises Inquiry Commission? A Congressional commission that spent 18 months investigating the subprime mortgage problem and in 2011 found Fan and Fred innocent of any fault and blamed the crises on private bankers 30

What is the lawsuit that the SEC brought against Fannie and Freddie in 2012? The SEC claims that six Fan and Fred executives defrauded investors because they knew and approved misleading statements about their subprime loan exposure 31

What is an example of hedging? A farmer agrees to sell his corn to someone at a set price on a set date in the future 32

What is an option? A derivative financial instrument that specifies a contract between two parties for a future transaction on an asset at a reference price (the strike price) 33

What are the two types of options? An option to buy something at a specific price in the future is named a call ; an option to sell something at a specific price is named a put 34

What does it mean to short the stock market? You borrow shares from a brokerage house in order to sell them in the hope that you can buy them later at a lower price, you gain when the price declines and lose when the price increases 35

What is a hedge fund? A private investment fund which may invest in a diverse range of assets and may employ a variety of investment strategies to protect from downturns and maximize the market upswings 36

What is a derivative instrument? A contract between two parties that specifies conditions under which payments are to be made between the two parties 37

What is a derivatives market? A financial market for future contracts, these financial instruments in a futures market are called options 38

What is a futures market? A specific type of derivative involving a bet between two parties on the future price, called the strike price, of some specified standardized product, like the price of corn six months from the agreement 39

How is future value determined? Derivatives often rely on some complicated mathematical model to determine future value, like the Black - Scholes model 40

What is an example of speculative trading in the derivatives market? In 1995 Nick Leeson, a trader for Barings Bank, the oldest investment bank in London, made poor and unauthorized investments in futures contracts bankrupting the bank 41

What is an over-the-counter derivatives market? A market that is an agreement between two parties and no one else, the contract is personal between the two parties, there is no exchange where information is shared 42

Is it possible that even the purchaser of the derivative is not privy to the facts? Yes, investment companies like Bear Stearns often sold contracts to others, like pension funds, without divulging all the facts 43

How large is the derivatives market today? The notional value, the hypothetical value existing only in theory, is about $600 trillion!!! 44

What is the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)? Authorized to regulate agricultural futures and the derivatives market 45

Who is Brooksley Born? She was the head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission from August 1996 to June 1999 46

What did Brooksley Born do as head of the CFTC? She lobbied Congress and the President to give the CFTC oversight of the over-the-counter derivatives market 47

Why was Brooksley Born concerned? Dangerous things were happening in the market like fraud and excessive speculation leading to major failures 48

What was the event that brought these excesses to light? In 1996 Proctor and Gamble ended up owing $200 billion in the derivatives market and it sued their derivatives dealer, Bankers Trust, for fraud claiming it was not given proper explanation 49

What was the outcome between Proctor and Gamble and Bankers Trust? In 1996 Bankers Trust settled with Proctor and Gamble forgiving most of the debt 50

What happened after Brooksley Born alerted the Treasury, the Fed, and the SEC about her concern? She was relieved of her jurisdiction over the derivatives market 51

Who is Alan Greenspan? He was Chairman of the Fed from 1987 to 2006 52

Who was Ayn Rand (1905-1982)? She was a playwright, screenwriter, and author who wrote The Fountainhead (1943) and Atlas Shrugged (1957) 53

What was Ayn Rand s philosophy? She believed in a strict laissez faire capitalistic economic system with minimal government and where rational self-interest plays a key role 54

Who was Atlas in Greek mythology? He was a god who held the world on his shoulders 55

Who was Atlas in her book Atlas Shrugged? The entrepreneur, when he shrugs the whole world comes tumbling down 56

How did Ayn Rand influence Alan Greenspan? He was her protégé and close friend 57

What was Alan Greenspan s response to Brooksley Born? He believed that the free market would take care of all problems and that any interference in the market would be harmful 58

What is leverage? The act of using borrowed money to make bets on some future event 59

What happened to Long Term Capital in 1998? Long Term Capital, a hedge fund, was highly leveraged in the derivatives market with $1.25 trillion notional value with only $4 billion capital to back it up 60

What happened to Long Term Capital? In 1998 big banks stepped in and took over Long Term Capital and incurred large losses on its leveraged investments 61

What is the Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000? This act stripped the Commodity Futures Trading Commission of all responsibility over the derivatives market 62

What did the Modernization Act do? It forbid state regulators to interfere with the over-thecounter derivatives market 63

What did rent seeking have to do with the situation between 2000 and 2010? Wall Street firms plied over $1.7 billion in campaign contributions and $3.4 billion on lobbyists 64

What was the Glass- Steagall Act of 1932? This act separated commercial banking from investment banking, commercial banks were regulated and investment banks were not 65

What happened to the Glass-Steagall Act? The Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000 obliterated the difference between commercial banks and investment banks 66

What else did the Modernization Act of 2000 do? The FDIC granted the same protection to investment banks as they did to commercial banks 67

What is a Credit Default Swap? A CDS is a bet on a future event involving a hedge against a possible default, for a price it transfers liability on an investment from party A to party B 68

When did CDSs emerge? In 1994 when young executives from JP Morgan bank had a weekend meeting in Boca Raton Florida 69

What is the American International Group (AIG)? AIG is an American insurance corporation who in 2008 was the 18 th largest public company in the world 70

What is an example of a CDS? Bank A lends one million dollars to the XYZ company and then pays AIG to take the risk of a possible default 71

What effect did a bank s CDS have on its excess reserves? The Fed agreed to lower its reserve requirement because of the lower risk incurred by banks 72

Who is Joe Cassano? Between 2001 and 2008 he was the head of the Financial Products Division of AIG 73

What did Joe Cassano do? He sold billions of dollars worth of CDSs to banks without the assets to back up the insurance 74

What is a Naked CDS? In a naked CDS neither party actually holds the underlying loan, in essence two noninvolved parties make a bet on some future event 75

How did Joe Cassano use Naked CDSs? He sold CDSs protection to numerous non-involved banks on the same loan 76

What is a Subprime Mortgage? A type of mortgage which involved a high level of risk to the lender and in some cases actual deceit and fraud 77

What is the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)? This commission is responsible for enforcing the federal securities law and regulating the securities industry 78

What did the SEC do in 2004 that effected the securities market? It allowed banks to set their own debt-to-net-capital rule which changed the industry standard from a 12 to 1 debt capital ratio to 40 to 1 ratio 79

Which firms benefited the most from this change in legal ratios? Goldman Sachs Bear Stearns Morgan Stanley Merrill Lynch Lehman Brothers 80

What happened in 2008 to these investment banks? They all collapsed and either disappeared or were converted to bank holding companies so they could be bailed out by the Fed 81

What precipitated the Financial Bubble in 2000? Fed policies Deregulation mania Excessive leverage 82

What is an Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loan? The interest rate would increase over time according to a pre-determined schedule 83

What does it mean to be upside down on a mortgage? You owe more on a house than what the house is worth on the market 84

What mandates were put on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in 2004? They were required to purchase subprime loans from banks to the tune of about $1 billion per week 85

What is a Collaterized Debt Obligation (CDO)? A type of structured asset whose value and payments are derived from a portfolio of fixed income assets, it is a collection of streams of income under one roof 86

How are CDOs structured? Hundreds of loans are put into a pool and then divided into different tranches according to risk level 87

What gives CDOs value? The money that flows into and out of the CDO as people pay their monthly installment loans or retire the loans 88

What is Standard and Poor s and Moody s? Two credit rating agencies 89

How did Standard and Poor s and Moody s rate these CDOs? They looked at the senior tranches with the highest value loans and rated the whole CDO according to this top tranche, the senior tranche 90

What are the 12 Deregulatory Steps to Financial Meltdown? The 12 slides will discuss the 12 events which resulted in the financial collapse of 2007 to 2008 as explained in Sold Out of March 2009 http://www.wallstreetwatch.org 91

#1 Repeal of the Glass-Steagal Act The Financial Services Modernization Act of 1999 formally repealed the Glass- Steagal Act of 1932 92

#2 Hiding Liabilities: Off Balance Sheet Accounting The Financial Accounting Standards Board allowed securitized mortgages to be held as an off-balance sheet entity so that banks did not have to have capital reserves to secure the pool of loans 93

#3 The Executive Branch Rejects Financial Derivative Regulation Brooksley Born was relieved of her duties and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission was instructed to cease any activities over the derivatives market, as well as states 94

#4 Congress Blocks Financial Derivative Regulation The Commodities Futures Modernization Act of 2000 exempted financial derivatives from regulation 95

#5 The SECs allowed Banks to set their own reserve requirements In 2004 the SEC authorized investment banks to develop their own net capital requirements, this resulted in excessive leverage with ratios as high as 40 to 1 96

#6 Bank Self-Regulation Goes Global: Preparing Repeat of the Meltdown The complicated financial maneuvering made it hard for international banks to agree and enforce any strict capital reserve requirements 97

#7 Failure to Protect Predatory Lending Regulators sat on their hands when it came to protecting abusive behavior in the subprime mortgage market 98

#8 Federal Preemption of State Consumer Protection Laws The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued formal opinions preempting all state predatory lending laws, thereby rendering them inoperative 99

#9 Escaping Accountability Under existing federal law only the original mortgage lender is liable for any predatory and illegal features of a mortgage even if the mortgage is transferred to another party 100

#10 Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Enter the Subprime Market The purchase of subprime assets was a break from prior practice but was forced on these agencies by Congress in their attempt to make every American a home owner 101

#11 Merger Mania The abandonment of antitrust related principles over the past has enabled a concentration in the banking sector resulting in megabanks with to-big-to-fail status with government guarantees against failure 102

#12 Rampant Conflicts of Interest: Credit Rating Firm s Failure The credit ratings given by the credit rating agencies were influenced by the fact that they got paid from the firms they rate resulting in the highest rating for CDOs based on the best mortgages in the pool 103

What is the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Protection Act of 2010? An Act to promote the financial stability of the United States by improving accountability and transparency in the financial system, to end "too big to fail", to protect the American taxpayer by ending bailouts, to protect consumers from abusive financial services practices, and for other purposes 104

How long is the Dodd- Frank bill and what are some highlights? 2100 pages New Consumer Protection Agency tucked under the Federal Reserve Establishes rigorous standards & supervision for financial firms Establishes council to identify systemic risks 105

What is the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau as part of the Dodd-Frank Bill? Receives 10% of Fed s assets but is not under its jurisdiction Led by an independent director Able to autonomously write rules for financial institutions Ends the shadow financial system by requiring hedge funds to register with the SEC and provide information about their trades 106

What is the Volcker Rule? Implements regulations for banks, affiliates, and holding companies that prohibit proprietary trading, investments in hedge funds, and private equity funds 107

What is the Shadow Banking System? The financial intermediaries involved in facilitating the creation of credit across the global financial system, but whose members are not subject to regulatory oversight 108

What are some examples of Shadow Banking System? Hedge funds Unlisted derivatives Credit default swaps hypothecation 109

What is Hypothecation? When a person pledges a mortgage or other assets as collateral for a loan, it refers to the right that a banker has to liquidate goods if you fail to service a loan. You are said to "hypothecate" the mortgage when you pledge it as collateral for a loan 110

What is Rehypothecation? The practice by banks and brokers of using, for their own purposes, assets that have been posted as collateral by their clients. Clients who permit rehypothecation of their collateral may be compensated either through a lower cost of borrowing or a rebate on fees 111

What is an example of Rehypothecation? In a typical example of rehypothecation, securities that have been posted with a prime brokerage as collateral by a hedge fund are used by the brokerage to back its own transactions and trades 112

What is the status of Rehypothecation in America? In the United States, rehypothecation of collateral by broker-dealers is limited to 140% of the loan amount to a client 113

What is the status of Rehypothecation in the UK? Unlimited rehypothecation is legal, this is called churning, 30 to1 leverage is common 114

What is Re-hypothecation in the UK an example of? Unlimited leverage 115

What is the latest casualty of re-hypothecation? John Corsign and MF Global collapse, 8 th largest bankruptcy in America s history The following video is not required http://rt.com/programs/capitalaccount/mf-global-banking-mafia/ 116

Who could be the next casualty? JP Morgan has $500 billion in the hypothecation market and an off balance sheet $90 trillion in derivatives. Every large financial institution has large sums of money in this market with liquidity backed by no assets The following video is not required http://rt.com/programs/keiserreport/episode-223-max-keiser/ 117

What do low interest rates have to do with hypothecation? Financial firms can borrow money at close to zero interest rates and use the money to use in the hypothecation market using the same collateral over and over resulting in the world s largest credit bubble 118

What is Moral Hazard? In economic theory, a moral hazard is a situation where there is a tendency to take undue risks because the costs are not borne by the party taking the risk 119

Tell me more YouTube "Fear the Boom and Bust" a Hayek vs. Keynes Rap Anthem YouTube "Hayek's 'Road to Serfdom' in Five Minutes YouTube "Senator Paul Ryan on the Rule of Man vs. the Rule of Law" 120

END 121