The "too big to (let) fail" theory asserts that certain
corporations, particularly financial institutions, are so large and so
interconnected that their failure would be disastrous to the greater
economic system, and that they therefore must be supported by government
when they face potential failure. The colloquial term "too big to fail" was popularized by U.S. Congressman Stewart McKinney in a 1984 Congressional hearing, discussing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation's intervention with Continental Illinois. The term had previously been used occasionally in the press.
Proponents of this theory believe that some institutions are so
important that they should become recipients of beneficial financial and
economic policies from governments or central banks. Some economists such as Paul Krugman hold that economies of scale in banks and in other businesses are worth preserving, so long as they are well regulated in proportion to their economic clout,
and therefore that "too big to fail" status can be acceptable. The
global economic system must also deal with sovereign states being too
big to fail.
Opponents believe that one of the problems that arises is moral hazard whereby a company that benefits from these protective policies will seek to profit by it, deliberately taking positions (see asset allocation) that are high-risk high-return, as they are able to leverage these risks based on the policy preference they receive. The term has emerged as prominent in public discourse since the 2007–08 global financial crisis.
Critics see the policy as counterproductive and that large banks or
other institutions should be left to fail if their risk management is
not effective. Some critics, such as Alan Greenspan, believe that such large organisations should be deliberately broken up: "If they're too big to fail, they're too big".
More than fifty prominent economists, financial experts, bankers,
finance industry groups, and banks themselves have called for breaking up large banks into smaller institutions.
In 2014, the International Monetary Fund and others said the problem still had not been dealt with. While the individual components of the new regulation for systemically
important banks (additional capital requirements, enhanced supervision
and resolution regimes) likely reduced the prevalence of TBTF, the fact
that there is a definite list of systemically important banks considered TBTF has a partly offsetting impact.
Definition
Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke
also defined the term in 2010: "A too-big-to-fail firm is one whose
size, complexity, interconnectedness, and critical functions are such
that, should the firm go unexpectedly into liquidation, the rest of the
financial system and the economy would face severe adverse
consequences." He continued that: "Governments provide support to
too-big-to-fail firms in a crisis not out of favoritism or particular
concern for the management, owners, or creditors of the firm, but
because they recognize that the consequences for the broader economy of
allowing a disorderly failure greatly outweigh the costs of avoiding the
failure in some way. Common means of avoiding failure include
facilitating a merger, providing credit, or injecting government
capital, all of which protect at least some creditors who otherwise
would have suffered losses. ... If the crisis has a single lesson, it is that the too-big-to-fail problem must be solved."
Bernanke cited several risks with too-big-to-fail institutions:
- These firms generate severe moral hazard: "If creditors believe that an institution will not be allowed to fail, they will not demand as much compensation for risks as they otherwise would, thus weakening market discipline; nor will they invest as many resources in monitoring the firm's risk-taking. As a result, too-big-to-fail firms will tend to take more risk than desirable, in the expectation that they will receive assistance if their bets go bad."
- It creates an uneven playing field between big and small firms. "This unfair competition, together with the incentive to grow that too-big-to-fail provides, increases risk and artificially raises the market share of too-big-to-fail firms, to the detriment of economic efficiency as well as financial stability."
- The firms themselves become major risks to overall financial stability, particularly in the absence of adequate resolution tools. Bernanke wrote: "The failure of Lehman Brothers and the near-failure of several other large, complex firms significantly worsened the crisis and the recession by disrupting financial markets, impeding credit flows, inducing sharp declines in asset prices, and hurting confidence. The failures of smaller, less interconnected firms, though certainly of significant concern, have not had substantial effects on the stability of the financial system as a whole."
Background on banking regulation
Depository banks
Prior to the Great Depression, U.S. consumer bank deposits were not guaranteed by the government, increasing the risk of a bank run,
in which a large number of depositors withdraw their deposits at the
same time. Since banks lend most of the deposits and only retain a
fraction in the proverbial vault, a bank run can render the bank
insolvent. During the Depression, hundreds of banks became insolvent and
depositors lost their money. As a result, the U.S. enacted the 1933 Banking Act, sometimes called the Glass–Steagall Act, which created the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) to insure deposits up to a limit of $2,500, with successive increases to the current $250,000.
In exchange for the deposit insurance provided by the federal
government, depository banks are highly regulated and expected to invest
excess customer deposits in lower-risk assets.
Investment banks and the shadow banking system
In
contrast to depository banks, investment banks generally obtain funds
from sophisticated investors and often make complex, risky investments
with the funds, speculating either for their own account or on behalf of
their investors. They also are "market makers" in that they serve as
intermediaries between two investors that wish to take opposite sides of
a financial transaction. The Glass-Steagall Act separated investment
and depository banking until its repeal in 1999. Prior to 2008, the
government did not explicitly guarantee the investor funds, so
investment banks were not subject to the same regulations as depository
banks and were allowed to take considerably more risk.
Investment banks, along with other innovations in banking and finance referred to as the shadow banking system,
grew to rival the depository system by 2007. They became subject to the
equivalent of a bank run in 2007 and 2008, in which investors (rather
than depositors) withdrew sources of financing from the shadow system.
This run became known as the subprime mortgage crisis.
During 2008, the five largest U.S. investment banks either failed
(Lehman Brothers), were bought out by other banks at fire-sale prices
(Bear Stearns and Merrill Lynch) or were at risk of failure and obtained
depository banking charters to obtain additional Federal Reserve
support (Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley). In addition, the government
provided bailout funds via the Troubled Asset Relief Program in 2008.
Fed Chair Ben Bernanke described in November 2013 how the Panic of 1907
was essentially a run on the non-depository financial system, with many
parallels to the crisis of 2008. One of the results of the Panic of
1907 was the creation of the Federal Reserve in 1913.
Resolution authority
Before 1950, U.S. federal bank regulators had essentially two options for resolving an insolvent institution: 1) closure, with liquidation of assets and payouts for insured depositors; or 2) purchase and assumption, encouraging the acquisition of assets and assumption of liabilities by another firm. A third option was made available by the Federal Deposit Insurance Act of 1950:
providing assistance, the power to support an institution through loans
or direct federal acquisition of assets, until it could recover from
its distress.
The statute limited the "assistance" option to cases where
"continued operation of the bank is essential to provide adequate
banking service". Regulators shunned this third option for many years,
fearing that if regionally or nationally important banks were thought
generally immune to liquidation, markets in their shares would be
distorted. Thus, the assistance option was never employed during the
period 1950–1969, and very seldom thereafter.
Research into historical banking trends suggests that the consumption
loss associated with National Banking Era bank runs was far more costly
than the consumption loss from stock market crashes.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act
was passed in 1991, giving the FDIC the responsibility to rescue an
insolvent bank by the least costly method. The Act had the implicit goal
of eliminating the widespread belief among depositors that a loss of
depositors and bondholders will be prevented for large banks. However,
the Act included an exception in cases of systemic risk, subject to the
approval of two-thirds of the FDIC Board of Directors, the Federal
Reserve Board of Governors, and the Treasury Secretary.
Analysis
Bank size and concentration
Bank size, complexity, and interconnectedness with other banks may
inhibit the ability of the government to resolve (wind-down) the bank
without significant disruption to the financial system or economy, as
occurred with the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy in September 2008. This
risk of "too big to fail" entities increases the likelihood of a
government bailout using taxpayer dollars.
The largest U.S. banks continue to grow larger while the
concentration of bank assets increases. The largest six U.S. banks had
assets of $9,576 billion as of year-end 2012, per their 2012 annual
reports (SEC Form 10K). For scale, this was 59% of the U.S. GDP for 2012
of $16,245 billion.
The top 5 U.S. banks had approximately 30% of the U.S. banking assets
in 1998; this rose to 45% by 2008 and to 48% by 2010, before falling to
47% in 2011.
This concentration continued despite the subprime mortgage crisis
and its aftermath. During March 2008, JP Morgan Chase acquired
investment bank Bear Stearns. Bank of America acquired investment bank
Merrill Lynch in September 2008. Wells Fargo acquired Wachovia in
January 2009. Investment banks Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley obtained
depository bank holding company charters, which gave them access to
additional Federal Reserve credit lines.
Bank deposits for all U.S. banks ranged between approximately
60–70% of GDP from 1960 to 2006, then jumped during the crisis to a peak
of nearly 84% in 2009 before falling to 77% by 2011.
The number of U.S. commercial and savings bank institutions
reached a peak of 14,495 in 1984; this fell to 6,532 by the end of 2010.
The ten largest U.S. banks held nearly 50% of U.S. deposits as of 2011.
Implicit guarantee subsidy
Since
the full amount of the deposits and debts of "too big to fail" banks
are effectively guaranteed by the government, large depositors and
investors view investments with these banks as a safer investment than
deposits with smaller banks. Therefore, large banks are able to pay
lower interest rates to depositors and investors than small banks are
obliged to pay.
In October 2009, Sheila Bair, at that time the Chairperson of the FDIC, commented:
"'Too big to fail' has become worse. It's become explicit when it was implicit before. It creates competitive disparities between large and small institutions, because everybody knows small institutions can fail. So it's more expensive for them to raise capital and secure funding." Research has shown that banking organizations are willing to pay an added premium for mergers that will put them over the asset sizes that are commonly viewed as the thresholds for being too big to fail.
A study conducted by the Center for Economic and Policy Research found that the difference between the cost of funds
for banks with more than $100 billion in assets and the cost of funds
for smaller banks widened dramatically after the formalization of the
"too big to fail" policy in the U.S. in the fourth quarter of 2008.
This shift in the large banks' cost of funds was in effect equivalent
to an indirect "too big to fail" subsidy of $34 billion per year to the
18 U.S. banks with more than $100 billion in assets.
The editors of Bloomberg View estimated there was an $83 billion
annual subsidy to the 10 largest United States banks, reflecting a
funding advantage of 0.8 percentage points due to implicit government
support, meaning the profits of such banks are largely a taxpayer-backed
illusion.
Another study by Frederic Schweikhard and Zoe Tsesmelidakis
estimated the amount saved by America's biggest banks from having a
perceived safety net of a government bailout was $120 billion from 2007
to 2010. For America's biggest banks the estimated savings was $53 billion for Citigroup, $32 billion for Bank of America, $10 billion for JPMorgan, $8 billion for Wells Fargo, and $4 billion for AIG. The study noted that passage of the Dodd–Frank Act—which promised an end to bailouts—did nothing to raise the price of credit (i.e., lower the implicit subsidy) for the "too-big-too-fail" institutions.
One 2013 study (Acharya, Anginer, and Warburton) measured the
funding cost advantage provided by implicit government support to large
financial institutions. Credit spreads were lower by approximately 28
basis points (0.28%) on average over the 1990–2010 period, with a peak
of more than 120 basis points in 2009. In 2010, the implicit subsidy was
worth nearly $100 billion to the largest banks. The authors concluded:
"Passage of Dodd–Frank did not eliminate expectations of government
support."
Economist Randall S. Kroszner
summarized several approaches to evaluating the funding cost
differential between large and small banks. The paper discusses
methodology and does not specifically answer the question of whether
larger institutions have an advantage.
During November 2013, the Moody's credit rating agency reported
that it would no longer assume the eight largest U.S. banks would
receive government support in the event they faced bankruptcy. However,
the GAO reported that politicians and regulators would still face
significant pressure to bail out large banks and their creditors in the
event of a financial crisis.
Moral hazard
Some critics have argued that "The way things are now banks reap
profits if their trades pan out, but taxpayers can be stuck picking up
the tab if their big bets sink the company." Additionally, as discussed by Senator Bernie Sanders,
if taxpayers are contributing to rescue these companies from
bankruptcy, they "should be rewarded for assuming the risk by sharing in
the gains that result from this government bailout".
In this sense, Alan Greenspan affirms that, "Failure is an integral part, a necessary part of a market system."
Thereby, although the financial institutions that were bailed out were
indeed important to the financial system, the fact that they took risk
beyond what they would otherwise, should be enough for the Government to
let them face the consequences of their actions. It would have been a
lesson to motivate institutions to proceed differently next time.
Inability to prosecute
The
political power of large banks and risks of economic impact from major
prosecutions has led to use of the term "too big to jail" regarding the
leaders of large financial institutions.
On March 6, 2013, United States Attorney General Eric Holder testified to the Senate Judiciary Committee that the size of large financial institutions has made it difficult for the Justice Department
to bring criminal charges when they are suspected of crimes, because
such charges can threaten the existence of a bank and therefore their
interconnectedness may endanger the national or global economy. "Some of
these institutions have become too large," Holder told the Committee.
"It has an inhibiting impact on our ability to bring resolutions that I
think would be more appropriate." In this he contradicted earlier
written testimony from a deputy assistant attorney general, who defended
the Justice Department's "vigorous enforcement against wrongdoing". Holder has financial ties to at least one law firm benefiting from de facto immunity to prosecution, and prosecution rates against crimes by large financial institutions are at 20-year lows.
Four days later, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard W. Fisher and Vice-President Harvey Rosenblum co-authored a Wall Street Journal op-ed about the failure of the Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act to provide for adequate regulation of large financial institutions. In advance of his March 8 speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference, Fisher proposed requiring breaking up large banks into smaller banks so that they are "too small to save", advocating the withholding from mega-banks access to both Federal Deposit Insurance and Federal Reserve discount window, and requiring disclosure of this lack of federal insurance and financial solvency
support to their customers. This was the first time such a proposal had
been made by a high-ranking U.S. banking official or a prominent
conservative. Other conservatives including Thomas Hoenig, Ed Prescott, Glenn Hubbard, and David Vitter also advocated breaking up the largest banks, but liberal commentator Matthew Yglesias questioned their motives and the existence of a true bipartisan consensus.
In a January 29, 2013 letter to Holder, Senators Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio) and Charles Grassley (R-Iowa)
had criticized this Justice Department policy citing "important
questions about the Justice Department's prosecutorial philosophy". After receipt of a DoJ
response letter, Brown and Grassley issued a statement saying, "The
Justice Department's response is aggressively evasive. It does not
answer our questions. We want to know how and why the Justice Department
has determined that certain financial institutions are 'too big to
jail' and that prosecuting those institutions would damage the financial
system."
Kareem Serageldin
pleaded guilty on November 22, 2013 for his role in inflating the value
of mortgage bonds as the housing market collapsed, and was sentenced to
two and a half years in prison. As of April 30, 2014, Serageldin remains the "only Wall Street executive prosecuted as a result of the financial crisis" that triggered the Great Recession.
Solutions
The
proposed solutions to the "too big to fail" issue are controversial.
Some options include breaking up the banks, introducing regulations to
reduce risk, adding higher bank taxes for larger institutions, and
increasing monitoring through oversight committees.
Breaking up the largest banks
More
than fifty economists, financial experts, bankers, finance industry
groups, and banks themselves have called for breaking up large banks
into smaller institutions.
This is advocated both to limit risk to the financial system posed by
the largest banks as well as to limit their political influence.
For example, economist Joseph Stiglitz
wrote in 2009 that: "In the United States, the United Kingdom, and
elsewhere, large banks have been responsible for the bulk of the
[bailout] cost to taxpayers. America has let 106 smaller banks go
bankrupt this year alone. It's the mega-banks that present the
mega-costs ... banks that are too big to fail are too big to exist. If
they continue to exist, they must exist in what is sometimes called a
"utility" model, meaning that they are heavily regulated." He also wrote
about several causes of the crisis related to the size, incentives, and interconnection of the mega-banks.
Reducing risk-taking through regulation
The United States passed the Dodd–Frank Act in July 2010 to help
strengthen regulation of the financial system in the wake of the subprime mortgage crisis
that began in 2007. Dodd–Frank requires banks to reduce their risk
taking, by requiring greater financial cushions (i.e., lower leverage
ratios or higher capital ratios), among other steps.
Banks are required to maintain a ratio of high-quality, easily
sold assets, in the event of financial difficulty either at the bank or
in the financial system. These are capital requirements. Further, since
the 2008 crisis, regulators have worked with banks to reduce leverage
ratios. For example, the leverage ratio for investment bank Goldman
Sachs declined from a peak of 25.2 during 2007 to 11.4 in 2012,
indicating a much-reduced risk profile.
The Dodd–Frank Act includes a form of the Volcker Rule,
a proposal to ban proprietary trading by commercial banks. Proprietary
trading refers to using customer deposits to speculate in risky assets
for the benefit of the bank rather than customers. The Dodd–Frank Act as
enacted into law includes several loopholes to the ban, allowing
proprietary trading in certain circumstances. However, the regulations
required to enforce these elements of the law were not implemented
during 2013 and were under attack by bank lobbying efforts.
Another major banking regulation, the Glass–Steagall Act
from 1933, was effectively repealed in 1999. The repeal allowed
depository banks to enter into additional lines of business. Senators
John McCain and Elizabeth Warren proposed bringing back Glass-Steagall
during 2013.
Too big to fail tax
Economist Willem Buiter
proposes a tax to internalize the massive costs inflicted by "too big
to fail" institution. "When size creates externalities, do what you
would do with any negative externality: tax it. The other way to limit
size is to tax size. This can be done through capital requirements that
are progressive in the size of the business (as measured by value added,
the size of the balance sheet or some other metric). Such measures for
preventing the New Darwinism of the survival of the fittest and the
politically best connected should be distinguished from regulatory
interventions based on the narrow leverage ratio aimed at regulating
risk (regardless of size, except for a de minimis lower limit)."
Monitoring
On November 16, 2018, a policy research and development entity, called the Financial Stability Board,
released a list of 29 banks worldwide that they considered
"systemically important financial institutions"—financial organisations
whose size and role meant that any failure could cause serious systemic problems.
- Agricultural Bank of China
- Banco Santander
- Bank of America
- Bank of China
- Bank of New York Mellon
- Barclays
- BNP Paribas
- China Construction Bank
- Citigroup
- Crédit Agricole
- Credit Suisse
- Deutsche Bank
- Goldman Sachs
- Groupe BPCE
- HSBC
- Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Limited
- ING Bank
- JPMorgan Chase
- Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group
- Mizuho Financial Group
- Morgan Stanley
- Royal Bank of Canada
- Société Générale
- Standard Chartered
- State Street Corporation
- Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group
- UBS
- Unicredit Group
- Wells Fargo
Notable views on the issue
Economists
More
than fifty notable economists, financial experts, bankers, finance
industry groups, and banks themselves have called for breaking up large
banks into smaller institutions.
Some economists such as Paul Krugman hold that economies of scale
in banks and in other businesses are worth preserving, so long as they
are well regulated in proportion to their economic clout, and therefore
that "too big to fail" status can be acceptable. The global economic
system must also deal with sovereign states being too big to fail.
Krugman wrote in January 2010 that it was more important to reduce bank
risk taking (leverage) than to break them up.
Economist Simon Johnson
has advocated both increased regulation as well as breaking up the
larger banks, not only to protect the financial system but to reduce the
political power of the largest banks.
Politicians
One
of the most vocal opponents in the United States government of the "too
big to fail" status of large American financial institutions in recent
years has been Elizabeth Warren.
At her first U.S. Senate Banking Committee hearing on February 14,
2013, Senator Warren pressed several banking regulators to answer when
they had last taken a Wall Street bank to trial and stated, "I'm really
concerned that 'too big to fail' has become 'too big for trial'." Videos
of Warren's questioning, centering on "too big to fail", became popular
on the internet, amassing more than 1 million views in a matter of
days.
On March 6, 2013, United States Attorney General Eric Holder told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Justice Department faces difficulty charging large banks with crimes because of the risk to the economy. Four days later, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Richard W. Fisher wrote in advance of a speech to the Conservative Political Action Conference that large banks should be broken up into smaller banks, and both Federal Deposit Insurance and Federal Reserve discount window access should end for large banks. Other conservatives including Thomas Hoenig, Ed Prescott, Glenn Hubbard, and David Vitter also advocated breaking up the largest banks.
International organizations
On April 10, 2013, International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde told the Economic Club of New York
"too big to fail" banks had become "more dangerous than ever" and had
to be controlled with "comprehensive and clear regulation [and] more
intensive and intrusive supervision".
Other commentators
Ron Suskind claimed in his book Confidence Men that the administration of Barack Obama considered breaking up Citibank and other large banks that had been involved in the financial crisis of 2008. He said that Obama's staff, such as Timothy Geithner, refused to do so. The administration and Geithner have denied this version of events.
Mervyn King, the governor of the Bank of England
during 2003–2013, called for cutting "too big to fail" banks down to
size, as a solution to the problem of banks having taxpayer-funded
guarantees for their speculative investment banking activities. "If some
banks are thought to be too big to fail, then, in the words of a
distinguished American economist, they are too big. It is not sensible
to allow large banks to combine high street retail banking with risky
investment banking or funding strategies, and then provide an implicit
state guarantee against failure."
Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Alistair Darling
disagreed: "Many people talk about how to deal with the big banks –
banks so important to the financial system that they cannot be allowed
to fail, but the solution is not as simple, as some have suggested, as
restricting the size of the banks". Additionally, Alan Greenspan
said that "If they're too big to fail, they're too big", suggesting
U.S. regulators to consider breaking up large financial institutions
considered "too big to fail". He added, "I don't think merely raising
the fees or capital on large institutions or taxing them is enough ...
they'll absorb that, they'll work with that, and it's totally
inefficient and they'll still be using the savings."
Public opinion polls
Gallup
reported in June 2013 that: "Americans' confidence in U.S. banks
increased to 26% in June, up from the record low of 21% the previous
year. The percentage of Americans saying they have 'a great deal' or
'quite a lot' of confidence in U.S. banks is now at its highest point
since June 2008, but remains well below its pre-recession level of 41%,
measured in June 2007. Between 2007 and 2012, confidence in banks fell
by half—20 percentage points." Gallup also reported that: "When Gallup
first measured confidence in banks in 1979, 60% of Americans had a great
deal or quite a lot of confidence in them—second only to the church.
This high level of confidence, which hasn't been matched since, was
likely the result of the strong U.S. banking system established after
the 1930s Great Depression and the related efforts of banks and
regulators to build Americans' confidence in that system."
Lobbying by banking industry
In the US, the banking industry spent over $100 million lobbying politicians and regulators between January 1 and June 30, 2011.
Lobbying in the finance, insurance and real estate industries has risen
annually since 1998 and was approximately $500 million in 2012.
Historical examples
Prior to the 2008 failure and bailout of multiple firms, there were "too big to fail" examples from 1763 when Leendert Pieter de Neufville in Amsterdam and Johann Ernst Gotzkowsky in Berlin failed, and from
the 1980s and 1990s. These included Continental Illinois and Long-Term Capital Management.
Continental Illinois case
An
early example of a bank rescued because it was "too big to fail" was
the Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company during the
1980s.
Distress
The Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company experienced a fall in its overall asset quality during the early 1980s. Tight money, Mexico's default (1982) and plunging oil prices followed a period when the bank had aggressively pursued commercial lending business, Latin American syndicated loan
business, and loan participation in the energy sector. Complicating
matters further, the bank's funding mix was heavily dependent on large certificates of deposit and foreign money markets, which meant its depositors were more risk-averse than average retail depositors in the US.
Payments crisis
The bank held significant participation in highly speculative oil and gas loans of Oklahoma's Penn Square Bank.[76]
When Penn Square failed in July 1982, the Continental's distress became
acute, culminating with press rumors of failure and an
investor-and-depositor run in early May 1984. In the first week of the run, the Fed permitted the Continental Illinois discount window
credits on the order of $3.6 billion. Still in significant distress,
the management obtained a further $4.5 billion in credits from a
syndicate of money center banks the following week. These measures
failed to stop the run, and regulators were confronted with a crisis.
Regulatory crisis
The
seventh-largest bank in the nation by deposits would very shortly be
unable to meet its obligations. Regulators faced a tough decision about
how to resolve the matter. Of the three options available, only two were
seriously considered. Even banks much smaller than the Continental were
deemed unsuitable for resolution by liquidation, owing to the
disruptions this would have inevitably caused. The normal course would
be to seek a purchaser (and indeed press accounts that such a search was
underway contributed to Continental depositors' fears in 1984).
However, in the tight-money financial climate of the early 1980s, no purchaser was forthcoming.
Besides generic concerns of size, contagion of depositor panic
and bank distress, regulators feared the significant disruption of
national payment and settlement systems. Of special concern was the wide
network of correspondent banks with high percentages of their capital
invested in the Continental Illinois. Essentially, the bank was deemed
"too big to fail", and the "provide assistance" option was reluctantly
taken. The dilemma then became how to provide assistance without
significantly unbalancing the nation's banking system.
Stopping the run
To prevent immediate failure, the Federal Reserve announced categorically that it would meet any liquidity needs the Continental might have, while the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) gave depositors and general creditors a full guarantee (not
subject to the $100,000 FDIC deposit-insurance limit) and provided
direct assistance of $2 billion (including participations). Money center
banks assembled an additional $5.3 billion unsecured facility pending a
resolution and resumption of more-normal business. These measures
slowed, but did not stop, the outflow of deposits.
Controversy
In a United States Senate hearing afterwards, the then Comptroller of the Currency C. T. Conover defended his position by admitting the regulators will not let the largest 11 banks fail.
Long-Term Capital Management
Long-Term Capital Management L.P. (LTCM) was a hedge fund management
firm based in Greenwich, Connecticut that utilized absolute-return
trading strategies combined with high financial leverage. The firm's
master hedge fund, Long-Term Capital Portfolio L.P., collapsed in the
late 1990s, leading to an agreement on September 23, 1998 among 14
financial institutions for a $3.6 billion recapitalization (bailout)
under the supervision of the Federal Reserve.
LTCM was founded in 1994 by John W. Meriwether, the former
vice-chairman and head of bond trading at Salomon Brothers. Members of
LTCM's board of directors included Myron S. Scholes and Robert C.
Merton, who shared the 1997 Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences
for a "new method to determine the value of derivatives". Initially
successful with annualized returns of over 40% (after fees) in its first
years, in 1998 it lost $4.6 billion in less than four months following
the Russian financial crisis requiring financial intervention by the
Federal Reserve, with the fund liquidating and dissolving in early 2000.
International
Canada
In March 2013, the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions announced that Canada's six largest banks, the Bank of Montreal, the Bank of Nova Scotia, the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, National Bank of Canada, Royal Bank of Canada and Toronto-Dominion Bank,
were too big to fail. Those six banks accounted for 90% of banking
assets in Canada at that time. It noted that "the differences among the
largest banks are smaller if only domestic assets are considered, and
relative importance declines rapidly after the top five banks and after
the sixth bank (National)."
New Zealand
Despite
the government's assurances, opposition parties and some media
commentators in New Zealand say that the largest banks are too big to
fail and have an implicit government guarantee.
United Kingdom
George Osborne, Chancellor of the Exchequer under David Cameron (2010–2016), threatened to break up banks which are too big to fail.
The too-big-to-fail idea has led to legislators and governments
facing the challenge of limiting the scope of these hugely important
organisations, and regulating activities perceived as risky or
speculative—to achieve this regulation in the UK, banks are advised to
follow the UK's Independent Commission on Banking Report.