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For rtlu«« on d«liv«ry
9:30 A.M., E.S.T.
March 17, 1993

Statement by
David W. Mullins, Jr.
Vice Chairman, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Subcommittee on
Telecommunications and Finance
of the
House Committee on Energy and Commerce
U.S. House of Representatives

March 17, 1993

Summary

In the view of the Board of Governors, the smooth
functioning of the overall government securities market
indicates that broad-based regulatory redesign is not
needed.

Given the scale of federal borrowing, the Treasury

is in no position to impose costs or discourage
participation without the strong presumption of offsetting
benefits.

In our estimation, many components of H.R. 618 do

not pass this test.

Instead of considering a risky overhaul

of a market that works well, Congress gan chart a safer
course:

restore the Treasury’s rulemaking authority,

perhaps allow. NASD to set sales practice standards for its
members in this market, and support the agencies’
substantial ongoing efforts to improve surveillance and
enforcement.

I welcome this opportunity to discuss legislative
initiatives concerning the government securities market.

By

my count, this marks the ninth time since Salomon Brothers’
admission of wrongdoing that I have delivered testimony on
this subject before a Congressional panel.

In my view,

there is enough at stake, particularly in terms of financing
the federal deficit, to warrant this close scrutiny.

The

interest cost of the federal debt depends on the rates when
securities are first auctioned, while this Committee’s
mandate concerns secondary market trading in government
securities.

But that is not a realistic distinction in

practice, since the Treasury’s ability to tap funding
sources in the primary market depends critically on the
assurance of smooth trading in the secondary market.
Developments since August 1991
Over the past 1-1/2 years, the Board of Governors,
the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (FRBNY), the Treasury,
and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), among
others, have devoted considerable attention to the
government securities market.

An important initial product

of that work was the Joint Report on the Government
Securities Market, which contained a comprehensive survey of
the market and a detailed plan for correcting the problems
that had been identified.

Much of the plan delineated in

the report has been put in place.

After consulting with the

other agencies, Treasury implemented redesigned auction

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procedures and rules to eliminate the possibility of a
recurrence of the abuses committed in the Salomon Brothers
episode.

With the help of staff at the New York Fed and the

Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the Board,
Treasury, and SEC formed an Interagency Working Group on
Market Surveillance.

As a result, enforcement

responsibilities and procedures have been clarified and
intensified.

After careful study, the Treasury commenced a

yearlong experiment with auction technique, and the FRBNY
has made considerable progress in automating the auction
process.

In addition, the New York Fed has adopted changes

in the administration of its relationship with primary
dealers and is in the process of revising the information
that it collects from them.
Meanwhile, staff at the various agencies, as well
as academic researchers, have studied the relationship
between prices in the cash and financing markets.

This

research has produced techniques to identify rate anomalies
that could be associated with squeezes.

And the Treasury

has shown a willingness to act through supply management
when market prices suggest a serious shortage.

Last year,

one issue, a ten-year note, was reopened under the policy
articulated in the Joint Report for addressing an "acute,
protracted” shortage.

Under the threat of Treasury

reopenings, no market participant can be confident of
profiting by cornering the market in a Treasury issue.

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Thus, the government securities market has already been
subject to substantial change and to intensified scrutiny on
an ongoing basis.
This extensive, in-depth analysis has increased my
respect and appreciation for this financial marketplace.

In

this regard, the U.S. government securities market has no
rival.

This market is the deepest and broadest of all

securities markets, offering widespread economic benefits by
permitting transactions of enormous size to be conducted at
razor-thin bid-ask spreads.

In general, the governmental

initiatives undertaken to date with respect to this market
have not been intrusive or especially costly, and thus have
been consistent with its continued efficiency.
What is Needed
In weighing the need for additional legislation,
the Board of Governors believes that the best, most
efficient, and equitable laws and regulations are drawn up
to address specific problems.

This is why, in the Board’s

view, the timely enactment of the legislative agenda
outlined in the Joint Report would serve the nation’s
interest.

This agenda--reestablishing the Treasury’s

rulemaking authority for the government securities market
and perhaps eliminating the prohibition on the National
Association of Securities Dealers (NASD) to specify sales
practice rules for members participating in this market-would complement the administrative actions that have

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already been put into motion.

Unfortunately, H.R. 618 goes

far beyond this recommendation by introducing potentially
confusing and possibly overlapping lines of authority
amongst the agencies, by erecting a regulatory apparatus
that is more appropriate for equity markets, and by creating
the potential for bureaucratic judgment to substitute for
the market determination of the flow of pricing information.
These actions would raise the cost of participating in the
government securities market precisely when our federal
finances are critically reliant on worldwide market
acceptance for the Treasury’s massive debt issuance.
The Board of Governors does not believe that the
evidence supports the case for the sweeping changes in
regulatory practices envisioned in this proposed
legislation.

In our view, the record over the last 1-1/2

years and a careful weighing of the costs versus benefits
would not warrant such steps.

The incidents that have come

to light are apparently related to individual ethical lapses
that are unfortunately all too common when money changes
hands.

From what is known thus far, it appears that the

existing body of laws and regulations has proved sufficient
to mete out punishment to the guilty.

While there are

reports that criminal investigations may have been made more
difficult by shoddy bookkeeping practices at some government
securities brokers and dealers, recordkeeping at most of
those entities is already covered under the existing

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regulatory umbrella.

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The measures already Implemented,

including stricter enforcement and more uniformity in
interpretation of the existing rules by self-regulatory
organizations and regulatory authorities that administer the
rules, should smooth the way in investigating potential
abuses.

Of course, such improvements within the current

regulatory framework would be made easier if Congress acted
to restore the Treasury’s rulemaking authority for
government securities brokers and dealers, which lapsed in
1991.
The Board of Governors believes that a decisive
case has not yet been presented for adding statutory
requirements on sales practice rules.

If Congress deems

that a provision for sales practice rules is necessary, this
could be obtained by simply removing the prohibition on the
NASD from applying its sale practice rules to government
securities transactions.

This would bring NASD firms into

line with procedures at New York Stock Exchange member
firms, extending sales practice rules to all nonbank brokers
and dealers.

What Is Not Needed
Compared with H.R. 618, the legislative agenda
outlined above is narrower and, in our view, better
targeted.

It appropriately recognizes the substantial

administrative changes already set in motion as well as the
unique nature of the government securities market.

In the

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view of the Board of Governors, more sweeping and intrusive
action does not stand the scrutiny of rigorous cost-benefit
analysis.

This was our judgment at the time of the writing

of the Joint Report, and events since have only strengthened
this conclusion.
There is no evidence of market failure that would
warrant the significant overhaul envisioned in H.R. 618.

In

a market where so much money changes hands so quickly, even
the whiff of illicit activity would inspire a chorus of
complaints and withdrawals from trading.

In fact, bid-ask

spreads remain narrow, volume remains heavy, and there have
been no notable changes in the ranks of participation.

Even

without evidence of spotty trading, thin markets, or trading
failures, if there was a convincing logical chain to suggest
that the government securities market was now susceptible to
wrongdoing, then prophylactic action could well be
justified.

On this score, though, the structure of the

government securities market would appear to offer little
scope for large-scale mischief.
First, prices in the government securities market
appear mostly driven by macroeconomic fundamentals.
Government securities are homogeneous, with few of the
idiosyncratic factors that push and pull the prices of
private debt or equity instruments relative to market
averages.

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Second, in a homogeneous, highly visible market
such as this one, the force of competition remains the best
protection from manipulation.

With narrow bid-ask spreads

and the quick dissemination of information, there is little
room to hide collusive activity.

Such a market is

inherently transparent.
Third, a trader who attempted to gain from market
manipulation now faces the prospect of aggressive Treasury
debt management that would reopen an issue to shave any
illicit gain.

Against this backdrop, many of the

potentially costly provisions of H.R. 618 guard against an
enemy that will never take the field.
In the Board’s view, there is no compelling need to
grant new recordkeeping authority to the SEC, especially
when existing authority can be used more effectively.

Nor

is there a need for large-position reporting, given the
substantial improvement in the agencies’ market surveillance
efforts.

The FRBNY's discussions with market participants

provide a wealth of detail to inform the Treasury reopening
decision and to alert enforcement agencies of potential
problems.

These sources are augmented by dealer report

forms that soon will routinely extract information on
specific securities.

But at a more fundamental level,

currently available data on market prices provide a
continuing stream of data to mine for evidence of
manipulative intent.

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In our view, there is no demonstrated need to put
the SEC into the business of mandating what trading screens
look like and who gets the information feeds, and such
initiatives could impose significant costs on the market.
Transparency, or the ability to get timely and reliable
price quotes in the government securities market, has
improved markedly of late.

GOVPX, for example, has enhanced

the information that it provides to the market.

If private

sector initiatives are allowed to run their course, this
access should be further widened.

The threat of

governmental interference may only prove counterproductive,
as private firms delay additional improvements for fear that
another format might be thrust upon them.
The Board accepts that the broad-based apparatus of
reporting requirements in this market that could be
implemented under H.R. 618 might reduce the cost of
investigating abuses and facilitate enforcement.

On the

other side of the ledger, such changes would boost the cost
of every trade and potentially reduce the ranks of market
participants.

The Treasury’s appetite for financing is too

large to make purchasing its securities more expensive or to
discourage willing buyers with administrative burdens
motivated by the vague fear that someone, somewhere out
there, may be inclined to cheat.
It is true that H.R. 618 does not mandate these
increased reporting requirements but rather gives various

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agencies the authority to enact these changes should they
deem them fit.

However, even backup authority may send a

chilling message about the U.S. market to all participants
choosing where to trade in the global marketplace.

Rather

than risk slipping into a fundamental change through backup
authority, the Board of Governors feels it would be a wiser
course of action to return to Congress for enabling
legislation in the future should such authority appear
necessary.