View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

For release on delivery
10 15 a m , E D T
October 5, 1997

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the
Annual Convention
of the
American Bankers Association
Boston, Massachusetts
October 5, 1997

I.

Introduction
Good Morning It is always with mixed feelings of pleasure and

trepidation that I accept an invitation to speak at the American Bankers Association
annual convention I still have a disconcerted remembrance of my acceptance of your
first invitation, which had been scheduled for October 20, 1987 That speech had to be
scratched at the last minute as the result of a certain adversity in stock price
adjustments the day before Experience suggests, however, that history does not repeat
with a fixed periodicity and, besides, I have crossed my fingers
The theme of your convention this year is timely It is exactly when
rapid innovation and institutional and technological change are taking place that market
participants should take time to contemplate the opportunities and the risks, what to
retain and what to change Only then can the banking industry create the most valueadded for customers, employees, and society, and as a consequence, for shareholders
As in recent years, the future role of banks and other providers of
financial services will surely be significantly affected by the same basic forces that
have shaped the real and financial economy world-wide relentless technological
change This morning, I would like to describe some of the effects of technological
change in both the financial and nonfinancial sectors and discuss a few of their more
important implications I will begin with the real economy

-2II.

Technological Change and the Real Economy
The most important single characteristic of the changes i n U S technology in

recent years is the ever expanding conceptualization of our Gross Domestic Product
We are witnessing the substitution of ideas for physical matter in the creation of
economic value—a shift from hardware to software, as it were The roots of increasing
conceptualization of output lie deep in human history, but the pace of such substitution
probably picked up in the early stages of the industrial revolution, when science and
machines created new leverage for human energy and ideas Nonetheless, even as
recently as the middle of this century, the symbols of American economic strength
were our outputs of such physical products as steel, motor vehicles, and heavy
machinery-items for which sizable proportions of production costs reflected the
exploitation of raw materials and the sheer manual labor required to manipulate them
However, today's views of economic leadership focus mcreasmgly on downsized,
smaller, less palpable evidence of weight and bulk, requiring more technologically
sophisticated labor input
Examples of this trend permeate our daily lives Radios used to be
activated by large vacuum tubes, today we have elegantly designed pocked-sized
transistors to perform the same function—but with the higher quality of sound and
greater reliability that consumers now expect Thin fiber optic cable has replaced huge
tonnages of copper wire Owing to advances in metallurgy, engineering, and

-3architectural design, we now can construct buildings that enclose as much or more
space with fewer materials
A number of commentators, particularly Professor Paul David of Stanford
University, have suggested that, despite the benefits we have seen this decade, it may
be that the truly significant increases in living standards resulting from the introduction
of computers and communications equipment still lie ahead If true, this would not be
unusual Past innovations, such as the introduction of the dynamo or the invention of
the gasoline-powered motor, required considerable infrastructure mvestment before
their full potential could be realized
Electricity, when it substituted for steam power late last century, was
initially applied to production processes suited to steam Gravity was used to move
goods vertically in the steam environment, and that could not immediately change with
the advent of electnc power It was only when honzontal factories, newly designed for
optimal use of electnc power, began to dominate our industnal system many years
after electncity's initial introduction, that national productivity clearly accelerated
Similarly, it was only when modern highways and gasoline service
stations became extensive that the lower cost of motor vehicle transportation became
evident
III.

Technological Change and the Financial Economy
It is surely not news to a group of bankers that the same forces that have

been reshaping the real economy have also been transforming the financial services

-4industry

Once again, perhaps the most profound development has been the rapid

growth of computer and telecommunications technology The advent of such
technology has lowered the costs, reduced the risks, and broadened the scope, of
financial services, making it increasingly possible for borrowers and lenders to transact
directly, and for a wide variety of financial products to be tailored for very specific
purposes

As a result, competitive pressures in the financial services mdustry are

probably greater than ever before
As is true in the real economy, it is difficult to overestimate the
importance of education and ongoing training to the advancement of technology and
product innovation in the financial sector I doubt that I need to tell any of you about
the importance of education and training for employees But the same is almost surely
true for your customers Surveys repeatedly indicate that users of electronic banking
products are typically very well educated For example, data from the Federal Reserve
Board's Survey of Consumer Finances suggest that a higher level of education
significantly increases the chances that a household consumer will use an electronic
banking product Indeed, this survey indicates that, in late 1995, the median user of an
electronic source of information for savings or borrowing decisions had a college
degree-a level of education currently achieved by less than one-third of American
households
Technological innovation and more sophisticated users have accelerated
the second major trend—financial globalization-which has been reshaping our financial

-5system, not to mention the real economy, for at least three decades Both
developments have expanded cross-border asset holding, trading, and credit flows and,
in response, both securities firms and U S and foreign banks have mcreased thencross-border operations Once again, a critical result has been greatly increased
competition both at home and abroad
A third development reshaping financial markets—deregulation-has been
as much a reaction to technological change and globalization as an independent factor
Moreover, the continuing evolution of markets suggests that it will be literally
impossible to maintain some of the remaining rules and regulations established for
previous economic environments While the ultimate public policy goals of economic
growth and stability will remain unchanged, market forces will continue to make it
impossible to sustain outdated restrictions, as we have recently seen with respect to
interstate banking and branching
In such an environment, I share your frustration with the pace of
legislative reform and revision to statutonly mandated regulations Nonetheless, we
should not lose sight of the remarkable degree of re-codification of law and regulation
to make banking rules more consistent with market realities that has occurred in recent
years Deposit and other interest rate ceilings have been eliminated, geographical
restrictions have been virtually removed, many banking organizations can do a fairly
broadly based securities underwriting and dealing busmess, many can do insurance
sales, and those with the resources and skill are authorized to virtually match foreign

-6bank competition abroad. Moreover, it seems clear that there is recognition by the
Congress that the basic financial framework has to be adjusted further

The process, as

you know, is not easy when the results of regulatory relief create both a new
competitive landscape and new supervisory and stability challenges
Change will, I believe, ultimately occur because the pressures unleashed
by technology, globalization, and deregulation have inexorably eroded the traditional
institutional differences among financial firms Examples abound

Securities firms

have for some time offered checking-like accounts linked to mutual funds, and their
affiliates routinely extend significant credit directly to busmess On the bank side, the
economics of a typical bank loan syndication do not differ essentially from the
economics of a best-efforts securities underwriting Indeed, investment banks are
themselves becoming increasingly important in the syndicated loan market With
regard to derivatives instruments, the expertise required to manage prudently the
writing of over-the-counter derivatives, a business dominated by banks, is similar to
that required for using exchange-traded futures and options, instruments used
extensively by both commercial and investment banks The writing of a put option by
a bank is economically indistinguishable from the issuance of an insurance policy The
list could go on It is sufficient to say that a strong case can be made that the
evolution of financial technology alone has changed forever our ability to place
commercial banking, mvestment banking, insurance underwriting, and insurance sales
into neat separate boxes

-7Nonetheless, not all financial institutions would prosper as, nor desire to
be, financial supermarkets Many specialized providers of financial services are
successful today and will be so in the future because of their advantages m specific
areas Moreover, especially at commercial banks, the demand for traditional services
by smaller businesses and by households is likely to continue for some time And the
information revolution, while it has deprived banks of some of the traditional lending
business with their best customers, has also benefited banks by making it less costly
for them to assess the credit and other risks of customers they previously would have
shunned Thus, it seems most likely that banks of all types will continue to engage in
a substantial amount of traditional banking, delivered, of course, by ever improving
technology
Community banks, in particular, are likely to provide loans and payments
services via traditional on-balance sheet banking Indeed, smaller banks have
repeatedly demonstrated their ability to survive and prosper in the face of major
technological and structural change by providing traditional banking services to their
customers The evidence is clear that well-managed smaller banks can and will exist
side by side with larger banks, often maintaining or increasing local market share
Technological change has facilitated this process by providing smaller banks with low
cost access to new products and services In short, the record shows that wellmanaged smaller banks have nothing to fear from technology, globalization, or
deregulation

-8For all size entities, however, technological change is blurring not only
traditional distinctions between the banking, securities, and insurance business, but is
also having a profound effect on historical separations between financial and
nonfinancial businesses Most of us are aware of software companies interested in the
financial services busniess, but some financial firms, leveraging off their own internal
skills, are also seeking to produce software for third parties Shipping companies'
tracking software lends itself to payment services Manufacturers have financed their
customers' purchases for a long time, but now mcreasingly are using the resultant
financial skills to finance noncustomers Moreover, many nonbank financial
institutions are now profitably engaged in nonfinancial activities
Current facts and expected future trends, in short, are creating market
pressures to permit the common ownership of financial and nonfinancial firms In my
judgment, it is quite likely that in future years it will be close to impossible to
distinguish where one type of activity ends and another begins Nonetheless, it seems
wise to move with caution in addressing the removal of the current legal barriers
between commerce and banking, since the unrestricted association of banking and
commerce would be a profound and surely irreversible structural change m the
American economy
Were we fully confident of how emerging technologies would affect the
evolution of our economic and financial structure, we could presumably develop today
the regulations which would foster that evolution But we are not, and history suggests

-9we cannot, be confident of how our real and financial economies will evolve If we
act too quickly, we run the risk of locking in a set of inappropriate rules that could
adversely alter the development of market structures

Our ability to foresee accurately

the future implications of technologies and market developments in banking, as m other
industries, has not been particularly impressive As Professor Nathan Rosenberg of
Stanford University has pointed out, "

mistaken forecasts of future structure litter

our financial landscape "
Indeed, Professor Rosenberg suggests that even after an innovation's
technical feasibility has been clearly established, its ultimate effect on society is often
highly unpredictable He notes at least two sources of this uncertainty First, the range
of applications for a new technology may not be immediately apparent For instance,
Alexander Graham Bell initially viewed the telephone as solely a business instrumentmerely an enhancement of the telegraph—for use in transmittmg very specific messages,
such as the terms of a contract Indeed, he offered to sell his telephone patent to
Western Union for only $100,000, but was turned down Similarly, Marconi initially
overlooked the radio's value as a public broadcast medium, instead believing its
principal application would be in the transmission of point-to-point messages, such as
ship-to-ship, where communication by wire was infeasible
A second source of technological uncertainty reflects the possibility that
an innovation's full potential may be realized only after extensive improvements, or
after complementary innovations in other fields of science According to Charles

-10Townes, a Nobel Pnze winner for his work on the laser, the attorneys for Bell Labs
initially refused, in the late 1960s, to patent the laser because they believed it had no
applications m the field of telecommunications

Only m the 1980s, after extensive

improvements m fiber optics technology, did the laser's importance for
telecommunications become apparent
It's not hard to find examples of such uncertainties within the financial
services industry The evolution of the over-the-counter derivatives market over the
past decade has been nothing less than spectacular But as the theoretical
underpinnings of financial arbitrage were being published in the academic journals in
the late 1950s, few observers could have predicted how the scholars' insights would
eventually revolutionize global financial markets Not only were additional theoretical
and empirical research necessary, but, in addition, several generations of advances in
computer and communications technologies were necessary to make these concepts
computationally practicable
All these examples, and more, suggest, that if we dramatically change the
rules now about banking and commerce, with what is great uncertainty about future
synergies between finance and nonfinance, we may well end up doing more harm than
good And, as with all rule changes by government, we are likely to find it impossible
to correct our errors promptly, if at all Modifications of such a fundamental structural
rule as the separation of banking and commerce accordingly should proceed at a

-11deliberate pace in order to test the response of markets and technological innovations
to the altered rules in the years ahead
The need for caution and humility with respect to our ability to predict
the future is highly relevant for how banking supervision should evolve As I
proposed to this audience last year, regulators are beginning to understand that the
supervision of a financial institution is, of necessity, a continually evolving process
reflecting the continually changing financial landscape Increasingly, supervisory
techniques and requirements try to harness both the new technologies and market
incentives to improve oversight while reducing regulatory burden, burdens that are
becoming progressively obsolescent and counterproductive
Concerns about setting a potentially inappropriate regulatory standard
were an important factor in the decision by the banking agencies several years ago not
to incorporate interest rate risk and asset concentration risk into the formal nsk-based
capital standards In the end, we became convinced that the technologies for
measuring and managing interest rate nsk and concentration risk were evolving so
rapidly that any regulatory standard would quickly become outmoded or, worse, inhibit
private market innovations Largely for these reasons, ultimately we chose to address
the relationship between these risks and capital adequacy through the supervisory
process rather than through the writing of regulations

-12IV.

Conclusion
In conclusion, it is clear that both the real and the financial economies

have been, and will continue to be, changed dramatically by the forces of technological
progress Banks will be under constant challenge to harness these forces to meet the
ever-shifting competition In such an environment, many existing rules and regulations
will, if not modified, increasingly bind those banks seeking to respond, let alone
innovate Thus, there is a profound need for legislators and banking supervisors also
to adapt to the changmg realities But do keep in mind that the government has an
obligation to limit systemic risk exposure, and centuries of expenence teach us the
critical role that financial stability plays m the stability of the real economy

Bankers

also have an obligation to their shareholders and creditors to measure and manage nsk
appropriately

In short, the regulators and the industry both want the same things—

financial innovation, creative change, responsible nsk-taking, and growth The market
forces at work will get us there, perhaps not as rapidly as some banks may desire, but
get there we will
* * * * *