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For release on delivery
5 4 5 p m EST
February 26, 1998

Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Conference on Capital Regulation in the 21st Century
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
New York, NY
February 26, 1998

The Role of Capital in Optimal Banking Supervision and Regulation

Good evening It is my pleasure to join President McDonough and our colleagues
from the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England in hosting this timely conference

Capital,

of course, is a topic of never-ending importance to bankers and their counterparties, not to
mention the regulators and central bankers whose job it is to oversee the stability of the
financial system Moreover, this conference comes at a most critical and opportune time As
you are aware, the current structure of regulatory bank capital standards is under the most
intense scrutiny since the deliberations leading to the watershed Basle Accord of 1988 and
the FDIC Improvement Act of 1991
In this tenth anniversary year of the Accord, its architects can look back with pride at
the role played by the regulation in reversing the decades-long decline in bank capital
cushions At the time the Accord was drafted, the use of differential risk weights to
distinguish among broad asset categories represented a truly innovative and, I believe,
effective approach to formulating prudential regulations The nsk-based capital rules also set
the stage for the emergence of more general nsk-based policies within the supervisory
process
Of course, the focus of this conference is on the future of prudential capital standards
In our deliberations we must therefore take note that observers both within the regulatory
agencies and the banking industry itself are raising warning flags about the current standard
These concerns pertain to the rapid technological, financial, and institutional changes that are
rendering the regulatory capital framework less effectual, if not on the verge of becoming
outmoded, with respect to our largest, most complex banking organizations In particular, it
is argued that the heightened complexity of these large banks' risk-taking activities, along
with the expanding scope of regulatory capital arbitrage, may cause capital ratios as
calculated under the existing rules to become increasingly misleading
I, too, share these concerns In my remarks this evening, however, I would like to
step back from the technical discourse of the conference's sessions and place these concerns
within their broad histoncal and policy contexts Specifically, I would like to highlight the
evolutionary nature of capital regulation and then discuss the policy concerns that have arisen

with respect to the current capital structure I will end with some suggestions regarding basic
principles for assessing possible future changes to our system of prudential supervision and
regulation
To begin, financial innovation is nothing new, and the rapidity of financial evolution
is itself a relative concept -- what is "rapid" must be judged in the context of the degree of
development of the economic and banking structure Prior to World War n, banks in this
country did not make commercial real estate mortgages or auto loans Prior to the 1960s,
securitization, as an alternative to the traditional "buy and hold" strategy of commercial
banks, did not exist Now, banks have expanded their securitization activities well beyond
the mortgage programs of the 1970s and 1980s, to include almost all asset types, including
corporate loans And most recently, credit derivatives have been added to the growing list of
financial products Many of these products, which would have been perceived as too risky
for banks in earlier periods, are now judged to be safe owing to today's more sophisticated
risk measurement and containment systems Both banking and regulation are continuously
evolving disciplines, with the latter, of course, continuously adjusting to the former
Technological advances in computers and in telecommunications, together with
theoretical advances ~ principally in option-pricing models ~ have contributed to this
proliferation of ever-more complex financial products The increased product complexity, in
turn, is often cited as the primary reason why the Basle standard is in need of periodic
restructuring Indeed, the Basle standard, like the industry for which it is intended, has not
stood still over the past ten years Since its inception, significant changes have been made on
a regular basis to the Accord, including, most visibly, the use of banks' internal models for
assessing capital charges for market risk within trading accounts All of these changes have
been incorporated within a document that is now quite lengthy — and written in appropriately
dense, regulatory style
While no one is in favor of regulatory complexity, we should be aware that capital
regulation will necessarily evolve over time as the banking and financial sectors themselves
evolve Thus, it should not be surprising that we constantly need to assess possible new
approaches to old problems, even as new problems become apparent Nor should the

continual search for new regulatory procedures be construed as suggesting that existing
policies were ill-suited to the times for which they were developed or will be ill-suited for
those banking systems at an earlier stage of development
Indeed, so long as we adhere in principle to a common prudential standard, it is
appropriate that differing regulatory regimes may exist side by side at any point in time,
responding to differing conditions between banking systems or across individual banks
within a single system Perhaps the appropriate analogy is with computer-chip
manufacturers Even as the next generation of chip is being planned, two or three generations
of chip — for example, Pentium IIs, Pentium Pros, and Pentium MMXs — are being marketed,
while, at the same time, older generations of chip continue to perform yeoman duty within
specific applications Given evolving financial markets, the question is not whether the Basle
standard will be changed, but how and why each new round of change will occur, and to
which market segment it will apply
In overseeing this necessary evolution of the Accord, as it applies to the more
advanced banking systems, it would be helpful to address some of the basic issues that, in my
view, have not been adequately addressed by the regulatory community In so doing, perhaps
we can shed some light on the source of our present concerns with the existing capital
standard There really are only two questions here First, how should bank "soundness" be
defined and measured? Second, what should be the minimum level of soundness set by
regulators7
When the Accord was being crafted, many supervisors may have had an implicit
notion of what they meant by soundness ~ they probably meant the likelihood of a bank
becoming insolvent While by no means the only one, this is a perfectly reasonable definition
of soundness Indeed, insolvency probability is the standard explicitly used within the
internal risk measurement and capital allocation systems of our major banks That is, many
of the large banks explicitly calculate the amount of capital they need in order to reduce to a
targeted percentage the probability, over a given time horizon, that losses would exceed the
allocated capital and drive the bank into insolvency
But whereas our largest banks have explicitly set their own, internal soundness

standards, regulators really have not Rather, the Basle Accord set a minimum capital ratio,
not a maximum insolvency probability Capital, being the difference between assets and
liabilities, is of course an abstraction Thus, it was well understood at the time that the
likelihood of insolvency is determined by the level of capital a bank holds, the maturities of
its assets and liabilities, and the riskiness of its portfolio In an attempt to relate capital
requirements to risk, the Accord divided assets into four risk "buckets," corresponding to
minimum total capital requirements of zero percent, 1 6 percent, 4 0 percent, and 8 0 percent,
respectively Indeed, much of the complexity of the formal capital requirements arises from
rules stipulating which risk positions fit into which of the four capital "buckets "
Despite the attempt to make capital requirements at least somewhat risk-based, the
main criticisms of the Accord, at least as applied to the activities of our largest, most
complex banking organizations, appear to be warranted In particular, I would note three
First, the formal capital ratio requirements, because they do not flow from any particular
insolvency probability standard, are, for the most part, arbitrary All corporate loans, for
example, are placed into a single 8 percent "bucket" Second, the requirements account for
credit risk and market risk, but not explicitly for operating and other forms of risk that may
also be important Third, except for trading account activities, the capital standards do not
take account of hedging, diversification, and differences in risk management techniques,
especially portfolio management
These deficiencies were understood even as the Accord was being crafted Indeed, it
was in response to these concerns that, for much of the 1990s, regulatory agencies have
focused on improving supervisory oversight of capital adequacy on a bank-by-bank basis In
recent years, the focus of supervisory efforts in the United States has been on the internal risk
measurement and management processes of banks This emphasis on internal processes has
been driven partly by the need to make supervisory policies more risk-focused in light of the
increasing complexity of banking activities In addition, this approach reinforces market
incentives that have prompted banks themselves to invest heavily in recent years to improve
their management information systems and internal systems for quantifying, pricing, and
managing risk

While it is appropriate that supervisory procedures evolve to encompass the changes
in industry practices, we must also be sure that improvements in both the form and content of
the formal capital regulations keep pace Inappropriate regulatory capital standards, whether
too low or too high in specific circumstances, can entail significant economic costs This
resource allocation effect of capital regulations is seen most clearly by comparing the Basle
standard with the internal "economic capital" allocation processes of some of our largest
banking companies For internal purposes, these large institutions attempt explicitly to
quantify their credit, market, and operating risks, by estimating loss probability distributions
for various risk positions Enough economic, as distinct from regulatory, capital is then
allocated to each risk position to satisfy the institution's own standard for insolvency
probability Within credit nsk models, for example, capital for internal purposes often is
allocated so as to hypothetically "cover" 99 9 percent or more of the estimated loss
probability distribution
These internal capital allocation models have much to teach the supervisor, and are
critical to understanding the possible misallocative effects of inappropriate capital rules For
example, while the Basle standard lumps all corporate loans into the 8 percent capital
"bucket," the banks' internal capital allocations for individual loans vary considerably — from
less than 1 percent to well over 30 percent — depending on the estimated riskiness of the
position in question In the case where a group of loans attracts an internal capital charge
that is very low compared to the Basle eight percent standard, the bank has a strong incentive
to undertake regulatory capital arbitrage to structure the nsk position in a manner that allows
it to be reclassified into a lower regulatory risk category At present, securitization is,
without a doubt, the major tool used by large U S banks to engage in such arbitrage
Regulatory capital arbitrage, I should emphasize, is not necessarily undesirable In
many cases, regulatory capital arbitrage acts as a safety-valve for attenuating the adverse
effects of those regulatory capital requirements that are well in excess of the levels warranted
by a specific activity's underlying economic nsk Absent such arbitrage, a regulatory capital
requirement that is inappropriately high for the economic nsk of a particular activity, could
cause a bank to exit that relatively low-risk business, by preventing the bank from earning an

acceptable rate of return on its capital That is, arbitrage may appropriately lower the
effective capital requirements against some safe activities that banks would otherwise be
forced to drop by the effects of regulation
It is clear that our major banks have become quite efficient at engaging in such
desirable forms of regulatory capital arbitrage, through securitization and other devices
However, such arbitrage is not costless and therefore not without implications for resource
allocation Interestingly, one reason why the formal capital standards do not include very
many risk "buckets" is that regulators did not want to influence how banks make resource
allocation decisions Ironically, the "one-size-fits-all" standard does just that, by forcing the
bank into expending effort to negate the capital standard, or to exploit it, whenever there is a
significant disparity between the relatively arbitrary standard and internal, economic capital
requirements
The inconsistencies between internally required economic capital and the regulatory
capital standard create another type of problem — nominally high regulatory capital ratios can
be used to mask the true level of insolvency probability For example, consider the case
where the bank's own risk analysis calls for a 15 percent internal economic capital
assessment against its portfolio If the bank actually holds 12 percent capital, it would, in all
likelihood, be deemed to be "well-capitalized" in a regulatory sense, even though it might be
undercapitalized in the economic sense
The possibility that regulatory capital ratios may mask true insolvency probability
becomes more acute as banks arbitrage away inappropriately high capital requirements on
their safest assets, by removing these assets from the balance sheet via securitization The
issue is not solely whether capital requirements on the bank's residual risk in the securitized
assets are appropriate We should also be concerned with the sufficiency of regulatory capital
requirements on the assets remaining on the book In the extreme, such "cherry-picking"
would result in only those assets left on the balance sheet for which economic capital
allocations are greater than the 8 percent regulatory standard
Given these difficulties with the one-size-fits-all nature of our current capital
regulations, it is understandable that calls have arisen for reform of the Basle standard It is,

however, premature to try to predict exactly how the next generation of prudential standards
will evolve One set of possibilities revolves around market-based tools and incentives
Indeed, as banks' internal risk measurement and management technologies improve, and as
the depth and sophistication of financial markets increase, bank supervisors should
continually find ways to incorporate market advances into their prudential policies, where
appropriate Two potentially promising applications of this principle have been discussed at
this conference One is the use of internal credit risk models as a possible substitute for, or
complement to, the current structure of ratio-based capital regulations Another approach
goes one step further and uses market-like incentives to reward and encourage improvements
in internal risk measurement and management practices A primary example is the proposed
pre-commitment approach to setting capital requirements for bank trading activities I might
add that pre-commitment of capital is designed to work only for the trading account, not the
banking book, and then only for strong, well-managed organizations
Proponents of an internal-models-based approach to capital regulations may be on the
right track, but at this moment of regulatory development it would seem that a full-fledged,
bank-wide, internal-models approach could require a very substantial amount of time and
effort to develop In a paper given earlier today by Federal Reserve Board economists David
Jones and John Mingo, the authors enumerate their concerns over the reliability of the current
generation of credit risk models They go on to suggest, however, that these models may,
over time, provide a basis for setting future regulatory capital requirements Even in the
shorter term, they argue, elements of internal credit risk models may prove useful within the
supervisory process
Still other approaches are of course possible, including some combination of marketbased and traditional, ratio-based approaches to prudential regulation But regardless of what
happens in this next stage, as I noted earlier, any new capital standard is itself likely to be
superceded within a continuing process of evolving prudential regulations Just as
manufacturing companies follow a product planning cycle, bank regulators can expect to
begin working on still another generation of prudential policies even as proposed
modifications to the current standard are being released for public comment

8
In looking ahead, supervisors should, at a minimum, be aware of the increasing
sophistication with which banks are responding to the existing regulatory framework and
should now begin active discussions on the necessary modifications In anticipation of such
discussions, I would like to conclude by focusing on what I believe should be several core
principles underlying any proposed changes to our current system of prudential regulation
and supervision
First, a reasonable principle for setting regulatory soundness standards is to act much
as the market would if there were no safety net and all market participants were fully
informed For example, requiring all of our regulated financial institutions to maintain
insolvency probabilities that are equivalent to a triple-A rating standard would be
demonstrably too stringent, because there are very few such entities among unregulated
financial institutions not subject to the safety net That is, the markets are telling us that the
value of the financial firm is not, in general, maximized at default probabilities reflected in
tnple-A ratings This suggests, in turn, that regulated financial intermediaries can not
maximize their value to the overall economy if they are forced to operate at unreasonably
high soundness levels
Nor should we require individual banks to hold capital in amounts sufficient to fully
protect against those rare systemic events which, in any event, may render standard
probability evaluation moot The management of systemic risk is properly the job of the
central banks Individual banks should not be required to hold capital against the possibility
of overall financial breakdown Indeed, central banks, by their existence, appropriately offer
a form of catastrophe insurance to banks against such events
Conversely, permitting regulated institutions that benefit from the safety net to take
risky positions that, in the absence of the net, would earn them junk-bond ratings for their
liabilities, is clearly inappropriate In such a world, our goals of protecting taxpayers and
reducing the misallocative effects of the safety net simply would not be realized Ultimately,
the setting of soundness standards should achieve a complex balance — remembering that the
goals of prudential regulation should be weighed against the need to permit banks to perform
their essential risk-taking activities Thus, capital standards should be structured to reflect

9
the lines of business and degree of risk-taking in which the individual bank chooses to
engage
A second principle should be to continue linking strong supervisory analysis and
judgment with rational regulatory standards In a banking environment characterized by
continuing technological advances, this means placing an emphasis on constantly improving
our supervisory techniques In the context of bank capital adequacy, supervisors increasingly
must be able to assess sophisticated internal credit risk measurement systems, as well as
gauge the impact of the continued development m securitization and credit derivative
markets It is critical that supervisors incorporate, where practical, the risk analysis tools
being developed and used on a daily basis within the banking industry itself If we do not use
the best analytical tools available, and place these tools in the hands of highly trained and
motivated supervisory personnel, then we cannot hope to supervise under our basic
principle -- supervision as if there were no safety net
Third, we have no choice but to continue to plan for a successor to the simple riskweighting approach to capital requirements embodied within the current regulatory standard
While it is unclear at present exactly what that successor might be, it seems clear that adding
more and more layers of arbitrary regulation would be counter productive We should, rather,
look for ways to harness market tools and market-like incentives wherever possible, by using
banks' own policies, behaviors, and technologies in improving the supervisory process
Finally, we should always remind ourselves that supervision and regulation are
neither infallible nor likely to prove sufficient to meet all our intended goals Put another
way, the Basle standard and the bank examination process, even if both are structured in
optimal fashion, are a second line of support for bank soundness Supervision and regulation
can never be a substitute for a bank's own internal scrutiny of its counterparties, as well as
the market's scrutiny of the bank Therefore, we should not, for example, abandon efforts to
contain the scope of the safety net, or to press for increases in the quantity and quality of
financial disclosures by regulated institutions
If we follow these basic prescriptions, I suspect that history will look favorably on our
attempts at crafting regulatory policy