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For release on delivery
1:00 p.m. EDT
April 11, 2007

Financial Regulation and the Invisible Hand

Remarks
by
Ben S. Bemanke
Chairman
Board of Govemors of the Federal Reserve System

at the
New York University Law School
New York, New York
April 11, 2007

Market forces determine most outcomes in our economy, a fact that helps to
explain much of our nation's success in creating wealth. Markets aggregate diffuse
information more effectively and set prices more efficiently than any central planner
possibly could. The result is powerful competitive incentives for businesses to produce,
at the least cost, the goods and services that our citizens value most. Writing in the
eighteenth century, Adam Smith conceived of the free-market system as an "invisible
hand" that harnesses the pursuit of private interest to promote the public good. Smith's
conception remains relevant today, notwithstanding the enormous increase in economic
complexity since the Industrial Revolution.
Although the market system is the principal source of America's economic
dynamism, economic theory and practice both suggest that targeted government
regulation and intervention can sometimes benefit the economy. In the particular case of
financial markets, for example, government regulation helps to promote general financial
stability and to protect investors and consumers against fraud. Of course, the benefits of
regulation come with direct and indirect costs. Direct costs include those arising from
compliance with a thicket of complicated rules--costs that can add significantly to a
firms' costs of production, leading to higher prices for consumers. Indirect costs include
reductions in innovation or competition that can result from overly restrictive regulations.
Therefore, before government decides to regulate in a particular situation, it must weigh
the social costs and benefits of the contemplated intervention.
In recent decades, public policy has been increasingly influenced by the insight
that the market itself can often be used to achieve regulatory objectives. For example, in

-2the area of environmental protection, the trading of emissions permits has been widely
embraced as a cost-effective means of controlling pollution. That market-based approach
is regulation by the invisible hand, as opposed to the very visible hand of direct
government regulation and enfbrcement. The invisible-hand approach to regulation aims
to align the incentives ofmarkf~t participants with the objectives of the regulator, thereby
harnessing the same powerful forces that allow markets to work so efficiently. In the
financial arena, as I will discuss, this approach often takes the form of creating incentives
for market participants to monitor and control the risk-taking behavior of financial firms-that is, to exert market discipline--thereby reducing the need for direct oversight by the
government.
Today I would like to explore the market-based approach to financial regulation
by considering its application to two important--but very different--types of financial
institutions: commercial banks and hedge funds. For both types of institutions, marketbased regulation has proven an effective supplement to (or substitute for) conventional
command-and-control approaches.
Commercial Banks

For much of U.S. history, bank shareholders and creditors--not government
regulators--were responsible for overseeing banks' lending and investment decisions.
For example, in the years betwt~en the demise ofthe Second Bank of the United States, in
1836, and the National Banking Act of 1863, private commercial banks issued noninterest-bearing notes that servc::d as the principal medium of exchange.
Although the notes issued by each bank were supposedly redeemable for gold (or
other safe assets, such as govenunent bonds), they did not always trade at face value in

-3-

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every location. Instead, notes issued by different banks traded at variable discounts that
depended on (among other things) the perceived financial condition of the issuing bank
and the distance a note-holder would have to travel to redeem the notes (Gorton, 1996).
Banks did not like to see their notes trade for much less than face value, however,
because holders of deeply discounted notes had an incentive to demand the face amount
in gold from the issuing bank. If too many note-holders redeemed their notes, the bank
might have to payout all its reserves of gold and close down. Concern about potential
note redemptions discouraged banks from taking excessive financial risks that might
cause their notes to trade at a deeper discount and, consequently, trigger increased
redemptions. Market forces thereby exerted discipline on banks' activities and the types
of assets they held.
Similarly, later in the nineteenth century, when demand deposits became the
primary form of bank liability, bankers recognized that any loss of confidence by
depositors might provoke a run--panicky withdrawals--that could force the bank to close
its doors. Presumably the potential for deposit runs led banks to take fewer risks than
they might have otherwise--another instance of market discipline (Calomiris and Gorton,
1991).
Although the actions of note-holders and depositors constrained banks' risktaking, they had some undesirable side effects. Throughout the nineteenth century and in
the early decades ofthe twentieth, bank runs often helped to precipitate general financial
panics that shut down large parts of the financial system and constricted economic
activity. Bank runs, by extinguishing deposits, also tended to sharply reduce the nation's
money supply. And they sometimes wreaked considerable hardship on the depositors

-4r

themselves. Certainly, from a modem perspective, putting the burden of monitoring
banks on small depositors seems inappropriate. Most retail depositors don't have the
time and resources to gather infonnation on bank assets and investments, and typically
,they cannot absorb losses when a bank fails.

In response to this series of financial panics, the Congress in 1913 founded the
Federal Reserve to provide the nation with a safer, more flexible, and more stable
monetary and financial system. Specifically, the Fed was established "to furnish an
elastic currency, to afford means of rediscounting commercial paper, [and] to establish a
more effective supervision of banking in the United States.,,1 Such powers can be used to
provide liquidity when an othelWise solvent bank experiences unexpected and
widespread withdrawals during a financial panic. Today, the Federal Reserve's discount
window and its oversight of the: payment system are core components of the so-called
federal "safety net" provided to banks.
However, the Federal Reserve failed to avert the banking panics of the Great
Depression of the 1930s, the longest and most severe series of banking panics in U.S.
history. Thousands of banks failed, many after suffering runs on their deposits. As a
consequence, the Congress added another element to the safety net when it established
government-backed deposit insurance. Deposit insurance both protects depositors
(subject to limits on the size and type of account) and reduces the liquidity risks faced by
banks. It has achieved its objective in that runs on insured institutions have virtually
disappeared.
However, despite its evident benefits, deposit insurance created a new type of
problem. Unlike the note-holders and depositors of earlier years, insured bank

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depositors, who know that their funds are protected even if their bank fails, have little or
no incentive to evaluate the risk-taking activities of their bank. In the absence of other
measures, this safety net reduces the restraint that creditors would otherwise place on
unsound lending because the insurance reduces the amount of money they have at stake.
The tendency of banks to take on excessive risks when they face little economic penalty
for doing so is an example of what economists call a moral hazard problem.
To help counter the moral hazard created by deposit insurance, and to try to
ensure that banks operate safely and soundly, the United States has developed an
extensive system of banking supervision and regulation. In effect, regulators assumed the
role of monitor, the role that insured depositors no longer have any incentive to play.
Somewhat ironically, however, this system of government supervision may itself
exacerbate moral hazard ifthe banks' uninsured creditors assume that the government's
oversight obviates any need for them to monitor banks. Market discipline may erode
further if market participants believe that, to avoid the risk of a financial crisis, the
government will step in to prevent the failure of any very large institution--the "too big to
fail" problem. With little or no help from market forces, the burden of ensuring banks'
soundness falls entirely on the supervisory agencies. But as we saw in the savings and
loans crisis of the 1980s, regulatory oversight may also fail if the regulators are not
sufficiently vigilant or lack the political will or financial resources to promptly close
insolvent institutions.
The lesson of history appears to be that neither market discipline nor regulatory
oversight alone is completely adequate for keeping the banking system safe and sound.
However, regulators have increasingly come to appreciate the value of a hybrid system

- 6that supplements direct regulation with a substantial amount of market discipline.
Fortunately, regulators have a variety of ways to restore and strengthen market discipline
for banks, notwithstanding the (~xistence of the federal safety net.
Minimum capital requir,ements are one method. A bank's capital provides a
buffer that can absorb losses before they fall on the deposit insurance fund (and,
ultimately, the taxpayers). In addition, however, capital requirements enhance market
discipline; they do so by ensuring that the bank will have shareholders (and possibly
other types of creditors as well) who have a significant amount of money at risk. These
shareholders have a substantial financial incentive to monitor the bank's activities and to
insist on changes if they are dissatisfied. Bank managers are also quite aware that a low
share price could invite a hostill;: takeover, an outcome they usually want to avoid.
The incentives for a bank to control risk are even stronger if regulations link the
amount of regulatory capital to the risks taken by banks. (Tying capital requirements to
risk is a primary objective ofthl;: Basel II capital accord, currently in the process of
review and implementation.) Risk-based capital regulations, if properly designed, require
banks that take more risks to hold more capital. Because equity capital is the most
expensive form of funding, this linkage gives banks an incentive to better measure and
control risks.
Credible receivership provisions for insolvent banks are another method of
enhancing market discipline. Effective market discipline requires that uninsured
investors believe they could lose some, or all, oftheir stake. This belief is especially
important in the case of very large banks, which investors may otherwise perceive to be
too big to fail. Receivership rules that make clear that investors will take losses when a

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bank becomes insolvent should increase the perceived risk ofloss and thus also increase
market discipline.
In the United States, the banking authorities have ensured that, in virtually all
cases, shareholders bear losses when a bank fails. Historically, however, bondholders
and uninsured depositors have at times doubted that regulators would impose significant
losses on them in the event ofa bank's failure. To address this issue, the Congress has
reduced regulators' discretion when dealing with troubled banks. For example, the
requirement for prompt corrective action prohibits regulatory forbearance when a bank's
capital falls to a predetermined level; and the least-cost-resolution requirement compels
regulators to resolve a troubled bank at the lowest cost to the deposit insurance fund.

2

Improving and broadening the requirements for disclosing information are yet
another method of strengthening the invisible hand. For example, the part of the Basel II
capital initiative called Pillar 3 requires banks to release additional information to the
public about their risk-taking. Pillar 3 should thus help investors, creditors, and other
counterparties better assess banks' risk profiles. Transparency about risk has become all
the more important because modem financial assets increasingly entail greatly different
degrees of economic leverage per dollar invested.
When pursuing regulatory objectives through the application of market discipline,
regulators must consider the nature of the incentives faced by different types of
stakeholders in varying circumstances as well as the ways each type of stakeholder
affects the bank's risk-taking. For example, as I mentioned, bank capital usually gives
equity investors an incentive to monitor and control risk. But when a bank falls into
financial distress, its capital may be all but depleted, and its equity investors may thus

-8have little left to lose. Consequently, equity holders may "gamble for resurrection" by
encouraging rather than discouraging excessive risk-taking. Thus, as was evident in the
savings and loan crisis of the 1980s, market discipline by equity holders may break down
when it is most needed.
This example suggests that the mix of instruments a bank uses to raise funds can
matter. For instance, holders of uninsured debt (such as large certificates of deposits or
corporate debt issues) care mostly about the risk of bankruptcy. They don't benefit if the
bank's stock price rises when undue risk-taking pays off. Consequently, they focus on
what bank managers are doing to avoid default. The incentive to monitor risk-taking is
particularly keen for holders of subordinated debt, as they are last in line in the event of
failure. Because debt holders are sensitive to changes in the probability of financial
distress, risk-taking by a bank raises its cost of funding in credit markets, and that
connection creates an incentive for banks to control risks. Moreover, the price of a
bank's debt provides useful infi>rmation about the bank's riskiness. With that
information, the bank's counterparties and supervisors can take steps of their own to
ensure that the bank is operating safely. 3
Hedge Funds
Hedge funds provide a second illustration of how the invisible hand can be used
to support regulatory objectives. Their rapid growth is one of the most important
developments in U.S. financial markets in the past decade or so. Hedge funds vary
widely in their investment strab!gies and in the types of risks they take. Overall,
however, most economists agree that the rise of hedge funds has been a positive
development for investors and for financial markets. They have stimulated an

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- 9extraordinary amount of financial innovation in recent years; and, using many of these
new financial tools, they have greatly enhanced the liquidity, efficiency, and risk-sharing
capabilities of our financial system.
Regulatory oversight of hedge funds is relatively light. Because hedge funds deal
with highly sophisticated counterparties and investors, and because they have no claims
on the federal safety net, the light regulatory touch seems largely justified. However, the
growing market share of hedge funds has raised concerns about possible systemic risk.
The complexity and rapid change inherent in the strategies of many funds make them
relatively opaque to outsiders, and so the concern arises that the collapse of a hedge fund
might come with little warning. In addition, many hedge funds are either highly
leveraged or hold positions in derivatives or other assets that make their net asset
positions very sensitive to changes in asset prices (the functional equivalent of high
leverage). Highly leveraged investors are intrinsically more vulnerable to market shocks,
of course, but leverage also increases the risks to the broader financial system. The
failure of a highly leveraged fund holding large, concentrated positions could involve the
forced liquidation of those positions, possibly at fire-sale prices, thereby imposing heavy
losses on counterparties. In the worst scenarios, these counterparty losses could lead to
further defaults or threaten systemically important institutions. In addition, market
participants that were not creditors or counterparties of the defaulting firm might be
harmed indirectly through changes in asset prices, liquidity strains, and increased market
uncertainty.
As I have noted, the market discipline provided by creditors and investors is
potentially a powerful mechanism for controlling leverage and other aspects of risk-

- 10taking. But market discipline can fail, as is illustrated by one notable case--the hedge
fund Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM), which was at the center of an episode of
severe financial stress in 1998. Perhaps because of the stellar reputations ofLTCM's
principals, banks and broker-dealers provided credit on. generous terms, even though
LTCM took exceptional risks. LTCM's investors and counterparties simply did not ask
the tough questions necessary to understand the risks they were taking. Together with the
admittedly extraordinary market conditions of August 1998, these risk-management
lapses were a major source of the LTCM crisis.
In response to the LTCM episode, the Congress might have imposed a much more
intrusive regulatory regime on private pools of capital. However, doing so would have
been co'stly and technically dif11cult, would have increased moral hazard by relieving
investors and counterparties of the responsibility for monitoring the funds, and likely
would have reduced the social benefits of hedge funds by hampering the ability of their
managers to respond quickly and flexibly to changing market conditions. Instead, the
regulatory approach taken in the United States has followed recommendations set forth in
1998 by the President's Working Group on Financial Markets and recently reaffirmed in
a set of principles by the same group.4
The market-discipline approach to regulating hedge funds imposes responsibilities
on four sets of actors: hedge fund investors, creditors and other counterparties, the
regulatory agencies, and the hedge funds themselves.
In discussing the regulation of commercial banks, I noted that most small retail
investors are ill-equipped to provide effective market discipline because monitoring
complex financial activities demands considerable time, effort, and sophistication. In the

- 11 case of hedge funds, securities laws effectively allow only institutions and high-wealth
individuals to invest in them. These investors generally have the resources and
sophistication, as well as the incentive, to monitor the activities of the hedge funds.
Large investors are not only well equipped to assess the management, strategies,
performance, risk-management practices, and fee structures of individual hedge funds but
they also have the clout to demand the information they need to make their evaluations.
Although regulations limit the direct access of retail investors to hedge funds, small
investors may obtain indirect exposure, through pension funds for example. However,
managers of pension funds and similar institutions generally have a fiduciary duty to their
investors to research and understand their investments and to ensure that their overall risk
profile is appropriate for their clientele. In practice, most pension funds have only a
small exposure to hedge funds.
Counterparties are another important source of market discipline. The principal
counterparties of most hedge funds are large commercial and investment banks, which
provide the funds with credit and a range of other services. As creditors, counterparties
have a clear economic incentive to monitor and perhaps impose limits on hedge funds'
risk-taking, as well as an incentive to protect themselves from large losses should one or
more of their hedge-fund customers fail. Counterparties seek to protect themselves
against large losses through risk management and risk mitigation. Risk management
includes the use of stress tests to estimate potential exposure under adverse market
conditions; risk-mitigation techniques include collateral agreements under which hedge
funds must daily mark to market and fully collateralize their current exposures.