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
6:40 p.m. EDT
March 18, 2010

Toward an Effective Resolution Regime for Large Financial Institutions

Remarks by
Daniel K. Tarullo
Member
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
Symposium on Building the Financial System of the 21st Century:
An Agenda for Europe and the United States
Armonk, New York

March 18, 2010

Two years ago this week, Bear Stearns succumbed to severe liquidity stress. It
was rescued, and eventually absorbed by JPMorgan Chase, with financing assistance
provided by the Federal Reserve. Although it would take another six months before the
accumulating stress and uncertainty posed an immediate threat to nearly all of our major
financial institutions, it is clear in retrospect that this arranged marriage, and its
accompanying dowry of government financing, set off an expansion of the universe of
firms perceived as too big to fail.
During the financial crisis, government authorities in the United States and
elsewhere believed they had only two realistic options in the face of serious distress at a
large financial firm. First, they could try to contain systemic risk by stabilizing the firm
through capital injections, extraordinary liquidity assistance, a subsidized acquisition by a
less vulnerable firm, or some combination of these supports. Second, they could allow
the firm to fail and enter generally applicable bankruptcy processes, risking in those times
of fear and uncertainty a run on similarly situated firms.
The Bear Stearns deal was an example of the first policy option. Lehman
Brothers was an example of the second. When its bankruptcy set off a firestorm in the
exceedingly dry tinder of financial markets in the fall of 2008, the U.S. government
decided that further failures of large, interconnected financial institutions risked bringing
down the entire financial system. It responded to the situation with the Troubled Asset
Relief Program to provide capital, and the Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program to
extend debt guarantees, to large financial firms.
Indeed, faced with the possibility of a cascading financial crisis, most
governments around the world selected the bailout option in most cases. But if the costs

-2of this approach are less dramatic during a crisis, they are no less significant afterward.
Entrenching too-big-to-fail status obviously risks imposing significant costs on the
taxpayer. It undermines market discipline, competitive equality among financial
institutions of different sizes, and normal regulatory and supervisory expectations.
The desirability of a third alternative to the Hobson’s choice of bailout or
disorderly bankruptcy is obvious--hence the prominence during the regulatory reform
debate of proposals for a special resolution process that would allow the government to
wind down a systemically important firm in an orderly way while still imposing losses on
shareholders and creditors. The crisis has also focused attention on the special problems
created by the failure of a large, internationally active financial firm. In my remarks I
will elaborate on the relationship between resolution regimes and an effective overall
system of financial regulation and supervision, both in the international and domestic
spheres.1
At the risk of some oversimplification, I would state that relationship as follows:
First, an effective domestic resolution process is a necessary complement to supervision
that would bring more market discipline into the decisionmaking of large financial firms,
their counterparties, and investors. At the same time, even a well-designed resolution
mechanism is no substitute for reformed regulatory rules and strengthened supervisory
oversight.
Second, the high legal and political hurdles to harmonized cross-border resolution
processes suggest that, for the foreseeable future, the effectiveness of those processes will
largely depend on supervisory requirements and cooperation undertaken before distress
appears on the horizon. I would further suggest that the importance of proposed
1

The views expressed are my own and not necessarily those of other members of the Board of Governors.

-3requirements that each large financial firm produce a so-called living will is that this
device could better tie the supervisory and resolution processes together.
A Resolution Regime for Large, Interconnected Firms
As compelling as the case for such a process is, the debate around resolution
proposals has highlighted the challenge of crafting a workable resolution regime for
large, interconnected firms. The basic design problem is that such a regime must advance
the goals of both financial stability and market discipline. While these goals are usually
complementary, they can at times be competing--especially in periods of high financial
stress, when time consistency problems can loom large. In the midst of a crisis,
governments fearful of financial upheaval can be tempted to provide assistance to
supposedly uninsured creditors, even at the cost of increasing moral hazard in the postcrisis period. Despite the consequent design difficulties, I think there are certain essential
features of any special resolution process.
First, any new regime should be used only in those rare circumstances where a
firm’s failure would have serious adverse effects on financial stability. That is, the
presumption should be that generally applicable bankruptcy law applies to nonbank
financial firms--even large, interconnected ones. One way to help ensure that the regime
is invoked only when necessary to protect the public’s interest in systemic stability is to
use a “multi-key” approach--that is, one that requires the approval of multiple agencies
and a determination by each that the high standards governing the use of the special
regime have been met.
Second, once invoked, the government should have broad authority to wind down
the company in an orderly way. This authority should include--among other things--

-4selling assets, liabilities, or business units of the firm; transferring the systemically
significant or viable operations of the firm to a new bridge entity that can continue these
operations; and repudiating burdensome contracts of the firm, subject to appropriate
compensation.
Third, there should be a clear expectation that the shareholders and creditors of
the failing firm will bear losses to the fullest extent consistent with preserving financial
stability. Shareholders of the firm ultimately are responsible for the organization’s
management (or, more likely, mismanagement) and are supposed to be in a first-loss
position upon failure of the firm. Shareholders, therefore, should pay the price for the
firm’s failure and should not benefit from a government-managed resolution process.
To promote market discipline on the part of the creditors of large, interconnected
firms, unsecured creditors of the firms must also bear losses. Here is where the potential
conflict of policy goals is obvious. While losses imposed on creditors will increase
market discipline in the longer term, the immediate effect could be to provoke a run on
other firms with broadly similar positions or business strategies. Thus the extent of these
losses and the manner in which they are applied may need to depend on the facts of the
individual case. At the very least, however, subordinated debt, or other financial interests
that can qualify as regulatory capital, should be fully exposed to losses.
Fourth, the ultimate cost of any government assistance provided in the course of
the resolution process to prevent severe disruptions to the financial system should be
borne by the firm or the financial services industry, not by taxpayers. The scope of
financial institutions assessed for these purposes should be appropriately broad, reflecting
that a wide range of financial institutions likely would benefit, directly or indirectly, from

-5actions that avoid or mitigate threats to financial stability. However, because the largest
and most interconnected firms likely would benefit the most, it seems appropriate that
these firms should bear a proportionally larger share of any costs that cannot be recouped
from the failing firm itself. To avoid pro-cyclical effects, such assessments should be
collected over time
Establishing a resolution regime with these characteristics is, I would suggest, one
of the most important financial regulatory reforms for every country that does not already
have such a mechanism in place. It would lend substance to the idea that market
discipline can be a solid third pillar of financial regulation, along with stronger prudential
requirements and improved supervisory oversight. Still, as is implicit in the foregoing
discussion, an untested regime will probably not acquire complete credibility until it is
actually applied successfully. For this reason, among others, it is important to ensure that
other regulatory tools will help compensate for the uncertainties associated with an
essentially untested mechanism.
International Efforts on Resolution Issues
The looming or actual failure of a large, internationally active financial firm
inevitably complicates the already challenging process of resolution. Mismatches in the
amounts and maturities of assets and liabilities held by the firm in the various countries in
which it operates can lead host governments to take special action to protect the interests
of depositors and creditors. And different insolvency regimes apply to separately
incorporated subsidiaries across the world. Some of those regimes may be substantively
inconsistent with one another, or may not account for the special characteristics of a large
international firm.

-6A natural response, which one can find peppered through various law journals
over the years, is to propose an international treaty that would establish and harmonize
appropriate insolvency regimes throughout the world. Just to state the proposition is to
see the enormous hurdles to its realization. The task of harmonizing divergent legal
regimes, and reconciling the principles underlying many of these regimes, would be
challenge enough. But an effective international regime would also likely require
agreement on how to share the losses and possible special assistance associated with a
global firm’s insolvency.
Despite the good and thorough work being undertaken in both the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision (Basel Committee) and the Financial Stability Board,
we must acknowledge that satisfyingly clean and comprehensive solutions to the
international difficulties occasioned by such insolvencies are not within sight.2 It would
certainly be useful if jurisdictions could at least broadly synchronize both standard
bankruptcy and any special resolution procedures applicable to a failing financial firm.
But even this significant advance would not settle many of the nettlesome problems
raised by a cross-border insolvency.
It thus seems reasonably clear that effective management of these problems will,
at least for the foreseeable future, require regulatory coordination and supervisory
cooperation before a large firm’s failure becomes a real possibility. In one sense, this
2

See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Cross-Border Bank Resolution Group (2009), Report and
Recommendations of the Cross-Border Bank Resolution Group (Basel, Switzerland: Basel Committee,
September), available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs162.pdf?noframes=1; and Financial Stability Forum
(2009), FSF Principles for Cross-Border Cooperation on Crisis Management (Basel, Switzerland: FSF,
April), available at www.financialstabilityboard.org/publications/r_0904c.pdf. (The Financial Stability
Forum subsequently was renamed the Financial Stability Board.) The Basel Committee's Cross-border
Resolution Group released its report and recommendations today, and the FSB will present a final report
and recommendations to the G-20 in October.

-7observation reinforces the importance of the international agenda for strengthening
capital and liquidity standards. It also counsels continued attention to efforts to ensure
that globally active institutions are subject to effective consolidated supervision, and that
information-sharing arrangements among home and host country supervisors are well
designed and implemented. To this end, the key supervisors and central banks for each
of the largest global banks will begin to meet regularly to discuss crisis planning, with
particular attention to contingency liquidity planning.
The crisis demonstrated that issues around cross-border liquidity support are
difficult. Liquidity pressures may arise in unexpected places, time for coordination will
be short, and failures in one jurisdiction likely will spread quickly to other jurisdictions.
The Basel Committee and the Committee of European Banking Supervisors are each
working on definitions of liquid assets, common stress-testing metrics, and structural
balance sheet measures. We are actively discussing the appropriate division of
responsibility between home and host authorities to provide liquidity support and the
related issue of how to approach cross-border branch operations. Some have called into
question the traditional assumption that home country authorities will be willing and able
to support all of the worldwide operations of a banking group headquartered in its
jurisdiction. It is not clear what approach might work better, but there is an obvious need
for broad international consistency and careful calibration with other prudential
requirements.
One of the key issues identified by the Basel Committee’s Cross-Border Bank
Resolution Group is the complexity and interconnectedness of the largest organizations.
Often the complexity is motivated by tax or regulatory factors, rather than a clear

-8business purpose. Given the way these firms are structured and their linkages to key
systems and other institutions, resolution of such an organization will carry significant
risk of spillovers to other key markets, payments systems, or systemically important
institutions. The Cross-Border Bank Resolution Group consequently recommended
developing initiatives that would result in simpler, less interconnected organizational
structures.
Living Wills
This point leads us to one much-discussed idea, that of firm-specific resolution
plans--sometimes referred to more colorfully, though not wholly accurately, as living
wills. This proposal provides a good opportunity to advance the aim of linking resolution
mechanisms to other regulatory tools, both domestically and internationally.
In one variant of the idea, each internationally active bank would be required to
develop, and potentially to execute, its own resolution plan--literally, to plan for its own
demise. Such a requirement could doubtless be helpful to some degree, but it has notable
limitations.
Most obviously, it is very difficult to predict in advance of a crisis which parts of
the firm will be under greatest stress, what geographical regions may be affected most
severely, and what the condition in various markets and economies will be, as well as the
stability of counterparties and similarly situated institutions. Furthermore, governments
may be understandably reluctant to rely too much upon a wind-down plan developed by
an internationally active financial firm that so mismanaged itself that it is on the brink of
failure, placing other institutions at peril. Finally, management of an institution can be
expected to seek to preserve as much value for shareholders as possible in its planning,

-9whereas the supervisors’ objective in a crisis is to achieve an orderly resolution, which
will often entail winding down or restructuring the insolvent firm in ways that effectively
wipe out shareholder interests.
The living will requirement could be broadened so as to make it into a potentially
very useful supervisory tool for healthy firms, as well as a resource in the event that
resolution became necessary. Under this approach, the firm would, in addition to
developing a resolution plan, be required to draw up a contingency plan to rescue itself
short of failure, identify obstacles to an orderly resolution, and show it can quickly
produce the information needed for the supervisor to orchestrate an orderly resolution
should the need arise. These plans will need to evolve as the organization’s business and
economic conditions evolve, and accordingly, the plans will need to become a regular
part of normal supervisory processes.
A living will of this type could remove some of the uncertainty around a possible
resolution. It would force firms and their supervisors to review contingency plans
regularly. As part of their ongoing oversight, supervisors could target the areas where a
firm’s planning falls short of best practices. Focusing on the legal, contractual, and
business relationships among the firm’s subsidiaries could yield significant benefits for
prudential supervision in normal, as well as stressed, times. The various elements of the
regulatory system could thus be better integrated by identifying mechanisms and
connections for the transmission of risk and liability between affiliates and by identifying
relationships that may present an obstacle to the ready sales of businesses, the proceeds
from which might allow the firm to avoid failure.

- 10 Central to the success of a living will as a supervisory tool is the quality of
information it would make available in a crisis. Some of the information would be
relatively static. A firm would have to inventory all of its legal entities, along with the
legal regimes applicable to each one, and map its business lines into legal entities. A firm
also would have to document interaffiliate guarantees, funding, hedging, and provision of
information technology and other key services. This information would be needed to
deal with any crisis, no matter what its specific form.
Once the centrality of accurate, comprehensive information is understood, it
becomes apparent that a very significant upgrade of management information systems
(MIS) may be the only way for the firm to satisfy living will requirements, just as we at
the Federal Reserve found when we led the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program-popularly known as the bank stress tests--that improved MIS are needed for ongoing risk
management at the institution.
Supervisory demands for improved MIS could have another benefit. Just as a
homeowner has an incentive to shed belongings to reduce the expense of moving, so a
financial firm may have a powerful incentive to simplify its organizational structure and
rationalize relationships among its corporate entities to reduce the cost of developing
comprehensive MIS that enable an organization to retrieve information in multiple
formats across jurisdictions, business lines, and legal entities. Simpler structures can also
be encouraged by reemphasizing existing supervisory guidance requiring banking
organizations to measure and manage their risks not only on the global, consolidated
level, but also on a legal entity basis. Together, the information requirements of living
wills and the need to measure and manage risks at the legal entity level can help create

- 11 the right incentives for firms to simplify their structures without necessarily requiring a
supervisor to delve into the details of a banking group’s structure.
Conclusion
All of this work on resolution, both domestic and international, is important and
necessary. But we must be realistic about what it can accomplish. In light of what has
happened over the past two years, it is imperative that governments convince markets that
they can and will put large financial firms into a resolution process rather than bail out its
creditors and shareholders. Yet no one can guarantee that future resolutions of
systemically important firms will proceed smoothly or predictably. Resolution
mechanisms must be understood not as silver bullets, but as critical pieces of a broader
agenda directed at systemic risk and the too-big-to-fail problem.