View original document

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

Speech
Vice Chairman Roger W. Ferguson, Jr.

At the Institute of International Finance Spring 2006 Membership Meeting, Zurich,
Switzerland
March 31, 2006

Financial Regulation: Seeking the Middle Way
I am pleased to participate in the panel discussion at this Institute of International Finance Spring
2006 Membership Meeting. As I will make clear, I think meetings of this sort, by contributing to the
dialogue between the leaders of financial institutions and policymakers, can play a critical role in
increasing mutual understanding and improved decisionmaking by both groups. The financial
environment can best be described as "dynamic." Financial innovations have been coming at a rapid
pace in recent years; new financial products have been introduced and are expanding rapidly, and
new institutions have taken on prominent roles in key financial markets. Financial technologies have
improved as well and have the potential to contribute to the efficiency and resilience of financial
markets. However, with new products and institutions comes the potential for new risks to financial
stability. As a result, we policymakers are likely to be torn. On the one hand, we may want to
encourage welfare-improving innovations by limiting the extent of regulation. On the other hand,
because of possible systemic concerns, some policymakers may want to regulate innovative
instruments and institutions even as they are developing. In my view, policymakers can best balance
these goals by expending the effort needed to understand financial innovations as they emerge and
by avoiding overregulation that may stifle valuable innovations.
When I talk about financial innovations, I have in mind several types of developments. A farreaching set of innovations is the development and increasing popularity of products for the transfer
of credit risk. Prominent among such innovations are credit derivatives, asset-backed securities, and
secondary-market trading of syndicated loans. Another important development has been the rapid
growth of the hedge fund industry and its expanded role in the financial system. On the retail side,
we have seen a proliferation of new lending products in the United States, including home-equity
lines of credit, interest-only and even negative-amortization mortgages, and subprime mortgages
and consumer loans.
Today, I will discuss briefly the potential benefits and drawbacks associated with new products and
institutions and spend most of my remarks on a middle way that regulators might pursue as these
new products and institutions emerge.
Benefits and Drawbacks
Financial innovations hold the promise of improved efficiency and increased overall economic
welfare. For example, new products and markets can open the door to new investment opportunities
for a variety of market participants. And improved risk-measurement and risk-management
technologies can contribute to an improved allocation of risk as risk is shifted to those more willing
and able to bear it.
Financial innovations also have the potential to boost financial stability. Risk-transfer mechanisms
can not only better allocate risk but also reduce its concentration. Improved efficiencies and
increased competition may result in substantially lower trading costs and may consequently improve
liquidity in many markets. Better liquidity, which is instrumental to faster and more accurate price
discovery and therefore to more-informative prices, can also be brought about by an increased
presence of new institutions in new or existing markets. The entry of those new institutions into new

markets can, so long as the institutions prove resilient, increase the availability of funds to
borrowers in times of stress and may thus reduce the likelihood of credit crunches.
Although financial innovations have the capacity to improve economic welfare overall, it is natural
for policymakers to worry that innovations may have unexpected and undesirable side effects and
may even represent new sources of systemic risk. For example, policymakers may be concerned
about unexpected price dynamics or problems in infrastructure or operations. Market participants
estimate how prices and investment flows are likely to behave for new instruments, but their
understanding becomes more detailed and more accurate only as behavior under a variety of
economic conditions is observed, and the development of that understanding obviously takes time.
Under turbulent conditions, or when new information causes market participants to question their
own investment strategies, their behavior may change rapidly, leading to rapid price changes that
may seem outsized relative to changes in economic fundamentals. That was briefly the case recently
in the market for synthetic collateralized debt obligations. Market participants did not anticipate the
sharp decline in implied default correlations that followed the downgrades of Ford and General
Motors debt. Prices moved quite a bit for a short time as portfolios were rebalanced, but spillovers
to other markets were limited, and market volatility subsequently eased.
Problems with the infrastructure or operations that support an innovation--including the underlying
legal documentation and accounting--are also likely to be revealed only over time, as exemplified by
the technical difficulties with restructuring clauses in credit default swaps that became apparent a
few years ago. In that case, default events and related payoffs sometimes did not occur as expected,
and so actual exposures differed from those investors had intended. The result was a change in the
value of existing contracts and a period of market adjustment as new restructuring clauses were
developed and implemented.
Of course, we should not want to prevent rapid price changes or changes in investment flows, as
such changes may be appropriate as new information about fundamentals emerges. And the
occurrence of glitches in new markets and institutions need not reflect policy failures or provide
evidence that an innovation is undesirable. Preventing all such occurrences would probably require
us to stop all innovation. But neither is it desirable that growing pains in one market or at a few
institutions spill over so strongly that the financial system as a whole could be destabilized.
A Middle Way in Regulation
Policymakers have a range of strategies available for dealing with innovation. At one extreme, in
theory we could take a completely hands-off approach, allowing new financial markets and
instruments to develop without restrictions and indeed without any scrutiny, trusting private market
participants to do everything necessary for stability and efficiency. At the other extreme,
policymakers theoretically might be quite heavy-handed, either imposing regulations on virtually
every market and instrument to stop any innovations that, in their judgment, could cause harm or,
conversely, actively fostering or subsidizing innovations seen as desirable.
Obviously, these are extreme positions, and I do not know of any practicing policymaker who
seriously wants to pursue either extreme course. Today I wish to argue for a middle ground in which
markets are allowed to work and develop and in which policymakers work hard to understand new
developments and to help market participants see the need for improvements where appropriate. In
my view, regulations should be imposed only when market participants do not have the incentive or
the capability to effectively manage the risks created by financial innovation. For example, explicit
or implicit subsidies of some institutions could limit market discipline of their risk-taking, leading to
a concentration of risk so large that even the most sophisticated institutions would find it next to
impossible to manage the risk under stressful circumstances. Or policymakers may be concerned
that some potential parties to innovative contracts, especially in the retail arena, are insufficiently
knowledgeable to understand or manage the associated risks. I believe such instances are rare.
Making a case for early regulatory intervention is particularly difficult when the private parties
involved in an innovation are sophisticated because, in many cases, they will be the first to
recognize possible problems and will have strong incentives to fix them and also to protect
themselves against fraud or unfair dealing.

So how should policymakers proceed down this middle path? First of all, we need to learn--we need
to understand and evaluate the innovations that are taking place in financial markets. This process
should include information sharing with other authorities, including those in other nations, in order
to benefit from the experiences in other markets and regions. The resulting improved understanding
is often enough to prepare policymakers to deal with any breakdowns that do occur and to avoid
having the breakdowns turn into systemic problems. The U.S. response to the century date change is
an example from a different context that fits into this category. In that case, policymakers worked
hard to understand the complex practical issues and to share that knowledge with financial firms.
Those firms independently evaluated the risks they faced and took appropriate action to manage
them effectively.
Improved understanding may also ease concerns about potential risks. For example, in light of the
effects of financial consolidation on the number of firms acting as dealers in the market for dollar
interest rate options, the Federal Reserve became concerned about possible risks to the functioning
of that market. These concerns included questions about the adequacy of risk management at the
remaining dealers and about the possible effects that problems at one of those dealers could have on
its counterparties and market liquidity. However, further investigation by Federal Reserve staff
suggested that market participants were generally managing their market and counterparty risks
effectively and that those hedging risk in the options market would not unduly suffer from a
temporary disruption in liquidity. Our wariness about concentration in this market has not
disappeared as a result of our improved understanding, but it has diminished. In general, improved
knowledge about financial innovations may prevent the imposition of unwarranted restrictions and
is surely a precursor to intelligent regulation in the event it is warranted.
A second step for policymakers walking the middle path should be to ensure that market participants
have the proper incentives and the information they need to protect themselves from any problems
related to new products, markets, or institutions; by so doing, policymakers can perhaps mitigate
those problems. Policymakers should insist that regulated firms effectively manage the risks
associated with new activities and markets, thereby fostering effective market discipline of risktaking, including risk-taking by unregulated firms. Such an insistence generally does not require
new regulation but rather is an application of existing regulation in a potentially new context. One of
the lessons of the difficulties at Long-Term Capital Management (LTCM) was that the hedge fund
had been able to achieve very high levels of leverage because some regulated counterparties had not
appropriately managed their counterparty risk exposures. Subsequently, both banks and supervisors
had to reassess what such management entailed. Clearly, supervisors should strongly encourage
institutions to know their risk posture and to be able to control it and react appropriately as
circumstances change. Policymakers should insist on similarly high risk-management standards for
regulated financial institutions that provide retail products. As a case in point, bank supervisors in
the United States recently issued guidance about the management of risks related to home-equity
lines of credit. This guidance did not involve new regulation of these instruments but rather
reminded institutions offering such products that they have an obligation to manage the resulting
risks appropriately.
A pervasive lack of awareness about the risks embedded in new financial products certainly
increases the likelihood that users of those products may face difficulties and that those difficulties
may become systemic. One way policymakers can help prevent this possibility from happening is by
supporting increased transparency and disclosure. Although counterparties in wholesale markets
should generally be expected to demand and obtain the information they need to evaluate their risks,
policymakers can no doubt help establish high standards. In the case of retail transactions, support
for efforts to foster the basic financial literacy of households is a useful complement to efforts to
promote appropriate disclosure. The more consumers are equipped to interpret disclosures, the more
effective those disclosures are likely to be.
A third feature of the moderate approach I am trying to chart is an active dialogue between
policymakers and market participants. In my view, policymakers should serve as a voice for the
development of infrastructure and sensible standards and practices. Ideally such steps would be
taken by market participants of their own volition, but sometimes informal interventions by

policymakers can help foster cooperative efforts by market participants. For example, partly in
reaction to the report of the second Counterparty Risk Management Policy Group, the Federal
Reserve Bank of New York recently hosted a meeting with representatives of major participants in
the credit default swap market, as well as with their domestic and international supervisors, to
discuss a range of issues, including market practices with regard to assignments of trades and
operational issues associated with confirmation backlogs. The result was an industry commitment to
take concrete steps to address issues of concern.
A fourth dimension of my proposed middle path is the ongoing monitoring of key markets and
institutions. Policymakers should be aware of any emerging stresses in the financial system,
including those related to new instruments and institutions. Indeed, some central banks have created
"financial stability" staff groups to oversee such monitoring and, in some cases, to publish regular
financial stability reports. In the event that such monitoring suggests that the operations of some
institutions or markets are under significant strain and, importantly, that the resulting pressures on
businesses and households could have a material adverse effect on the real economy, the central
bank may want to respond by adjusting the stance of monetary policy.
Finally, financial innovations may on occasion warrant new regulations because financial
institutions either cannot or will not manage the associated risks appropriately. Indeed, regulation
should be seen as part of the broader "infrastructure" that supports both financial stability and
innovation, and like other more traditional infrastructure, regulatory regimes have to keep up. For
example, developments in financial markets and advances in the ability of banks to measure and
manage their risks have increasingly made the existing capital regulation of the largest banks, the
1988 Basel Accord, look antiquated. Basel II is a more flexible framework than Basel I and is
intended to better permit capital regulation to keep up with financial market innovations in the
future.
To conclude, I wish to emphasize that policymakers should have a bias toward trusting financial
markets to manage the introduction of new products and the development of new institutions
smoothly and without undue stress to the financial system. However, we cannot take such an
outcome for granted: Financial firms may not consider the effects of their decisions on the stability
of other firms or on the broader financial markets, and some may lack the incentives and ability to
learn about and manage the risks induced by financial innovations. In such cases, policymakers may
need to work with markets and their participants, and on occasion regulate them, to achieve the
desired outcomes. However, policymakers should, wherever possible, avoid premature regulation
that could stifle innovation. I would note that a significant number of substantial shocks to financial
markets have occurred in recent years--including, for example, the difficulties at Long-Term Capital
Management and the unexpected and massive fraud at some high-profile companies--and yet the
broader effects on the real economy have ultimately been quite small. Our financial markets are
flexible and resilient, and they can absorb shocks surprisingly well. As a result, most risks caused by
new developments in financial markets should be manageable without heavy-handed regulation.
This meeting is a good example of what my middle course suggests we should be doing: working
hard to understand innovations and their possible implications. Alertness and knowledge on the part
of policymakers would go a long way toward ensuring that our positive recent track record will
carry on amid what I am sure will continue to be a rapidly changing financial landscape.
Return to top