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Remarks by
Thomas M. Hoenig, Director,
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Financial Oversight: It’s Time to Improve Outcomes
to the
AICPA/SIFMA FSA National Conference
New York, NY
November 30, 2012
Introduction

Many remain skeptical of claims that the financial system has been reformed and that
taxpayer bailouts are relics of the past. Such skepticism is understandable. For nearly a
century, the public has been told repeatedly that stronger regulations and supervision,
greater market discipline, and enforced resolution will ensure that financial crises will be
less likely, and, should they occur, will be handled effectively.
Despite these assurances, the public remains at risk of having to pick up the pieces
when the next financial setback occurs. The safety net continues to expand to cover
activities and enterprises it was not intended to protect, resulting in subsidized risk
taking by the largest financial firms and fueling their leverage. At the same time, the
tolerance for leverage remains essentially unchanged, leaving us in a situation that is
little different than before the recent crisis. We can be confident that as time passes, this
leverage again will be a problem and the public again will be left holding the bag.
To change this outcome, we must change the framework and related incentives.
Defining the Problem
The structure of the system, the rules of the game, and the methods of accountability
are all keys to the success or failure of any market system. They determine incentives
and, of course, performance outcomes. As you would expect following this most recent
crisis, various commissions attempted to sort out what went wrong and offered
remedies to prevent such a crisis from recurring.
But for all this effort, incentives around risk remain mostly unchanged and leave the
industry vulnerable to excesses. While there are no perfect solutions, there are actions
that, taken together, can more effectively improve outcomes.
First, we must change the structure of the industry to ensure that the coverage of the
safety net is narrowed to where it is needed, and stop the extension of its subsidy to an
ever-greater number of firms and activities.
Second, we must simplify and strengthen capital standards to contain the impulse for
excessive leverage and to provide a more useful backstop to absorb unexpected
losses.

Third, we must reestablish a more rigorous examination program for the largest banks
and bank holding companies to best understand the risk profile of both individual firms
and financial markets.
Narrowing the Safety Net
Commercial banking in the United States has been protected for decades by a public
safety net of central bank lending, deposit insurance and, more recently, direct
government support. This has been done because commercial banks are thought
essential to a well-functioning economy. Their operations involve providing payment
services, taking short-term deposits, and making loans. In other words, conducting
activities that intermediate the flow of credit from savers to borrowers, transforming
short-term deposits into longer-term loans. This funding arrangement requires that the
public and business have confidence that they can access their money on demand. The
safety net helps provide that assurance.
The intended purpose of this government support is well understood. However, less
understood is its unintended consequence: providing banks a subsidy in raising funds.
As a result, they are less subject to economic or market forces, and their funding costs
are less than that of firms outside the safety net. This subsidy, in turn, creates
incentives to leverage their balance sheets and take on greater asset risk.
In the United States, this financial subsidy was greatly expanded in 1999 with the
enactment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB), which eliminated prohibitions that kept
banks from affiliating with broker-dealer and securities firms. By allowing such cross
ownership, the safety net and, therefore, its subsidy was expanded to more and everlarger financial firms, conducting ever more complex and risk-oriented activities.
Subsidies are valuable, and once given are hard to take away and once expanded are
hard to restrict.
Despite repeated assurances following GLB that no firm would be too big to fail, the
actions of governments have only confirmed that some firms -- the largest or most
complex -- are simply too systemically important to be allowed to fail. Under such
circumstances, market discipline breaks down since creditors are confident that they will
be bailed out regardless of what the bank does. The deposit subsidy and the lack of
market discipline from the consequences of failure create an incentive to take on
excessive risk.
Narrowing the safety net, limiting its coverage, and realigning incentives, therefore,
must be among the highest priorities following this recent crisis. Governments would be
wise to limit commercial banking activities to primarily those for which the safety net’s
protection was intended: stabilizing the payments system and the intermediation
process between short-term lenders and long-term borrowers. That is, it should be
confined to protecting our economic infrastructure.1

Trading activities do not intermediate credit. They reallocate assets and existing
securities and derivatives among market participants. When they are placed within the
safety net, they create incentives toward greater risk-taking and cause enormous
financial distortions. Protected and subsidized by the safety net, complex firms can
cover their trading positions by using insured deposits or central bank credit that comes
with the commercial bank charter. Non-commercial bank trading firms have no such
access and no such staying power. The safety net provides the complex organizations
an enormously unfair competitive advantage. Thus, while such activities are important
to the success of an economy, there is no legitimate reason to subsidize them with
access to the safety net.
The mixing of commercial banking and trading activities also changes incentives and
behavior within the firm. Commercial banking works within a culture of win-win, where
the interests and incentives of banks and their customers are aligned. If a customer is
successful, the payoff to the bank means success as well. In contrast, trading is an
adversarial win-lose proposition because the trader’s gains are the counterparty’s
losses -- and oftentimes the counterparty is the customer. Trading focuses on the shortterm, not on longer-term relationship banking. Culture matters, and as we have seen in
recent years, the mixing of banking and trading tends to drive organizations to make
short-term return choices.
It is sometimes suggested that had broker-dealer and trading activity been separated
from commercial banking, the recent financial crisis would have been just as severe.
Lehman Brothers was not a commercial bank, and yet it brought the world to its knees.
However, following GLB, just as commercial banks enjoyed the special benefit of the
safety-net subsidy, firms like Lehman enjoyed the benefits from the special treatment
given to money market funds and overnight repos to fund their activities. They were
essentially operating as commercial banks and enjoying an implied subsidy very similar
to that of commercial banks. Thus, a fundamental change needed to encourage greater
accountability and stability is to correct the rules giving special treatment to money
market funds and repos, thereby ending their treatment as deposits.
Market discipline works best when stockholders and creditors understand they are at
risk and when the safety net is narrowly applied to the infrastructure for which it was
intended.
Capital and Bank Safety
Capital is fundamental to any industry’s success, both as a source of funding and as a
cushion against unforeseen events. This is especially the case for financial firms, as
they are, by design, highly leveraged. But what is the right amount of capital, and how
should it be measured and enforced to assure a more stable financial environment?
Basel standards have for more than two decades been the focal point of discussion in
defining adequate capital for the financial industry. A new version of Basel standards is
out for comment as supervisors struggle to find a system that properly defines capital,

appropriately allocates it against risk, and results in a more stable financial system.
However, the Basel proposal remains extremely complex and opaque as it attempts to
anticipate every contingency and to assign risk weights to every conceivable asset that
an institution might place on or off its balance sheet. The unfortunate consequence is
ineffective capital regulation due to confusion, uncertainty about the quality of the
balance sheet, and added costs imposed on a firm’s capital program.
Past attempts at defining the correct amount and distribution of capital have uniformly
failed. For example, in 2007 as the financial crisis was just emerging, Basel’s measure
of total capital to risk-weighted assets for the10 largest U.S. financial firms was
approximately 11 percent -- a very impressive level of capital. But the ratio, using the
more conservative tangible-equity-to-tangible-assets measure, was a mere 2.8
percent2. Had this been the primary capital measure in 2007, it is likely that far more
questions would have been asked about the soundness of the industry, resulting in a
less severe banking crisis and recession.
Today, this same tangible-equity measure for the largest U.S. banks, while double the
2.8 percent number, remains far below what history tells us is an acceptable marketdetermined capital level. We should learn from past experience and turn our attention
from using a capital rule that gives what in the end is a false sense of security to one
that is effective because of its simplicity, clarity, and enforceability. Before the safety net
was in place in the United States, the market demanded that banks on average hold
between 13 and 16 percent tangible equity to tangible assets -- a far cry from the 2.8
percent held by these largest firms in 2007 or the 6 percent they hold today.
Therefore, as an alternative to the unmanageably complex Basel risk-weighted
standards, the emphasis should be shifted to a tangible-equity-to-tangible-asset ratio, of
say 10 percent. With this simple but stronger capital base, bank management could
then allocate resources in a manner that balances the drive for return on equity with the
discipline of greater amounts of tangible equity. Moreover, global supervisors would
have a clear benchmark to test against and enforce a minimum level. Behind this
tangible measure we could use a simplified risk-weighted measure as a check against
excessive off-balance sheet assets or other factors that might influence firms’ safety.
Some argue that a high minimum would be too much capital, and would impede credit
growth and eventually economic growth. However, this level of capital remains well
below what the market would most likely require without the safety net and its subsidy.
Recall that because so little tangible capital was available to absorb loss when the last
crisis emerged, the industry had to resort to a violent shedding of assets and
downsizing of balance sheets as it grasped to maintain even modest capital ratios. The
effect of too little capital was far more harmful in the end than the effect of a strong
capital framework.
Finally, it should be noted that except for the very largest U.S. commercial banks, most
banks are currently near this minimum level for tangible equity. For example, while the
tangible equity capital to tangible assets for the 10 largest bank holding companies in

the U.S. is 6.1 percent, for the top 10 regional banks with less than $100 billion in
assets, it is 9 percent. This ratio for the 10 largest banks with less than $50 billion in
assets is 9.4 percent, and for the top 10 community banks with less than $1 billion in
assets it is 8.3 percent.
Only the largest, most complex banks are too big to fail as evidenced by the capital
numbers presented here. When the public and the market are at risk, they demand
more -- not less -- capital.
Bank Examinations and Financial Stability
Relying on a single tangible measure as a minimum capital standard begs the question
of whether it will assure an adequate capital level for the industry. In other words, under
a straight leverage ratio, would banks load their balance sheet with the most risky
assets because all assets are weighted equally?
First, such a question fails to recognize that a system that underweights high-risk assets
and overweights low-risk assets is even more dangerous. This has been the experience
with the Basel system going back almost to its start. Also, a minimum tangible-equity-totangible-asset ratio, of 10 percent for example, would bring more tangible capital to the
balance sheet than current Basel III calculations.
Second, we need to remember that Basel has three pillars: capital, market discipline,
and an effective bank supervision program. Effective bank supervision requires that
authorities systematically examine a bank and assess its asset quality, liquidity,
operations, and risk controls, judging its risk profile and whether it is well managed.
Done properly, therefore, the best way to judge a firm’s risk profile is through the audit
and examination process.
If, following an exam, a bank is judged to carry a higher risk profile, then the minimum
capital, it should be judged inadequate for the risk and capital required. Moreover, in
this instance the bank’s dividend and capital redemption programs would be curtailed
until the adjusted minimum is achieved. For example, a 10 percent minimum tangible
capital ratio would be adequate for a 1-rated bank, while a bank whose risk profile is 2
rated might require a higher ratio, say 11 percent, and similarly a 3 rating might require
say 13 percent. A bank rated more poorly would be under a specific supervisory action.
Such an approach would most affect the largest banks where full-scope examinations
have been de-emphasized in favor of targeted reviews, financial statement monitoring,
model validations, and, more recently, the use of stress tests. These activities can be
useful, but they are limited in scope and have been adopted because the largest firms
are judged simply too large and complex for full scope examinations. However, full
exams are doable. Statisticians, for example, have long been designing sampling
methodologies for auditing and examining large bank asset portfolios and other
operations, providing reliable estimates of their condition, and at an affordable cost.

And finally, commissioned examiners as a rule are highly skilled professionals, able to
effectively assess bank risk and to do so in a more thorough manner than a static riskweighted program. Their success, however, is tied not only to their skills but, as always,
to the leadership of the supervisory agency. The examination process, effectively
conducted and effectively led, holds the best potential to identify firm-specific risks and
adjust capital levels as needed. In the end, an industry with strong individual firms is a
strong industry.
Conclusion
The remarks and suggestions outlined here are not new. We have long been aware of
the destabilizing effects of broadening the coverage of the financial safety net to an
ever-expanding list of activities. There is a long history of the danger of confusing strong
capital with complex capital rules, and of confusing strong supervision with monitoring
instead of full examinations.
We would be wise to think beyond added rules to fundamental change. We must narrow
the safety net and confine it to the payments system, deposit taking, and the related
intermediation of deposits to loans. We must simplify and strengthen the capital
standards and then subject all banks to the same standard of measurement and
performance. And finally, we must reintroduce meaningful examination programs for the
largest firms. These steps, taken together, would do much to assure greater stability for
our financial system.

1Director Hoenig's proposal to limit financial activities supported by the public safety net
can be found at http://www.fdic.gov/about/learn/board/Restructuring-the-BankingSystem-05-24-11.pdf.
2The measure of tangible equity and tangible assets used here differs from the GAAP
measures (which exclude intangible assets such as goodwill) by also excluding deferred
tax assets. Deferred tax assets are excluded because they are not available for paying
off creditors when a bank fails; that is, they are “going concern” assets but not "gone
concern" assets.

Last Updated 04/17/2013