https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/07/the-fund-created-to-unwind-a-failing-megabank-has-a-problem-theres-no-money-in-it/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: July 9, 2024 ~

Taming the Megabanks, Book JacketLast week the American Banker published an
opinion article by Arthur E. Wilmarth, Jr., the Professor Emeritus of Law
at George Washington University. Wilmarth is the man who wrote the seminal
book on the continuing threat to financial stability posed by U.S.
megabanks – the same ones that blew up Wall Street and the U.S. economy in
2008.

The title of Wilmarth’s article (paywall) is: “The FDIC’s resolution plan
for failed megabanks is an empty promise.” The thrust of the article is
this: the Dodd-Frank Act was passed by Congress and signed into law in 2010
– 14 years ago. One of its primary goals was to prevent taxpayers from
having to rescue megabanks, as occurred in 2008. A key component of that
goal is Title II of Dodd-Frank, which provides an Orderly Resolution Plan
to unwind failing megabanks that does not require taxpayer or Federal
Reserve bailouts. That Plan, in turn, requires a giant pool of instantly
available cash, which Dodd-Frank calls the Orderly Liquidation Fund or OLF.

Stunningly, Wilmarth reveals that there hasn’t been a dime in the OLF since
its creation in 2010. Wilmarth explains:

“…the FDIC’s sole source of funding for a Title II receivership is the
Orderly Liquidation Fund, or OLF, which the Treasury administers. When
Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, the big-bank lobby defeated proposals
that would have required megabanks to pay risk-based premiums to prefund
the OLF. As a result, the OLF has a zero balance. The FDIC must therefore
borrow from the Treasury to pay the costs of a Title II receivership that
cannot be covered by wiping out the holding company’s shareholders and
debt-holders.

“The FDIC has very strong incentives to avoid borrowing from the Treasury
to finance the resolution of a failed megabank. Borrowing from the Treasury
would raise political red flags by increasing the federal government’s debt
burden and signaling that taxpayers might have to pay additional taxes if
the FDIC cannot repay the Treasury.”

Since the financial crash of 2008, the U.S. has experienced three serious
banking crises. And not once during those crises was the Orderly
Liquidation Fund used. The reason is simple. As long as the megabanks can
get trillions of dollars in below-market-rate revolving loans from
emergency programs quickly created by an obliging Federal Reserve, why
would they settle for billions of dollars that involve approval from the
U.S. Treasury and public scrutiny.

The first banking crisis since 2008 began on September 17, 2019 when the
repo market seized up. In the last quarter of 2019, the New York Fed
secretly funneled emergency repo loans cumulatively totaling (on a
term-adjusted basis) $19.87 trillion into Wall Street megabanks. As the
chart below indicates, just six trading units of the megabanks on Wall
Street received 62 percent of that amount. (Unadjusted for the term of the
loan, the cumulative total was $4.5 trillion.) The names of the banks and
the amounts they borrowed were not disclosed to the public for two years.
When the Fed did release the loan data, there was a mainstream media news
blackout. Only Wall Street On Parade published the charts and tallied the
loan amounts.

Fed's Repo Loans to Largest Borrowers, Q4 2019, Adjusted for Term of Loan

The next banking crisis occurred in March 2020 and was blamed on the
COVID-19 pandemic. The share prices of the four largest banks (by deposits)
collapsed by as much as 40 to 60 percent between January 2, 2020 and March
18, 2020. (See chart below.) The Fed rolled out the same alphabet soup of
emergency lending programs that it had rolled out in 2008 – with the New
York Fed once again in charge of the bulk of those programs.

Prices of Four Largest Banks During Early Part of Pandemic in 2020

In the spring of 2023, the second, third and fourth largest bank failures
in U.S. history occurred. One of those banks (Silicon Valley Bank)
experienced the fastest run on its deposits in U.S. history, showing just
how quickly large banks can fail in the digital age. The Fed ran to the
rescue again with another emergency bailout program: the Bank Term Funding
Program.

Wilmarth correctly concludes his article at the American Banker with this:

“Megabanks continue to exploit implicit subsidies resulting from widely
shared expectations of future bailouts. Given the lack of credible
strategies for resolving failures of megabanks without publicly funded
rescues, we must recognize that megabanks pose grave threats to financial
stability and social welfare. Requiring big banks to increase their equity
capital significantly would be an important first step in addressing those
threats.”

The second critical step would be separating federally-insured banks from
the casino trading houses on Wall Street by restoring the Glass-Steagall
Act, which provided financial stability in the U.S. for 66 years until its
repeal in 1999.

Reply via email to