The Man Who Called the Financial Crisis—70 Years
Early<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704405704575596382345085258.html#printMode>
By
JASON ZWEIG
 Decades before anybody had ever heard of a mortgage derivative, an
economist named Melchior Palyi predicted key causes of the 2008-2009
financial crisis with precision that makes a modern reader's hair stand on
end.

His warnings help explain why investors insist on trusting market
gatekeepers they know to be fallible—such as policy makers, regulators and
credit-ratings firms.

The seeds of today's problem were planted long ago, and its forgotten
history holds important lessons. In 1936, as part of reforms under the new
Banking Act, the U.S. government mandated that federally regulated banks
could no longer hold securities that weren't rated investment-grade by at
least two ratings firms.
   To determine how to implement the new policy, the government launched a
massive project—with experts from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., the
National Bureau of Economic Research and the Works Progress
Administration—to study how credit ratings should be used.

Mr. Palyi, then teaching at the University of Chicago, was a vocal skeptic
from the outset. Looking back into the 1920s, he found that investment-grade
bonds went bust <http://www.jstor.org/pss/2349621> with alarming frequency,
often in the same year they were rated. On average, he showed, a bank that
followed the new rules would end up with a third of its bond portfolio going
into default.

The record was so unreliable that it would be "still more responsible," Mr.
Palyi growled, to "stop the publication of ratings altogether." He was
especially troubled that the new banking rules switched the responsibility
for credit safety from bankers—and even bank regulators—to ratings firms.

"From there," he warned, it "will have to be shifted again—to someone else,"
presumably taxpayers. Liquidity, Mr. Palyi argued, was being replaced by
what he scornfully called "shiftability," a new kind of risk that could
someday "be magnified into catastrophic dimensions."

In response to his criticism, government researchers studying how to apply
bond ratings changed their method for calculating the performance of
investment-grade bonds. By 1943 they had come up with an oddly contorted
median that magically improved the track record of the ratings providers.

This switcheroo, recently
documented<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1681609>for
the first time by economists David Levy of George Mason University and
Sandra Peart of the University of Richmond, legitimized the new regulatory
model and flushed Mr. Palyi's criticism down the memory-hole of history.
Credit ratings, in the words of economist Lawrence White at New York
University, acquired "the force of law."

Since the 1930s, more than 150 laws and regulations sprang up requiring
banks, brokerage firms, insurance companies, pension plans and money-market
funds to hold securities regarded as investment-grade by rating agencies. A
study released in 2007, on the eve of the financial crisis, found that 76%
of fund managers wouldn't invest in bonds below certain credit ratings, even
though fewer than a third of them thought that was "a good investment
strategy."

In the wake of the crisis, Fitch,
Moody's<http://online.wsj.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=MCO>and
Standard & Poor's, today's major ratings companies, have all said they
have taken steps to improve the transparency and reliability of their
ratings and that no one should use credit ratings as the main basis for an
investment decision. This year's financial-reform law scales back, but
doesn't eliminate, the role of credit ratings in regulation.

Who was Melchior Palyi? Born in Hungary in 1892, he became chief economist
at Deutsche 
Bank<http://online.wsj.com/public/quotes/main.html?type=djn&symbol=DB>.
Fluent in at least four languages and endowed with a wicked sense of humor,
Mr. Palyi was the chief economic adviser to the German central bank during
the financial reconstruction of Germany after the hyperinflation of the
early 1920s. In 1933, as Hitler came to power, Mr. Palyi fled to the U.S. He
nursed a wariness of centralized power and inflation until he died in 1970.

Mr. Palyi warned in 1938 that a push toward universal home ownership would
"make the population fixed to the ground" by "overburdening them with
housing costs." That, he foresaw, would limit the mobility of American
workers—helping explain why unemployment is so stubbornly high today.

He also derided <http://www.jstor.org/pss/1403954> what is now called
"quantitative easing," characterizing it as "a sort of Santa Claus to the
economic system" that can lead to "runaway inflation" and a concentration of
too much power in too few hands. Investors piling into stocks today based on
the Federal Reserve's latest bond-buying binge shouldn't get too cocky.

Mr. Palyi was fond of saying that sooner or later, too much credit always
turns into a giant debit as borrowers crumple under the burden of escalating
interest payments. That's a warning this entire country would do well to
heed.


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

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