GAO Audit Reveals Fed Played Fast and Loose With Loan Rules
Posted By: John Carney | Senior Editor, CNBC.com
CNBC.com
| 22 Jul 2011 | 12:08 PM ET

http://www.cnbc.com/id/43855944

At the height of the financial crisis, the Federal Reserve evoked emergency 
powers to make loans to Wall Street firms without bothering to adequately 
explain the legal grounds for those loans.

And nearly three years after the loans were made, the Fed still hasn’t provided 
a satisfying answer for why it made loans to the London-based broker-dealer 
subsidiaries of Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs , Morgan Stanley , and Citigroup , 
as well as the U.S. broker-dealer subsidiaries of Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, 
and Morgan Stanley, according to the Government Accounting Office’s newly 
released audit of the Federal Reserve’s financial crisis activities.

In September and November of 2008, the Federal Reserve extended credit to the 
affiliates of these Wall Street firms under terms very similar to those it was 
making under the Primary Dealer Credit Facility. But because these affiliates 
were not actually primary dealers, loans under that facility were not 
officially available.

But the Fed made the loans anyway, citing its powers under Section 13(3) of the 
Federal Reserve Act to extend loans in “exigent circumstances.” But it never 
explained exactly why it decided these loans qualified under this provision.

Prior to 2008, the Federal Reserve had rarely invoked Section 13(3).

But beginning with the rescue of Bear Stearns, it began to use this provison 
more frequently. The provision allows the Federal Reserve to lend to “any 
individual, partnership or corporation” in “unusual and exigent circumstances” 
when the borrower “is unable to secure adequate credit accommodations from 
other banking institutions.” (You can read a history of 13(3) put together by 
the Minneapolis Fed here.)

“In explaining the basis for these exceptional credit extensions, Federal 
Reserve Board officials cited the continuing strains in financial markets and 
concerns about the possible failures of these dealers at the time. However, the 
Federal Reserve Board could not provide documentation explaining why these 
extensions were provided specifically to affiliates of these four primary 
dealers,” the GAO writes.

The GAO goes on the explain that when it asked for documentation about the 
finding of exigent circumstances, it was told that the Fed had never documented 
its views. Fed officials responded to auditors' requests by just reiterating 
the blanket claim that “unusual and exigent circumstances” existed.

The GAO is not satisfied with this. In its view, the law doesn’t just give the 
Fed complete discretion to declare exigent circumstances and transfer funds. 
The Fed should have to explain and document its findings.

“However, without more complete documentation, how assistance to these 
broker-dealer subsidiaries satisfied the statutory requirements for using this 
authority remains unclear. Moreover, without more complete public disclosure of 
the basis for these actions, these decisions may not be subject to an 
appropriate level of transparency and accountability,” the GAO reports.

In other words, this is more than just a case of a bureaucracy forgetting to 
cross its Ts or dot its Is. It goes to the basic question of whether the Fed’s 
powers under the law have any real limitations. If just declaring “exigent 
circumstances” exist is enough, then there are no real limits. If the 
declaration must be backed up in a way that can be publicly examined and 
debated, then the prospect of having to articulate a public justification at 
least creates a potential limit.

The Fed’s position is apparently that its powers are not limited and do not 
require the articulation of a public justification. Even the Supreme Court 
explains its rulings, so this is quite a claim by the Fed.

Fortunately, it won’t be one the Fed can make going forward. The Dodd-Frank Act 
includes new requirements for the Fed to report to Congress on any loan 
authorized under Section 13(3). Those reports must include not just the 
amounts, terms and borrowers but the justification for the assistance.

Next time just declaring “exigent circumstances” won’t be good enough.


© 2011 CNBC.com
URL: http://www.cnbc.com/id/43855944/
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