Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan
Banking
At the annual convention of the American Bankers Association, Phoenix,
Arizona (via satellite)
October 7, 2002

It is a pleasure to once again join the members of the American Bankers
Association at your annual meeting. This morning I would like to explore the
apparent incongruity between the recent substantial losses on corporate
credits and the continued strength of the U.S. banking system.

Over the past two or three years, the U.S. financial system has suffered a
sharp run-up in corporate bond defaults, business failures, and investor
losses. At commercial banks, troubled loans--including charge-offs,
classified loans, and delinquent credits--have also climbed to quite high
levels. At the same time, banks in this country remain quite healthy--with
strong profits and rates of return and with capital and reserves not much
below recent historical highs. Our banks have been able to retain their
strength in this business cycle, in contrast to the early 1990s when so many
either failed or had near-death experiences. Why is this? The answer may
tell us much about the changes in our financial and economic system over the
intervening dozen years or so.

Part of the answer, of course, is that the real economy was different during
these two intervals. The most recent recession was less severe and centered
mainly in the business sector. After years of rapid growth, capital spending
plunged as firms realized that investments in capital goods, especially in
the telecommunication and other high-tech sectors, were excessive. The
financing of this high level of spending with debt, which was seen as
prudent when equity valuations were high, led to a rise in defaults when
firms were no longer able to repay bank loans and other debt through equity
issuance in a depressed stock market.

In contrast, despite the substantial destruction of wealth reflected in the
decline in equity prices, households, encouraged by ongoing increases in
income and housing wealth, have maintained their expenditures. Low mortgage
rates encouraged households to purchase both new and existing homes, the
latter enabling sellers to extract large amounts of home equity, previously
enhanced by capital gains. Low rates also encouraged refinanced mortgage
cash outs and rapid expansion of home equity loans. Consumer and mortgage
loans have not suffered the sharp run-up in delinquencies that loans in the
business sector have, and they have contributed significantly to the
earnings of the banking system, providing it with the ability to absorb
losses elsewhere, to maintain loss reserves, and still to show significant
profits.

Those banks with relatively large exposures to the business sector and
insufficient offsets from other earning flows were able to avoid stresses
because they entered the period with both substantial capital and reserves.
These positions reflected not just diligent supervision and the Basel I
capital reforms but also a marketplace that increasingly demands strength in
financial institutions that serve as counterparties in frontier financial
risk-management transactions. And bank managers who lived through the late
1980s and early 1990s found capital buffers comforting as well as useful.

That banks had impressive earnings and balance sheets going into the current
period of stress is of key significance. The strong balance sheets lowered
funding costs and provided needed buffers. Some banks also benefited from
the increased diversification and scale of their operations that had
resulted from previous consolidations. The larger banks were better able not
only to spread their portfolio risks across a wider range of customers but
also to broaden their funding sources.

An analysis of the resiliency of the U.S. banking system would be far from
complete without a recognition of the new techniques in risk management that
have been applied in banking during the past few years. To be sure, at most
banks the application of these practices has just begun, and even the most
advanced banks still have significant strides to make. Nonetheless, the
efforts to quantify risk have provided management with a far more
disciplined and structured process for evaluating credits, pricing risk, and
deciding which credits to retain. In the process, banks are becoming much
less dependent on the analysis and subjective judgments of lending officers.
Although such judgments in the end are indispensable to the lending process,
a methodical, systematic, and quantitative review of facts--including the
effects of material new exposures on the lender's consolidated
risk--provides a greater depth to risk management than we have had in
decades past.

Improved risk management and technology have also facilitated, of course,
the growth of markets for securitized assets and the emergence of entirely
new financial instruments--such as credit default swaps and collateralized
debt obligations. These instruments have been used to disperse risk to those
willing, and presumably able, to bear it. Indeed, credit decisions as a
result are often made contingent on the ability to lay off significant parts
of the risk. Such dispersal of risk has contributed greatly to the ability
of banks--indeed of the financial system--to weather recent stresses. More
generally, the development of these instruments and techniques have led to
greater credit availability, to a more efficient allocation of risk and
resources, and to stronger financial markets.

The flexibility and size of the secondary mortgage market has been
especially important in the United States. Since early 2000, this market has
facilitated the large debt-financed extraction of home equity I just noted.
That, in turn, has been critical in supporting consumer outlays in this
country through the recession. This market's flexibility has been
particularly enhanced by extensive use of interest rate swaps and options to
hedge maturity mismatches and prepayment risk.

Financial derivatives, more generally, have grown at a phenomenal pace over
the past fifteen years. Conceptual advances in pricing options and other
complex financial products, along with improvements in computer and
telecommunications technologies, have significantly lowered the costs of,
and expanded the opportunities for, hedging risks that were not readily
deflected in earlier decades. Moreover, the counterparty credit risk
associated with the use of derivative instruments has been mitigated by
legally enforceable netting and through the growing use of collateral
agreements. These increasingly complex financial instruments have been
especial contributors, particularly over the past couple of stressful years,
to the development of a far more flexible, efficient, and resilient
financial system than existed just a quarter-century ago.

Banks appear to have effectively used such instruments to shift a
significant part of the risk from their corporate loan portfolios to
insurance firms here and abroad, to foreign banks, to pension funds, to
hedge and vulture funds, and to other organizations with diffuse long-term
liabilities or no liabilities at all. Most of these transfers were made
early in the credit-granting process, and significant exposures to
telecommunication firms were laid off through credit default swaps,
collateralized debt obligations, and other financial instruments. Other risk
transfers reflected later sales at discount prices as credits became riskier
and banks rebalanced their portfolios. Some of these sales were at
substantial concessions to entice buyers to accept substantial risk. Whether
done as part of the original credit decision or in response to changing
conditions, these transactions represent a new paradigm of active credit
management and are a major part of the explanation of the banking system's
strength during a period of stress.

Of course, sound risk-management techniques require more than adequate tools
and diverse markets. Managers must also pay attention to changing risks and
respond effectively to them. In this respect, developments in 1998 were key
in alerting U.S. banks to mounting risk. After three or four years of
economic expansion, loan growth, and rising profits, the Asian crisis and
the Russian default sent a strong and timely message to U.S. banks to raise
their credit standards and more actively manage their existing portfolios to
limit risk exposures. I am aware of no other time when banks began so much
before the cyclical peak to be highly sensitive to potential risks in either
new or existing credits. That experience is indicative, I believe, of how
better risk-management techniques can infuse the decisionmaking process with
increased discipline and can focus attention on the need to balance risk and
reward. We can have little doubt that we have seen a new response mechanism
that has contributed to the health of the banking system, one that I trust
will be more than transitory.

To be sure, there were, and still are, substantial problems. Large losses
have been taken, and more are yet to be recognized. No risk-management
system will ever be flawless, and I emphasize that banks have just begun the
process of applying the new quantification techniques. Indeed,
quantification techniques require quantities--numbers --to work. The most
recent credit cycle has created an abundant supply of exactly the kind of
critical information that banks will need to improve their risk-management:
information about default rates and the associated losses by borrower and
loan type.

Now is the time to collect and maintain these default and loss data in a
disciplined and uniform fashion. Most banks missed that opportunity in the
early 1990s, and some are going back at great cost to mine these data today.
A decade ago, one might have been excused from undertaking such data
collection efforts because of the technology then existing and the cost of
data storage. These reasons are no longer justified. Further, the collection
of data on defaulting credits, both from past cycles and on a continuing
basis, is required to link internal default and loss estimates with the
minimum regulatory requirements under the new Basel Capital Accord now being
developed for the large internationally active banks.

Banks of all sizes are familiar with the importance of data in the
quantification of risk-management tools. The simplest of these techniques,
credit-scoring models, have been in wide use over the past ten to fifteen
years by lenders, insurers of loans, and participants in secondary markets.
The technologies have been integrated into routine business operations. They
all incorporate past data about borrowers to predict and rank potential
borrowers by the risk of default. These technologies have sharply reduced
the cost of credit evaluation and improved the consistency, speed, and
accuracy of credit decisions.

Credit-scoring technologies have served as the foundation for the
development of our national markets for consumer and mortgage credit,
allowing lenders to build highly diversified loan portfolios that
substantially mitigate credit risk. Their use also has expanded well beyond
their original purpose of assessing credit risk. Today they are used for
assessing the risk-adjusted profitability of account relationships, for
establishing the initial and ongoing credit limits available to borrowers,
and for assisting in a range of activities in loan servicing, including
fraud detection, delinquency intervention, and loss mitigation. These
diverse applications have played a major role in promoting the efficiency
and expanding the scope of our credit-delivery systems and allowing lenders
to broaden the populations they are willing and able to serve profitably.

The use of credit-scoring models, whether turnkey models purchased from
providers or proprietary models developed in house, has taught
bankers--sometimes through costly experience--the value of continually
updating the database on which the model operates. Indeed, one can speculate
that some of the problems this year in subprime credit card losses may well
represent an insufficiently long data series to score successfully such
credits during a recession. The experience with credit-scoring models
underlines the necessity of basing more-sophisticated quantitative
approaches, approaches that seem to have served the banking system so well
when applied initially, on a longer and larger database of loss experience.

Let me conclude by noting an often overlooked fact. The use of the more-
sophisticated techniques I spoke of earlier, especially the various forms of
derivatives, are, by construction, highly leveraged. They are thus prone to
induce speculative excesses, not only in the U.S. financial system, but also
through out the rest of the world. The greater potential for systemic risk
can be contained by improvements in effective risk management in the private
sector, including market discipline based on better public disclosure, and
by improvements in bank supervision and regulation in the public sector. To
be sure, as I have noted elsewhere, there is some level of risk that must be
absorbed, as a last resort, by central banks if an economy is to obtain the
full resource allocation benefits of financial intermediation.

The supervisors of the industrial world have been working together for two
decades, through the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, to improve bank
supervision and regulation. The revised Capital Accord, now almost fully
developed, places much greater emphasis, implicitly and explicitly, on
improved risk-management systems. All of this has the potential for placing
even more responsibility on commercial banks for reducing both their own and
systemic risk. Most financial institutions will neither need nor be expected
to achieve the complex risk-management practices required by the new Basel
Accord for large, complex banking organizations, but their operations will
not be unaffected. Success, indeed survival, requires that we all adapt. The
recent experience of the U.S. banking system suggests that it has begun to
prepare itself for the task.


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