http://tyillc.blogspot.com/2011/09/banks-still-expect-taxpayers-to-pay-for.htmlA Telegraph column by Philip Aldrick focused on a comment made by the Bank of England's Paul Fisher that banks still expect taxpayers to pay for their failure. As this blog has frequently mentioned, banks should feel this way so long as regulators maintain a monopoly on all the useful, relevant information for each bank.
Without this current asset and liability-level data, banks cannot assess the risk of any bank that they do business with and adjust both the price and amount of their exposure according to the findings. Instead, the banks have to rely on the assurances of the regulators that the other banks are solvent. This sets up the situation that we are currently in where taxpayers have to bailout the banks because the banks cannot be held responsible for any losses that result from relying on regulatory assurances.
Mr. Fisher's solution is not to end the regulators' information monopoly and the implied taxpayer bailout of any errors made by regulators, but to run stress tests with more onerous assumptions. Under this solution, regulators continue gambling with the taxpayers' money as the solution still leaves the banks relying on the regulators' assurances of solvency.
If these assurances are incorrect, banks should expect the taxpayers to bail them out. In a paper published yesterday, Paul Fisher, the Bank's executive director for markets, disclosed that "some banks have told us that they think they should not be required to hold capital and liquidity to deal with such extreme tail events – leaving the public sector to be the capital provider of last resort". His comments clash with the public statements of bankers who claim lenders should not be a burden on the taxpayer...Earlier this year, Bob Diamond, Barclays' chief executive, told the Treasury Select Committee: "It is not acceptable for taxpayers to bail out banks," adding that "badly managed" lenders should be allowed to fail. There is no suggestion that Mr Diamond is among those to whom Mr Fisher was referring.
Add Mr. Diamond to the list of bank CEOs calling for a disclosure of all the useful, relevant information so they can determine who their dumbest competitor is and avoid any exposure to them....Without the current asset and liability-level data, bank bosses have no ability to assess how risky their exposures to other financial institutions really are. The bank bosses are blindly betting with their exposures to other financial institutions based on regulatory assurances. This is the problem created by the regulators' monopoly on all the useful, relevant information and the publication of assurance by the regulators as to the solvency of each bank!
With the disclosure required under the FDR Framework, this problem goes away....Actually, the greatest sin in the years preceding the financial crisis was the failure to use 21st century information technology to support disclosure of all the useful, relevant information for each financial institution. With this information, each financial institution could have protected itself from other financial institutions that took on excessive risk. A likely result of financial institutions protecting themselves is that the financial crisis would have been far less severe and the financial system would have been far more stable....In the absence of all the useful, relevant information in an appropriate, timely manner, financial market participants cannot deal with tail-risk. The current financial crisis proves this point. The areas of the financial markets that ceased functioning were all the areas with opacity (for example, structured finance and interbank lending). The areas that continued to function without government support all were areas with disclosure (for example, equity markets).