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Jack M. Guttentag The Mortgage Professor

Jack M. Guttentag, The Mortgage Professor

Maybe the Banks Should Be "Hoarding" Money

by Jack M. Guttentag

Very Good (621 Ratings)
3.429944/5
Posted on Tuesday, January 13, 2009, 12:00AM

"Is it not shameful that our financial institutions receive capital infusions from the government and, instead of lending the money out, they hoard it?"

I hear this complaint a lot, and the government has not done a very good job of responding to it. My view of government intent is that the capital infusions were meant to be "hoarded," defining that word as adding to the firm's capital rather than adding to its loans.

A necessary backdrop: The financial crisis began in the home mortgage market and then spread like wildfire to engulf the entire financial system. The core reason for the conflagration was that financial institutions were over-leveraged -- meaning that their debt was excessive. They were also under-capitalized, which means the same thing.

The Major Roles of Capital

Consider a financial firm that has $100 billion of earning assets, $90 billion of debt, and $10 billion of capital, which is the difference between its assets and its debts. The major role of capital is to absorb potential losses on the assets, some of which will default. A closely related role is to instill confidence in the firm's creditors, whose concern is always whether or not capital is sufficient to absorb all losses. If it isn't, the firm may not be able to repay its creditors.

Let's assume the year is 2000 and the firm's assets consist entirely of home mortgages. Defaults and losses on the mortgages are very low because home prices are rising; the firm views its capital as more than adequate and it sets out to increase earnings by borrowing more in order to acquire more mortgages. It is increasing its leverage.

By year-end 2006, the firm has increased its assets and its debts by $200 billion, with no change in its capital. The $10 billion of capital must now cover losses from $300 billion of mortgages rather than $100 billion.

When the World Changes

That would not be a problem if the world didn't change. Indeed, the firm's expansion was based on just that premise. But the world did change: Home prices peaked and started to fall in late 2006, the default rate on the firm's mortgages began to rise, and everything pointed to continued increases in defaults and to substantial losses. Anticipating that rising losses could entirely deplete the firm's capital, creditors feared that the firm would not be able to meet its obligations.

Fast-forward to 2008, when some of the firm's existing obligations came due. The creditors involved would not extend them but insisted on being paid. Since the old creditors wanted out, there was little inducement for potential new creditors to take their place. Unable to raise new money to pay their debts, the firm faced bankruptcy, even before all its capital was depleted.

Enter the Government

Enter the government, which decided to make a capital investment in the firm. The purpose of the investment was not to provide the means for the firm to make more loans but to avoid the firm's failure and the devastating consequences of failure for the economy. The investment increased the firm's capital, which strengthened its ability to meet future losses and hopefully restored the confidence of its creditors.

Sometimes such investment decisions by the government have to be made very quickly, perhaps over a weekend, because the firm faces cash needs that it won't be able to meet when it opens for business on Monday.

In other cases, the need is not imminent but may arise in the future, probably when some debts come due. Many if not most financial firms are under-capitalized by the standards of today's harsh economic environment. A capital infusion from the government gives them a safety margin going forward.

A Misguided Reaction

It was reported on December 22, 2008, that the Associated Press had asked 21 banks that have received capital infusions of $1 billion or more from the government to report exactly what they have done with the money. None gave specific answers, which has been widely viewed as evasive and shameful. This is an understandable reaction, but it is misguided.

A bank‘s sources and uses of funds are like a bathtub with multiple pipes and drains. If a bathtub has water coming in from pipes A, B, C, and G (for government), and leaving through outlets W, X, Y, and L (for loans), the question of which outlet the water coming in through pipe G empties into is not answerable. Even if the tub were rigged so that the G inlet was connected directly to the L outlet, the allocation of water from the other sources to the various uses is bound to be affected.

It would be a simple matter, for example, for a bank to allocate 100 percent of the government's capital to various categories of loans while reducing the flow of funds from other sources into loans. We should be pleased that none of the banks have seen fit to play that game.

Besides which, the premise of the AP survey is wrong. The justification for the capital infusions is that it will increase capital, not loans. The goal is to avoid future shocks arising from the failure of under-capitalized firms. The fundamental purpose is to prevent the crisis from getting worse. Other measures are needed for a cure.

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252 Comments

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  • Yahoo! Finance User - Friday, January 23, 2009, 1:15AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    You're right that it is in the banks interest to hoard money, but it won't help the economy nor the American people. It is in our best interest to hoard money too, or in other words to build liquidity. Cash will be king in the next few months and years. In my opinion, the best way to build liquidity is to open a Mortgage Savings Account. MSA's allow you to build liquidity while saving hundreds of thousands of dollars in mortgage interest. If you are not familiar with MSA's, www.maxhouse.com has good information.

  • Elwood - Wednesday, January 21, 2009, 12:20AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Hoarding only to survive. It's repeats of the play Oliver " Please Sir I want some more" over and over. Tick,Tock,Tick,tock,Tick,tock the time is comming for the US Tresuries to collapse amidst careless flaunting of borrowed money. The Sunday deals with the fed amounts to deflation, too much debt, buried, upsidedown, tipped, whatever you want to consider it? The Chinese are kicking the prop out from under the dollar and the likes of Chevez and Ahmadinejad planning the petroeuro, the time has come. Hoard the money, it doesn't matter it will not be enough we will own you anyway it it's investing in ourself survival. Hanke and Spanke, I mean Bernanke look like they seen a ghost. Today will be an easy day to remember the day the new dollar started its evolution.Tick,Tock,Tick,Tock,Tick,Tock, Ken you may want to hoard enough of that cash for a new set of veneers. God bless us all, what a bunch of suckers we were to fall into this premeditated trap just for the lust to consume and utter greed.

  • vandooman - Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 1:45PM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 5/5

    Keep in mind also that banks have lost deposits. Deposits are needed to fuel loans. The regulators watch the ratio of deposts to loans very closely so banks don't fund loans with unstable sources of funds. So we need to restore consumer confidence in order to restore lending.

  • Jason - Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 3:11AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 3/5

    I think the story makes a lot of sense, however it fails to really get to the point of why the money is not going to the people. Its really clear, think about it, it did go to the people, we just already spent it as a society!! Housing got actifically high, so did the value of the loans, so many did this thing we called pulling equity out of our homes, when really the equity was gained from false means, such as speculation and home loans to people who should have never got them, and houe valuation fraud. Then we all used home equity to spend money that was only temporally there since the value was gained by false demand. The reality is the government is injecting money to the banks that need to be hoarded because the money the gov. is giving, (our tax money) was actually already spent years ago by our society. The middle class will be wiped out! The home owner who spent equity out of the home or lived on hopes of having that equity blanket, made a very bad decision. So many spent the money way into the future. We got the money! The reality is if banks lend again, people are dumb enough to over spend again! The fact is were heading to another great depression, and the people already spent there money. Most any way, the ones who did not, well were going to suffer too, not as much though. The governement needs to realize how capitialism works. The people must suffer for their choices and the goverment is at fault for letting banks go crazy with loans. The worst is yet to come.

  • Buster - Tuesday, January 20, 2009, 1:02AM ET  Report Abuse

    • Overall: 1/5

    Who is this idiot? The cash infusion went to replace 'earning assets' that no longer exist. Loans on the books. Banks have loans that are worth about 50% of face value. The Fed money covers the rest.

Showing comments 1-5 of 252Next >>

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