Transcript Slide 1

Macro-Prudential
Surveillance – Shaping the
Future
CCBS/PFTAC Workshop
Nuku’alofa, Tonga
10-13 August 2010
When the music stops, in terms of liquidity,
things will be complicated. But as long as the
music is playing, you got to get up and dance.
We’re still dancing.”
Chuck Prince, former CEO of Citigroup,
July 2007
Outline
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What is Macro-Prudential Surveillance?
How is it different to Micro-Prudential Surveillance?
Two dimensions of Risk
The Australian framework of surveillance
Why the resilience of the Australian financial system?
Some principles for effective macro-prudential
surveillance
• Discussion – implications for the Pacific Island Central
Banks
“Macro-prudential supervision seeks to
ensure financial stability by limiting
disruptions to financial services caused by an
impairment of all or parts of the financial
system and [and which have] the potential to
have serious negative consequences for the
real economy.”
Source: Committee on the Global Financial System, May 2010
Macro-prudential and Micro-prudential Approaches
Compared
Macro-prudential
Micro-prudential
Immediate Objective
Avoid financial systemwide distress
Ultimate Objective
Avoid output (GDP) loss Depositor protection
Characterisation of
Risk
Endogenous: dependent
on collective behaviour
Exogenous: independent
of individual agents’
behaviour
Correlations and
common exposures
across institutions
Seen as important
Seen as irrelevant
Calibration of
Prudential Controls
Top-down: specified in
terms of system-wide
risk
Bottom-up: specified in
terms of individual firms
Source: BIS Working Paper No. 128, February 2003
Limit distress of
individual firms
Macro and Micro Prudential
Surveillance
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The macro and micro approaches to prudential
surveillance are complementary.
A prudential supervisor that does not take
systemic risks into account is failing in its microprudential mandate, as well as a macroprudential one.
The Role of Macro-Prudential Policy
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Two dimensions of systemic risk:
Cross sectional – risk arising from linkages
within the financial system.
Time – risk arising from the business/financial
cycle.
The Australian Framework for Macro
Prudential Supervision
• Council of Financial Regulators – the primary
(and formal) co-ordinating body for Australia’s
main financial regulatory agencies – comprises
the RBA (Chair), APRA, ASIC and Australian
Treasury.
• The Council contributes to the effectiveness of
financial regulation by providing a high-level
forum for co-operation.
The Australian Framework for Macro
Prudential Supervision (cont’d)
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The Council of Financial Regulators:
shares information and views;
discusses regulatory reform or issues where
responsibilities overlap; and
co-ordinates responses to potential threats to
financial stability (if need be).
The Australian Framework for Macro
Prudential Supervision (cont’d)
“The Reserve Bank of Australia will be
strengthened and its role focused on the
objectives of monetary policy, overall financial
system stability and regulation of the payments
system.”
Treasurer’s response to the Wallis Inquiry, 1997
The Australian Framework for Macro
Prudential Supervision (cont’d)
Communication:
• The RBA publishes a formal Financial Stability
Review every six months (since 2004).
• Macro-prudential indicators are shared with
APRA on an ad hoc basis and through the
regular Coordination Committee meetings
between the RBA and APRA (Memorandum of
Understanding, 1998).
The Australian Framework for
Macro-Prudential Supervision
APRA has a requirement to:
“balance the objectives of financial safety and
efficiency, competition, contestability and
competitive neutrality and, in balancing these
objectives, is to promote financial system stability
in Australia.”
APRA Act, 1998, Section 8(2)
Why the Resilience of the Australian
Financial System?
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Australian banks had not accumulated large
exposures to US mortgage-backed securities –
focused on domestic loan demand.
Household sector activity underpinned by tight
labour market - strong growth in real average
earnings and rising employment-to-population
ratio.
Absence of housing supply over hang
Why the Resilience of the Australian
Financial System? (cont’d)
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Lending standards did not ease as much as in
the United States, with APRA raising capital
requirements on certain mortgage products.
Australian households cannot deduct interest
on owner-occupied mortgage, reducing the
incentive to keep mortgage balances high.
Loan-to-valuation ratios lower in Australia
than United States with less people facing
negative equity.
Some Principles for Effective
Macro-prudential Oversight
Desirable Institutional arrangements:
1.
The need for an agency with an explicit mandate to
monitor and analyse systemic risk in the financial system.
2.
The need for financial regulators to share information
and co-operate to identify and respond to systemic
vulnerabilities.
3.
The systemic risk regulator, either independently or
through a formal body (the Council of Financial
Regulators in Australia), should have a mandate to call for
institutional changes needed to forestall the build-up of
systemic vulnerabilities.
Some Principles for Effective
Macro-prudential Oversight (cont’d)
Conduct of macro-prudential oversight and analysis
4. The systemic risk regulator should regularly conduct
and publish analysis about systemic risks and
vulnerabilities, (the Financial Stability Review in
Australia).
5. The supervisory frameworks of all prudential and
market integrity regulators should accommodate
systemic concerns.
6. Supervisory responses should be informed by, but
not mechanically driven, by macroeconomic variables.
Implications for the Pacific
For Discussion:
• Is there a need for Pacific Island central banks to
enhance their macro-prudential surveillance, given low
level of integration with global financial system and low
level of connectedness domestically?
• What form should surveillance take, given limited
resources and dominance of foreign-owned banks?
• A macro-prudential surveillance approach requires
regulators to monitor developments in the global
banking system as well as national systems. How well
are Pacific islands central banks placed to carry out this
function?