Transcript ppt version
Getting to the Root of the Cause
MACROFINANCE CRASH OF 2008
Landmark Events in Crisis
Winter 2006-07
Real Estate Prices Fall
Summer 2007
Countrywide Mortgage fails
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac in
distress
Summer-Fall 2007
Northern Rock (British
lender) fails
Spread between T-Bill and
LIBOR grows large
Recession begins
Spring 2008
Bear Stearns fails
Summer 2008
Oil & other commodity prices
spike
September 2008
Lehman Bros. fails
AIG near failure
Stock market plunges
LIBOR; Commercial Paper
markets freeze (“wholesale
money markets”
Wachovia (bank) fails
Fed begins/expands unusual
interventions
Financial Stress Leading up to Sept 08
TED = T-Bill Rate – LIBOR (usually equal)
KCFSI = Kansas City Fed Financial Stress
Index
6
5
4
3
6
3.5
5
3.0
1
4
2.5
0
3
2.0
2
1.5
1
1.0
0
0.5
-1
0.0
-2
-0.5
2
-1
07M01
07M07
08M01
08M07
TED
09M01
09M07
KCFSI
90
92
94
96
98
00
TED (Libor -TB3)
02
04
06
KCFSI
08
Relative Size of Financial &
Macroeconomic Losses
Time Frame
Stock Market
Change (DIJA)
1907-08
Length
GDP Change
(Real)
Stock Change/
GDP Change
Highest
Unemp. Rate
-40%
13 months
-5%
8
8.00%
1919-20
-46%
15 months
-23%
2
11.30%
1929-33
-83%
43 months
-29%
3
25.20%
1937-38
-49%
15 months
-7%
7
19.10%
1946-48
-35%
21 months
-5%
7
4.00%
1973-75
-51%
25 months
-5%
10
9.00%
1978-82
-37%
48 months
-7%
5
10.80%
1987-88
-28%
5 months
>0%
NA
5.80%
2000-01
-18%
16 months
-1%
18
6.10%
2007-2009
-53%
16 months
-4%
13
10.10%
Key Questions
Cause/Effect
What was the gasoline, what was the match?
Responses
Get rid of gasoline?
Get rid of matches?
Store in safer places?
Fuel for the Crash
Home Mortgage Debt = 1/3
Commercial Loans
Amplified by implied or explicit guarantees to
banking/financial system (“moral hazard”)
Fed/Fannie-Freddie
Amplified by competition for loans
Amplified by gov’t push for loans to non-qualifiers
DEBT, DEBT, DEBT
4.0
60000
3.5
50000
3.0
40000
2.5
30000
Debt/GDP - left scale
2.0
20000
1.5
10000
U.S. Debt -- right scale
1.0
0
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
00
Mortgage Debt Part of the Story,
Commercial Lending a Bigger Part
4.0
3.5
Total Debt/GDP
3.0
2.5
2.0
Non-house-govt/gdp
1.5
1.0
House-debt/gdp
0.5
Govt Debt/gdp
0.0
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
00
05
“Poster” Project for Commercial (nonmortgage) Debt (Artist Image)
$11 Billion City Center Project
Las Vegas – MGM Mirage
Bank Loan/Bond Funded
The Real Thing
Limits of Debt Constraints
Economy-wide Budget Constraint:
Income + Debt Value = Debt Payments + Consumption
Over the long run:
Debt Value = Debt Payment or else “Ponzi Scheme”
Implies Consumption must be based on Income (not
debt)
Why So Much Attention on
Mortgage Debt?
Mortgage market was the first “on fire”
Many interpreted as “the cause”
Mortgage debt traded daily in markets
Quickly reflecting change in valuations
Info on this appearing by 2007
Commercial bank loans not traded in markets
Change in value reported slowly by banks over
time
Info on this not really appearing until into 2009
MATCH FOR THE FUEL
Falling real estate prices & mortgage defaults
beginning in 2006-2007
Lenders not receiving expected payments
Begins chain of financial firms in trouble because not
receiving payments from other firms
Oil Price (and many other basic commodities)
Price Spikes of 2008
Oil from $70/barrel to $145/barrel
Oil price spikes leading all but 1 post WWII recession
Limiting Future Problems?
LIMIT “SYSTEMIC RISK”
MANY IDEAS:
Stricter regulation including more owner “capital” per
loan
Limit financial firm size
Insurance fees tied to risks of lending
Eliminate subsidies to housing lending like Fannie/Freddie
Bottom Line: whatever the specifics, systemic risk
only reduced through substantially less lending
Tradeoff: Benefits of lending-Risks of lending
Causes of Debt/GDP Expansion:
Cheap Credit
9
8
7
6
5
1990-99
2003-07:7
4
3
2
1
0
Prime
AAA
BBB
Fed Funds
ComPaper
Causes of Cheap Credit:
Public Sector Backing of Debt
(Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and others)
9000
GSE Assets + Govt-MBS
(in Billions $)
8000
7000
6000
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
90
92
94
96
98
00
02
04
06
08
Cheap Credit:
Foreign Investors Liked U.S.
.06
Capital Inflows Relative to GDP
.05
.04
U.S.
.03
.02
.01
.00
Euro Area
-.01
97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09
Causes of Cheap Credit:
Expansion of “Wholesale” Money Markets
Cheap Credit:
Wholesale Market Expansion
Cheap Credit:
Wholesale Market Expansion
Securitization, e.g. CDOs
Pooling mortgage (other debt) risk (CDOs, SPVs)
Credit Insurance
Transferring Risk (CDS)
Cheap Credit:
Fed Responsible?
20
16
Inflation Rate & Smoothed (HP Filter)
12
8
4
0
-4
-8
82 84 86 88 90 92 94 96 98 00 02 04 06 08