
The Financial Services Authority (FSA) has today issued a discussion paper (DP) focusing on policy measures to address the problem of systemically important 'too-big-to-fail' banks. The paper also examines the trade-offs involved in increasing capital and liquidity requirements, and stresses the need to assess the cumulative impact of multiple reforms.
The paper identifies the dangers posed by those firms that are seen as too-big or too-interconnected-to-fail, or too-big-to-rescue. It describes the full range of policy options - including the creation of 'narrow banks' - in order to provide the basis for an informed debate, but also outlines the position which the FSA is currently proposing in international fora, namely that:
The DP also stresses the need to assess the possible cumulative impact of multiple reforms to capital and liquidity regimes now being considered by international standard-setting bodies. It describes the case for significant increases in capital and liquidity requirements to reduce financial instability risks, while recognising the potential implications for lending volumes and the cost of credit intermediation. It considers methodologies which can help inform judgements on the trade-offs involved.
The DP makes clear, however, that the potential trade-off between improved stability and constrained lending does not arise in relation to required changes in trading book capital, nor where capital enhancement can be achieved by moderation of bonus payments. It therefore reasserts the Financial Stability Board message that the priority use of high investment bank profits must be to enhance capital levels rather than to support excessive bonus payments.
Lord Turner, FSA chairman, said:
"The direction of travel is clear: the overall level of capital required in the banking system must be significantly increased over time, while liquidity standards must be significantly tightened. These changes are required to create a more stable financial system for the long-term: the challenge now is to determine the precise long-term objective and the appropriate transition path.
"Meanwhile, the FSA has to reduce the danger that authorities in future will be faced with only one option - using public funds to rescue whole groups with only equity holders suffering loss. And we must also limit the extent to which implicit government guarantees support unnecessary levels of risky proprietary trading. The way to achieve this is likely to be a number of mutually reinforcing policies, not a single silver bullet."