Governor Randall S. Kroszner
At the Conference of State Bank Supervisors Annual
Conference, Amelia Island Plantation, Florida
Governor Kroszner presented identical remarks to the Banco
Central do Brasil Annual Seminar on Banking, Financial Stability, and Risk, on
May 27, 2008
May 22, 2008
Prospects for Recovery and Repair of Mortgage Markets
As all of you well know, it was just about one year ago that the turmoil in
the mortgage and financial markets emerged. Today I will offer my perspective on
the prospects for recovery and repair of the mortgage markets, which I believe
will be a gradual process that requires both market and regulatory discipline.
Greater transparency and less complexity in credit instruments will help to
promote broader scrutiny of credit risk. Investors with more and better
information from the originators and sponsors of credit products will be able to
more easily conduct proper due diligence and verify evaluations of credit risk.
Financial institutions that develop and hold these instruments and that have
similar or correlated exposures through various business lines should also
strengthen risk-management practices. As supervisors, we must insist on
effective risk management and take the steps necessary to ensure that changes
are implemented where needed.
Although any assessment at this stage about the recovery and repair of
mortgage markets is preliminary, I will outline some steps, many of which are
already in train, that can foster the rehabilitation process. As part of this
discussion, I will highlight what the Federal Reserve is doing to facilitate
improvements in the mortgage markets, some of which involve important
collaborations with the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS).
Background
As you know, the initial shock to financial markets
was essentially a rapid deterioration in the performance of subprime and
so-called alt-A mortgages in the United States, particularly among such loans
that were originated after the middle of 2005. A large share of those mortgages
were funded through structures known as mortgage-backed securities (MBS), and
many of those structures were, in turn, funded by other structures called
collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), in which subprime and alt-A MBS
represented the collateral.
These CDOs were ultimately held by a wide range of investors and financial
institutions. Much of the issuance of these securities over the past few years
occurred in an environment of tightly compressed risk spreads--that is, the
difference between the yields on what were perceived as relatively safe and
relatively risky assets was much smaller than usual. Indeed, many of the
structures seemed to be created to satisfy investors' strong demand for
securities that carried investment-grade ratings but that might provide slightly
higher yields than other investment-grade securities, such as corporate bonds.
In many cases, however, investors seem to have been attracted to these
structured securities without a thorough understanding of the underlying risk
profiles.
Although MBS and CDOs had been around for many years, the more recent
structures were significantly different and more complex than their earlier
counterparts. Investors' earlier experience with CDOs, for example, was mainly
limited to cases in which primary securities, such as corporate bonds, business
loans, or other simple securities, formed the underlying collateral. In
contrast, the more recent CDOs frequently were themselves backed by structured
securities, resulting in so-called two-layer securitizations in which structured
products are used to fund other structured products.
These two-layer securitizations are inherently more complex and are more
exposed to tail risk than their earlier one-layer counterparts. Indeed, in its
recent report on credit-risk transfer, the Joint Forum--an international
collaboration of financial supervisors--noted a cliff effect that is associated
with the distribution of returns that can be realized on the more senior
tranches of two-layer securitizations.1 Simply put, the cliff effect refers
to the fact that investors of higher-rated tranches of complex securities can
expect to receive a small positive return in most circumstances, but they are
vulnerable to extremely large losses in those rare events of widespread
financial stress.
Despite the greater complexity, it seems that many investors assumed that the
evaluations of credit-rating agencies would work well and be sufficient for the
new structured securities. Investors ended up relying too heavily on those
assessments rather than requiring ample information about the underlying assets
and demanding extra transparency in order to estimate projected risk-return
trade-offs.
Role of Information and Transparency in Corporate Bond Market
To
illustrate how important information and transparency will be in the recovery
and repair process of the securitization markets going forward, it might be
helpful to review a case in which, on the whole, market functioning has held up
relatively well. I'm thinking specifically about the market for corporate bonds
issued by investment-grade nonfinancial firms.
To be sure, over the past year, growing concerns about individual firms'
earnings and about the overall macroeconomic outlook have contributed to
significantly wider risk spreads on corporate bonds. Nonetheless,
investment-grade nonfinancial companies in the United States have been able to
issue a sizable volume of traditional debt instruments rather consistently, even
as demand for some other types of securities has been substantially curtailed.
In addition, on the whole, liquidity in the secondary markets for corporate
bonds has been perceived to be much better than liquidity for non-agency
mortgage-backed securities and for more-complex structured securities. Part of
the reason that the markets for high-grade nonfinancial bonds have continued to
function relatively well is that those securities have not experienced
widespread ratings downgrades or defaults.
The extensive amount of data available about nonfinancial corporations and
the performance of corporate bonds over time has made it easier and less costly
for investors to conduct due diligence--or to put it another way--to trust but
verify credit-risk evaluations. The same cannot be said of many residential MBS
created over the past couple of years and the many complex structured products
that held MBS as collateral, where the complexity of the pay-off structures
(including so-called cliff effects) made expected returns and risks more
difficult to model.
Recovery and Repair Going Forward
As I have said, recovery in the
mortgage market will take time and will require more market and regulatory
discipline. I would now like to discuss this process in further detail as it
relates to the credit-rating agencies, the originate-to-distribute model for
mortgage lending, the important role of the new Basel II framework, and
improvements in risk-management practices that financial institutions will need
to make in several key areas.
Credit-Rating Agencies
As I mentioned, establishing sound and
thorough independent risk evaluations is costly, particularly for complex
structured products that have only recently been created. To address problems
with risk evaluations, the President's Working Group on Financial Markets (PWG)
has recommended, among other things, that the credit-rating agencies themselves
should display greater skepticism when they are presented with complex and
opaque instruments to rate.2 The PWG also suggested that the credit-rating agencies would better
serve investors by providing greater transparency about the models, estimation
methods, and assumptions used to evaluate credit risk for complex structured
securities. In addition, it is important for the rating agencies to clarify that
a given rating applied to a complex structured credit product may have a
different risk than the same rating applied to a simple security, such as a
corporate bond.
Originate-to-Distribute Approach to Mortgage Lending
The growth of
the originate-to-distribute approach in the mortgage market played an important
role in the rapid expansion of mortgage lending in the United States until the
onset of the recent market turbulence. That expansion was concentrated in the
subprime and alt A segments of the mortgage market, where underwriting
deteriorated at the point of origination. To an ever-increasing extent from
around the middle of 2005 until about a year ago, originators made loans that
layered multiple sources of credit risk, including low documentation of borrower
income, very high combined loan-to-value ratios, and loans with nontraditional
payment schedules that sometimes allowed principal and interest payments to be
deferred. In an environment of compressed risk spreads, investors have more
difficulty signaling concerns about credit risk, which may have reduced the
incentives for originators to maintain strict underwriting.
I would expect the originate-to-distribute model to continue to be an
important part of the modern financial market landscape, but, I hope, in a much
stronger form. The model works best when the resulting credit instruments are
less complex and opaque, as analysts and investors can evaluate the underlying
risks with greater certainty. And originate-to-distribute is most effective when
the incentives of originators and investors are closely aligned and when market
pricing reinforces incentives for originators to perform careful underwriting.
Firms surveyed about their risk-management practices by a group of supervisory
agencies from France, Germany, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, and the United
States--known as the Senior Supervisors Group (SSG)--have emphasized the
importance of understanding the quality of new credits that their businesses
originate or purchase from others.3
The process of recovery and repair in non-agency mortgage securitization
markets would also be aided by more clarity and consistency in underwriting
standards. This would provide more certainty to the mortgage market, thereby
helping to revive investor confidence in this market and to promote the flow of
credit to borrowers. Both to protect consumers and to foster the revival of
these markets, the Federal Reserve has proposed stricter underwriting rules for
high-cost mortgages under the Home Ownership and Equity Protection Act (HOEPA),
which could also help to increase the transparency and improve the quality of
underlying assets in private mortgage pools.
The Federal Reserve's proposed rules would better protect consumers from a
range of unfair or deceptive mortgage lending and advertising practices. Our
proposal includes four key protections for higher-priced mortgage loans secured
by a consumer's principal dwelling: (1) creditors would be prohibited from
engaging in a pattern or practice of extending credit without considering
borrowers' ability to repay the loan; (2) creditors would be required to verify
the income and assets they rely upon in making a loan; (3) prepayment penalties
would only be permitted if certain conditions are met, including the condition
that no penalty will apply for at least sixty days before any possible payment
increase; and (4) creditors would have to establish escrow accounts for taxes
and insurance. We are working toward issuing final regulations in July.
Role of Basel II
Individual institutions are
responsible for maintaining sound risk-management practices. But supervisors, of
course, also have a role to play in both promoting effective risk management and
offering incentives for bankers to make improvements to their practices.
The new Basel II framework is a substantial supervisory initiative that seeks
to improve risk-management practices at banking organizations. The framework
more closely aligns regulatory capital requirements with actual risks, which
should lead institutions to make better decisions about extending credit,
mitigating risks, and determining overall capital needs. For example, unlike
under Basel I, the risk weights applied to first-lien residential mortgages will
be subject to a more refined differentiation depending on whether the borrower
has low or high credit risk. Similarly, Basel II attempts to more fully capture
risks in securitization transactions.
Just as lessons learned from recent events can help bankers improve risk-
management practices, they can also help supervisors further increase the
effectiveness of the Basel II framework. For example, the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision plans to strengthen the resiliency of Basel II by revising
it to establish higher capital requirements for certain complex structured
credit products, such as CDOs of asset-backed securities, among other
enhancements.4
Improvements in Risk-Management Practices
Studies of last year's
events have concluded that part of the reason that the problems with subprime
and alt-A mortgages led to much wider financial market turmoil was weaknesses in
the risk-management practices at some large global financial firms that created
and held complex credit products. Recent events have highlighted the need for
risk-management improvements in four fundamental areas: risk identification and
measurement, liquidity risk management, governance and risk control, and
valuation practices.
First, for risk identification and measurement, as all of you here know, good
information is the lifeblood of sound risk management. A good risk-management
structure is designed to identify the full spectrum of risks across the entire
firm, gathering and processing information on an enterprise-wide basis in real
time. In short, you cannot manage your risks if you do not know what they are.
Recent events have illustrated that many large, complex institutions had
exposures to subprime mortgages that ran across independent business lines,
through off-balance-sheet conduits such as structured investment vehicles, and
with respect to numerous counterparties such as monoline financial guarantors.
But too few institutions fully recognized their aggregate exposure to risks that
turned out to be highly correlated. Latent risks from certain complex products
and certain risky activities are particularly problematic because they can
manifest themselves when market turbulence sets in. Stress testing and scenario
analysis are essential because they can reveal potential risk concentrations
that may not be apparent when using information gleaned from normal times.
The second fundamental area is liquidity risk management. Because of its
central role in the business of banking, liquidity risk requires rigorous and
effective management. Recent events have shown that during times of systemwide
stress, liquidity shocks can become correlated, so that the same factors that
can lead to liquidity problems for the bank's assets or off-balance-sheet
vehicles can simultaneously put pressure on a bank's own funding liquidity.
Because risk concentrations have the potential to manifest themselves during
times of stress and at that time adversely affect capital positions, it is
particularly important that firms assess how liquidity events could place
pressure on capital levels.
The third fundamental, governance and risk control, has been a key factor
that has differentiated performance across financial institutions during the
recent turmoil. Firms that operated with the two main ingredients for solid
governance and controls--thorough information and strong incentives--have come
through this tumultuous period in better condition.
Lastly, supervisors' comparative reviews also identified valuation practices
as critical. The SSG reported that those firms that paid close attention to the
problems associated with the valuation of financial instruments, particularly
those for which markets were not deep, fared better. These more-successful firms
developed in-house expertise to conduct independent valuations and refrained
from relying solely on third-party assessments.
Federal Reserve's Mortgage Initiatives
I would now like to discuss
some of the actions the Federal Reserve is taking to address the ongoing
challenges in the mortgage market. The Federal Reserve's decisions regarding
monetary policy and our efforts to promote financial stability affect mortgage
and housing markets, of course. But, we are also working on these issues more
directly on a number of fronts as we are very concerned about the high rate of
mortgage foreclosures.
We are contributing to initiatives already under way at the local and
national level, as well as collaborating with other regulators, community
groups, policy organizations, financial institutions, and public officials in an
effort to identify ways to prevent unnecessary foreclosures and the associated
negative effects on local communities. In doing so, we are taking advantage of
the decentralized geographic structure of the Federal Reserve System, which
consists of the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., and the twelve Federal
Reserve Banks that each represent a region of the country.
In recent months, for example, I have had the opportunity to get a firsthand
look at what is happening in various parts of the country. I have met with local
community groups, bankers, housing advocates, counseling agencies, and state and
local government officials in Cincinnati, Minneapolis, Philadelphia, Boston,
Miami, and Las Vegas. The Reserve Banks representing those areas have helped
facilitate these meetings, which have enhanced my understanding of the
challenges being faced across the country and of how policymakers should think
about these issues at both the local and national levels.
We are engaged with mortgage servicers to understand impediments they may
face when modifying loans or offering other alternatives to foreclosure. We have
encouraged the mortgage industry to increase their efforts to work with troubled
borrowers, to develop guidelines and templates for reasonable standardized
approaches to various loss-mitigation techniques, and to adopt transparent
reporting standards. Clear disclosures of loan modifications will not only make
it easier for regulators, the mortgage industry, and community groups to assess
the effectiveness of foreclosure-prevention efforts, but they will also foster
greater transparency, and hence greater confidence, in the securitization
market.
We are also using our analytic resources to conduct research that the Reserve
Banks can disseminate to local community groups, counseling agencies, financial
institutions, and others who are working to help troubled borrowers and
communities. Earlier this month, we announced a new partnership with the
nonprofit NeighborWorks America to develop materials, tools, and training
programs to help communities and others acquire and manage vacant properties.
The goal is to support the provision of affordable rental housing and new
homeownership opportunities in low- and moderate-income neighborhoods.
The Federal Reserve has collaborated with the CSBS on several interagency
initiatives to help struggling homeowners and to enhance the functioning of the
mortgage markets. The federal banking agencies and the CSBS last fall issued
guidance urging lenders and servicers to pursue workout arrangements, when
feasible and prudent, as an alternative to foreclosure. Reaching borrowers
before they fall too far behind in their payments is important to effecting a
sustainable workout and may help more borrowers remain in their homes. In some
cases, temporary adjustments to payments may not be sufficient, and
more-permanent reductions in interest rates or an extension of the loan term may
be called for. In some situations, lenders and servicers may want to consider
using principal writedowns as a way to reduce re-default risk or to facilitate a
refinancing.
We are also coordinating with the CSBS, the American Association of
Residential Mortgage Regulators (AARMR), and other federal agencies on consumer
compliance reviews of non-depository mortgage lenders with significant subprime
mortgage operations. These reviews, which began earlier this year, are aimed at
evaluating underwriting standards, risk-management strategies, and compliance
with certain consumer protection laws.
The Federal Reserve is also working cooperatively with the states to provide
data and analysis on subprime mortgage loan performance to inform the states'
policies in this area. These efforts will be supported by the new system for
registering and tracking mortgage brokers that the CSBS and the AARMR launched
earlier this year. The Nationwide Mortgage Licensing System should better
protect borrowers by bringing greater consistency across the states to the
supervision of mortgage lenders. Nationwide licensing should prevent lenders who
run afoul of authorities in one state from simply relocating their business to
another state.
Conclusion
As market participants take steps to foster greater
transparency and to reduce the complexity of structured credit instruments, I
believe that recovery and repair in the mortgage markets will take hold over
time. Moreover, as financial institutions strengthen risk-management practices
and as supervisors ensure that the necessary actions are taken, I expect the
financial system as a whole to become more resilient. A number of efforts are
under way by the Federal Reserve, jointly and independently with the CSBS and
other organizations, to help prevent avoidable foreclosures and to promote
responsible mortgage lending.
Footnotes
1. The Joint Forum (2008), Credit Risk Transfer--Developments
from 2005 to 2007
(Basel, Switzerland: Bank for International
Settlements). Return to text
2. President's Working Group on Financial Markets (2008), "Policy
Statement on Financial Market Developments (1.36 MB PDF)" (Washington:
Department of the Treasury). Return to text
3. The report, "Observations on Risk Management Practices
during the Recent Market Turbulence," is available at:
http://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/news/banking/2008/rp080306.html
Return to text
4. For further discussion of plans to strengthen the
resiliency of the framework, refer to Randall S. Kroszner (2008), "Risk Management and Basel
II," speech delivered at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston AMA Conference,
May 14. Return to text