"After a career of writing about bank
failures, I wound up in the middle of one when my bank, Silicon Valley Bank,
was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. On Saturday, when I
tried to pay a bill online, I was greeted by this not very reassuring missive:
“This page will be unavailable
throughout the weekend, but will resume next week in accordance with the
guidance provided by the F.D.I.C.” I wasn’t truly worried; small depositors
like me had long ago internalized the rule that it made no sense to worry about
your bank’s condition, since the risks of failure were borne by the F.D.I.C.
Federal deposit insurance was
introduced 90 years ago during the heart of the Great Depression. Ever since
then, small depositors within the F.D.I.C. limit of coverage have slept
soundly. Now, in light of the bank failures of the last few days and the
F.D.I.C.’s extension of coverage, why will any depositor worry about
risk? Having bailed out depositors of two
banks in full, how will the government refuse others?
Established as part of the landmark
Glass-Steagall Act of 1933, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation initially
provided deposit insurance up to $2,500, supported by premiums from member
banks. The act was written by two Democrats, Senator Carter Glass of Virginia
and Representative Henry Steagall of Alabama. Steagall wanted to protect rural
banks, which had many small depositors, from contagious panics.
In that era, banking “progressives”
were centered in the heartland. During the 1920s, low farm prices led to waves
of bank failures. Various states adopted insurance, but the statewide systems
failed. Scores of bills for federal insurance were also introduced.
The idea was controversial. The
president of the American Bankers Association protested that insuring deposits
was “unsound, unscientific and dangerous.” It was opposed by President Franklin
D. Roosevelt and by his Treasury secretary, William H. Woodin. Roosevelt
opposed insurance because he thought it would be costly and also encourage bad
behavior. If there was no need to mollify depositors, then banks would be free
to take all sorts of risks. Today we call this “moral hazard.”
In 1933, an estimated 4,000 banks
failed. Roosevelt took office in March, and declared a national bank holiday
to prevent more failures. After a pointed debate, in June Roosevelt signed the
Glass-Steagall Act.
The F.D.I.C. definitely prevented
panics. From its creation until America’s entry into World War II, banks failed
at a rate of close to 50 per year, not bad considering the economic depression
in most of that period. And most of the banks that failed were small.
By the postwar period, deposit
insurance seemed to have been created for an era that no longer existed.
Bankers schooled in the 1930s tended toward prudence, and the industry was risk
averse. The failure rate was exceptionally low. That all changed in the 1970s
and ’80s. A combination of financial deregulation, revived animal spirits on
Wall Street, and rising inflation led to financial instability and swings in
interest rates. Voilà — bank failures returned.
In recent days, many have been
reminded of 2008 and ’09 (165 banks failed in those two years alone). But for
the most part, that crisis was not the result of depositors pulling funds. Bear
Stearns, Lehman and others failed or sought bailouts because overnight funding
from professional investors disappeared. It dried up for two good reasons:
Banks like Lehman had too much leverage, and they were overexposed to a very
weak and widely held asset, mortgage securities.
That was not the case with S.V.B.
This panic was a classic bank run,
and it bears an echo to a different historical episode. In the 1980s, lenders
known as savings and loans had invested their funds in long-term mortgages
paying a fixed rate of interest. When the Federal Reserve, under pressure of
rising inflation, began to jack up rates, S.&L.’s had to pay higher rates
to attract deposits.
The mismatch between the cost of
their money and the (lower) rate that their mortgages earned sank the industry.
Many switched to riskier assets to juice their returns, but as these
investments soured, their problems worsened. Roughly a third, or about 1,000,
S.&.L.’s failed. The F.D.I.C. was not (luckily for it) involved, because
the S.&L.’s were covered by a separate federal insurer. This agency, known
as F.S.L.I.C., became insolvent, and the subsequent bailout was estimated to
have cost taxpayers more than $100 billion.
Silicon Valley Bank’s failure looks
a bit like an S.&.L. crisis in miniature. Like its 1980s counterparts,
S.V.B. grew extremely rapidly, had many assets parked in fixed, long-term
bonds, and was done in when inflation caused the Fed to raise interest rates,
raising the cost of keeping deposits.
Like the S.&.L.’s, Silicon
Valley Bank was heavily concentrated. It catered to start-ups for whom an
S.V.B. account was a matter of status. One tech savant who had recently changed
jobs (aren’t they always switching jobs?) told me that in his experience, roughly
two thirds of start-ups banked with S.V.B. (the bank claimed that nearly half
the country’s venture capital-backed technology and life science companies were
customers).
These crises provoked a widening of
the federal safety net. Until the 1970s, the F.D.I.C. limit on deposit coverage
increased only slowly. But in 1980, as banks came under pressure from soaring
inflation, Congress raised the cap to $100,000, over the objections of the
F.D.I.C. itself. In the 2008 crisis, the limit was raised to $250,000. And
after the failure of IndyMac in 2008, the F.D.I.C., when possible, quietly protected
uninsured depositors.
In the rescue of S.V.B. on Friday and of Signature Bank in
New York two days later, the F.D.I.C. overtly ignored the cap and rescued all
depositors, irrespective of size. This is a breathtaking leap.
Rescued seven-figure depositors were primarily venture
companies steeped in the ideology of investing. The first plank of capitalism
is that it entails risk. You cannot sensibly invest without assessing the
chance for loss. If venture firms relied on groupthink rather than financial
due diligence, that was their doing. In the case of Signature, which was
exposed to the crypto industry, the rescue probably bailed out gamblers on
speculative assets.
Federal officials have seized on a technicality to claim
that it is not a bailout: Any required rescue payments will come from a special
assessment on (private) banks, not the public. Prudent banks, which hedged
their exposure to interest rates and suffered a competitive cost for doing so,
will be hit with the added expense. Most likely, banks will pass along the
rescue costs in the form of higher fees to consumers.
Strictly speaking, President Biden’s assurance that
taxpayers are not on the line was accurate. However, in the sense that banking
customers are a pretty big group, the “public” will be affected.
Moreover, the hazardous effect on behavior will be the same.
The regulators clearly failed to monitor S.V.B.’s unhealthy
mismatch of assets and liabilities. Their job will be more difficult in the
future, as risk taking on deposits has effectively become socialized. What if a
bank opts to attract more funds by raising its interest rate on deposits? Can
the regulators permit it? Wait a second, this is what all banks do.
Once you take risk out of a part of a bank’s operations, it
is hard to let market principles govern the rest. We should expect, at a
minimum, tougher standards on bank capital (as now exists at the biggest
banks), more regulation and higher costs. As this newspaper’s DealBook
newsletter has predicted, more loans will move
away from F.D.I.C.-member institutions to so-called shadow banks such as hedge
funds, outside the purview of regulators.
In past bank failures, uninsured depositors did not lose all
— 10 percent to 15 percent was typical. And in this episode, there wasn’t any
systemically bad asset à la mortgages in 2008. Given that the risk was
contained, and that the Federal Reserve provides liquidity to banks facing runs
(and provided emergency liquidity this week), allowing uninsured depositors of
banks that fail to suffer a haircut might have been healthier for the system in
the long run.
And the bailout does nothing to
address the condition that fostered financial instability: inflation. It may
even exacerbate it. This is not what Henry Steagall had in mind."
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