Newsweek
Web Exclusive
February
6, 2009
Act
Fast, Or Else
Why
we should nationalize troubled banks sooner rather than later.
Adam
B. Kushner
As
we wait on pins and needles for the Obama administration's
finance-sector rescue plan next week, investors, moguls, and nearly
everyone who pays taxes in the United States seem to have an opinion on
how it should look. Of course, no matter what kind of banking bailout
Washington proposes, people will fight about it from here until a bull
market and beyond. But the two biggest crisis-induced nationalizations
in world history—Sweden in the early 1990s and Japan in the middle of
that decade—suggest that how the bailout works might be less important
than when it works. And the longer we wait, the worse off we'll be.
Sweden
succeeded in large part because of its speed, and Japan failed for its
sloth. Together they offer an object lesson, says Adam Posen, deputy
director of the Peterson Institute for International Economics: once
the government offers certain promises, banks with dwindling capital
that are allowed to remain in private hands just make things worse.
"It's heads bankers win, tails taxpayers lose," says Posen. They roll
over bad debt, appraise assets dubiously and make myopic business calls
to keep their employers alive.
The
decade-long Japanese financial crisis is a case study in the error of
trepidation. As in America before the 2007 onset of the
subprime-mortgage crisis, Japanese banks had become very aggressive
about lending to less-than-worthy debtors in 1990, goaded on by a
thriving economy that made blowback seem like fanciful dystopian
cynicism. Loanees included hyperleveraged corporations and inflated
real estate, such as luxe golf courses whose long membership waiting
lists suddenly evaporated as clients lost interest in rounds for $400
during a slump.
When
Tokyo's stock and real-estate bubble collapsed in 1991, debt
overwhelmed these companies, and they began missing bank payments.
(Before tougher disclosure laws were enacted by Parliament in 1998,
banks were not forced to report loan defaults.) Instead of declaring
bankruptcy or petitioning the government for cash, distressed companies
asked for credit extensions—which, overwhelmingly, the banks gave to
them. Regulators knew what was happening but didn't want to induce a
panic, so they took a "wait and see" approach, hoping the market would
recover and the companies could pay back their loans, according to
Ulrike Schaede, an expert on Japanese business at the University of
California, San Diego.
Of
course, banks weren't extending any new credit while they weren't
making money, and the market didn’t turn around. In order to not
frighten shareholders, they overstated the value of assets and the
reliability of debtors, and companies—seeing that banks would backstop
them in perpetuity (with tacit government support)—refused to make
large write-downs that would have overwhelmed balance sheets. It was
like a scene from "Weekend at Bernie's": to protect shareholders and
their jobs, they pretended like their clients weren't actually dead.
Tokyo
worried that reassessing the assets "would make banks close
nonperforming loans by forcing a sale of these assets, creating a glut
of real-estate offers and driving prices down even further, thus
increasing the number of bad loans," says Schaede. Nationalization
early on would have allowed the government to phase the loans out
slowly over time. Only five years into the crisis, realizing Bernie
wouldn't come back to life, did Tokyo take over the banks, write down
the loans and privatize the recapitalized institutions—by which point
it had condemned the economy to 10 years of sluggishness and credit
stinginess.
Compare
that with Sweden, whose central bank, like the Fed, immediately handed
out cash in 1991 on an ad-hoc basis to banks in need. In 1992, as
recession began to settle in, it erected an agency to administer the
crisis, which heard petitions for cash from individual banks. Unlike
the Fed, it scrutinized the books carefully before deciding which
candidates were worthy. That way, investors knew that banks denied
liquidity didn't really need it, and Sweden staved off a panic.
When
the country's two biggest banks, Nordbanken and Gota Bank, got into
irrevocable trouble—bad loans again—in 1993, the crisis agency stepped
in at once and took them over. It issued a blanket guarantee to
creditors and, after stripping the toxic loans and wiping out
shareholders, shored up the balance sheets with ample cash. The agency
replaced the top brass with executives more committed to risk
management, but Parliament had ordered that Sweden couldn't interfere
with daily operations as long as the banks met solvency goals. Two
years later, it began selling off the recapitalized banks—for a profit.
Stockholm
never let Nordbanken and Gota Bank throw good money after bad, and the
loans weren't simply extended until the market improved, as they were
in Tokyo, according to a paper by Knut Sandal of Norges Bank. Close
study of the balance sheets showed what needed writing down and just
how much assets were worth (rather than trusting the banks' own
estimates). And because of quick government action, executives weren't
allowed to sell off what valuable assets remained in order to raise
cash—a move that would have left the banks in even worse position and
depressed the price of good assets by flooding the market with them.
That's still something American bankers could do if they get desperate.
The
key in every Swedish success was haste, and the flaw in every Japanese
mistake was patience. And if policymakers in Washington want to learn
from these case studies, they'll quicken their debate about how to
nationalize. Until they decide, one example they could follow is
Stockholm's decision to storm every distressed bank with accountants
and see just how bad their balance sheets are. That way, investors
would know whether to trust banks and might even pony up equity for
institutions that weren't preparing to write down colossal sums. Until
Washington finalizes its plan, the TARP money is enough oxygen to keep
banks on life support, but not enough to get them breathing—let alone
lending—on their own.
URL:
http://www.newsweek.com/id/183591
©
2009