The Global Financial Crisis: Overview: A Supplement To Macroeconomics (W.W. Norton, 2008)

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The Global Financial Crisis: Overview

Charles I. Jones

A Supplement to Macroeconomics (W.W. Norton, 2008)


May 22, 2009
OVERVIEW
In this chapter, we learn
the causes of the nancial crisis that began in the summer of 2007 and where the
economy currently stands.
how the current nancial crisis compares to previous recessions and previous -
nancial crises in the United States and around the world.
several important concepts in nance, including balance sheet and leverage.

Graduate School of Business, Stanford University. Preliminary comments welcome. I am grateful


to Jules van Binsbergen, Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, Pete Klenow, James Kwak, Jack Repcheck, Josie Smith,
and David Romer for helpful suggestions.
2 CHARLES I. JONES
Wednesday is the type of day people will remember in quant-land for a very
long time. Events that models only predicted would happen once in 10,000
years happened every day for three days.
MatthewRothman, global head of quantitative equity strategies, Lehman
Brothers, August 2007.
1
1. Introduction
The nancial crisis that started in the summer of 2007 and intensied in September
2008 has remade Wall Street. Financial giants such as Bear Stearns, Lehman Brothers,
Merrill Lynch, AIG, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and Citigroup have either disappeared or
been rescued through large government bailouts. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley
converted to bank holding companies in late September, marking the end of an era for
investment banking in the United States.
While the U.S. economy initially appeared surprisingly resilient to the nancial cri-
sis, that is clearly no longer the case. The crisis that began on Wall Street migrated to
Main Street. The National Bureau of Economic Research, the semi-ofcial organization
that dates recessions, determined that a recession began in December 2007. By April
2009, the unemployment rate had risen to 8.9%, up from its low of 4.4% before the re-
cession. Forecasters expect this rate to rise to 10% or even higher in 2010, and it seems
likely that this will go down in history as the worst recession since the Great Depression
of the 1930s.
This chapter provides an overviewof these events and places themin their macroe-
conomic context. We begin by documenting the macroeconomic shocks that have hit
the economy in recent years. Next, we consider data on macroeconomic outcomes like
ination, unemployment, and GDP to document the performance of the economy to
date.
The chapter then studies how nancial factors impact the economy. We introduce
several important nancial concepts, especially balance sheets and leverage. Clearly,
1
Quoted in Kaja Whitehouse, One Quant Sees Shakeout For the Ages 10,000 Years Wall Street
Journal, August 11, 2007.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 3
there is a crisis among nancial institutions tied to a decline in the value of their assets
and the effect this has on their solvency in the presence of leverage. But the crisis has
also struck household balance sheets through a decline in their assets, notably hous-
ing and the stock market. As a result, households have cut back their consumption,
reducing the economys demand for goods and services. Finally, the balance sheets of
both the U.S. government and the Federal Reserve play starring roles in current events.
The Congressional Budget Ofce projects that federal debt as a ratio to GDP will double
over the next decade, from 41% to 82%, in part because of the nancial crisis.
2
And the
Federal Reserve has already more than doubled the size of its balance sheet, pursuing
unconventional means to ensure liquidity in nancial markets. In this sense, the cur-
rent crisis is tightly linked to balance sheets throughout the economy for nancial
institutions, for households, for governments, and for the Federal Reserve.
2. Recent Shocks to the Macroeconomy
What shocks to the macroeconomy have caused the global nancial crisis? A natural
place to start is with the housing market, where prices rose at nearly unprecedented
rates until 2006 and then declined just as sharply. We also discuss the rise in interest
rate spreads (one of the best ways to see the nancial crisis in the data), the decline in
the stock market, and the movement in oil prices.
2.1. Housing Prices
The rst major macroeconomic shock in recent years is a large decline in housing
prices. In the decade leading up to 2006, housing prices grew rapidly before collaps-
ing by more than 30 percent over the next three years, as shown in Figure 1. Fueled by
demand pressures during the new economy of the late 1990s, by low interest rates
in the 2000s, and by ever-loosening lending standards, prices increased by a factor of
nearly 3 between 1996 and 2006, an average rate of about 10% per year. Gains were sig-
nicantly larger in some coastal markets, such as Boston, Los Angeles, New York, and
San Francisco.
2
Congressional Budget Ofce, APreliminary Analysis of the Presidents Budget and an Update of CBOs
Budget and Economic Outlook, March 2009.
4 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 1: A Bursting Bubble in U.S. Housing Prices?
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
220
Year
Housing Price Index (Jan 2000=100, ratio scale)
Decline of 31.6 percent
since peak!
Note: After rising sharply in the years up to 2006, housing prices have since fallen
dramatically. Source: The S&P/Case-Shiller U.S. 10-City monthly index of hous-
ing prices (nominal).
Alarmingly, the national index for housing prices in the United States declined by
31.6% between the middle of 2006 and February 2009. This is remarkable because it is
by far the largest decline in the index since its inception in 1987. By comparison, the
next largest decline was just 7% during the 199091 recession.
What caused the large rise and then sharp fall in housing prices? The answer brings
us to the nancial turmoil in recent years.
2.2. The Global Saving Glut
In March 2005, before he chaired the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke gave a speech
entitledThe Global Saving Glut andthe U.S. Current Account Decit. Withthe benet
of hindsight, we cannowlook at this speechand see one of the maincauses of the sharp
rise in asset prices. The genesis of the current nancial turmoil has its source, at least
to some extent, in nancial crises that occurred a decade ago.
Inthis speech, Governor Bernanke notedthat nancial crises inthe 1990s prompted
an important shift in the macroeconomics of a number of developing countries, espe-
cially in Asia. Prior to the crises many of these countries had modest trade and current
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 5
account decits: essentially, they were investing more than they were saving, and this
investment was nanced by borrowing from the rest of the world. For rapidly growing
countries, this approach has some merit: they will be richer in the future, so it makes
sense to borrow now in order to maintain consumption while investing to build new
highways and equip new factories.
For a variety of reasons (discussed in more detail in Chapter 17), these countries
experienced a series of nancial crises in the 1990s: Mexico in 1994, Asia in 19971998,
Russia in 1998, Brazil in 1999, and Argentina in 2002. The result was a sharp decline
in lending from the rest of the world, steep falls in the value of their currencies and
stock markets, and signicant recessions. After the crises, these countries increased
their saving substantially and curtailed their foreignborrowing, instead becoming large
lenders to the rest of the world especially to the United States. While developing
countries on net borrowed $88 billion in 1996 from the rest of the world, by 2003 they
were instead saving a net $205 billion into the worlds capital markets.
Bernanke argued that this reversal produced a global saving glut: capital markets
in advanced countries were awash in additional saving in search of good investment
opportunities. This demand for investments contributed to rising asset markets in the
United States, including the stock market and the housing market. One way this hap-
pened was through the creation of mortgage-backed securities, as we see in the next
two sections.
2.3. Subprime Lending and the Rise in Interest Rates
Lured by low interest rates associated with the global saving glut, by increasingly lax
lending standards, and perhaps by the belief that housing prices could only continue
to rise, large numbers of borrowers took out mortgages and purchased homes between
2000 and 2006. These numbers include many so-called subprime borrowers whose
loan applications did not meet mainstream standards, for example because of poor
credit records or high existing debt-to-income ratios. According to The Economist, by
2006, one fth of all new mortgages were subprime.
3
Against this background and after more than two years of exceedingly low inter-
3
An excellent early summary of the subprime crisis and the liquidity shock of 2007 can be found in
CSI: Credit Crunch The Economist, October 18, 2007.
6 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 2: The Fed Funds Rate
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Year
Percent
Note: After keeping interest rates very low from 2002 to 2004, the Fed raised rates
sharply over the next two years. Following the nancial turmoil that began in
August 2007, the Fed cut interest rates even more sharply. Source: FRED (Federal
Reserve Economic Data), courtesy of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis: http:
//research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/.
est rates, the Federal Reserve began to raise its fed funds target the rate charged for
overnight loans between banks as shown in Figure 2. Between May 2004 and May
2006, the Fed raised its interest rate from 1.25% to 5.25%, in part because of concerns
over increases in ination. (This was arguably a reasonable policy according to the
Taylor Rule, interest rates were too low in the preceding years and the Fed raised them
to a more reasonable level. This will be discussed further below.) Higher interest rates
generally lead to a softening of the housing market, as borrowing becomes more costly.
In an environment with subprime borrowers facing mortgages whose rates were mov-
ing from low teaser rates to much higher market rates, the effect on housing prices was
even more severe. According to Chairman Bernanke, by August 2007, nearly 16 per-
cent of subprime mortgages with adjustable rates were in default.
4
Since that time,
the problem has spiraled as low housing prices led to defaults, which lowered housing
4
Ben S. Bernanke, The Recent Financial Turmoil and its Economic and Policy Consequences October
15, 2007.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 7
prices even further in a vicious cycle.
2.4. The Financial Turmoil of 2007-20??
To understand the nancial turmoil that followed, it helps to appreciate a (generally
valuable) innovation in nance known as securitization. Like a decadent buffet at an
expensive hotel, securitization involves lumping together large numbers of individual
nancial instruments such as mortgages and then slicing and dicing them into differ-
ent pieces that appeal to different types of investors. A hedge fund may take the riskiest
piece in the hope of realizing a high return. A pension fund may take a relatively safe
portion, constrained by the rules under which it operates. The resulting pieces go by
many names and acronyms, such as mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed com-
mercial paper, and collateralized debt obligations (CDOs).
5
In principle, combining large numbers of assets can diversify the risk associated
withany individual asset. For instance, one subprime mortgage may be especially risky,
but if you put thousands together and only a few default, the aggregate instrument
will be mostly insulated. In the case of the subprime crisis, however, the underlying
mortgages proved to be signicantly riskier than most investors realized. Banks that
generated the mortgages sold them off and did not have to bear the consequences if
their particular mortgages went bad; as a result, lending standards deteriorated. More-
over, securitization is based to a great extent on the supposition that a large fraction
of mortgages will not go bad at the same time. After all, the history of the U.S. hous-
ing market was that while some regions experienced large declines, the overall national
market was relatively stable. When the Fed raised interest rates, more and more sub-
prime mortgages went under, housing prices fell nationwide, and this led to even more
defaults. Securitization did not (and cannot) insulate investors from aggregate risk.
As sophisticated nancial instruments were developed and traded, it became dif-
cult to know howmuch exposure an individual bank had to this risk. In August of 2007,
these forces came to a head and banks sharply increased the interest rates that they
charged one another: If Bank A worries that Bank B is backed by a large number of bad
mortgages, it will demand a premium to lend money or may not lend at all. There was
a ight to safety as lenders decided to place their funds in U.S. Treasury bills gov-
5
A quick visit to Wikipedia can provide more details on these and other nancial instruments.
8 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 3: Liquidity and Risk Shocks since August 2007
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
Year
Percentage points
Spread between the 3month LIBOR rate
and the 3month U.S. treasury bill yield
Note: The rate at which banks borrow and lend to one another rose sharply in
August 2007 during the subprime crisis and then spiked in September 2008 with
the collapse of Lehman Brothers. Source: EconStats.com.
ernment bonds that mature in one year or less, sometimes called T-bills instead of
lending to other banks. As a result, the spread between T-bill yields and interbank lend-
ing rates rose dramatically, as shown in Figure 3. What had been a modest premium of
0.2 to 0.4 percentage points rose sharply to between 1.0 and 1.5 percentage points. If
the yield on treasuries was 2.0%, banks might lend to one another at 2.3% before the
crisis. Once the crisis started, these rates rose to as much as 3.5%, and the amount
of lending dropped, producing a classic example of a liquidity crisis a situation in
which the volume of transactions in some nancial markets falls sharply, making it dif-
cult to value certain nancial assets and thereby raising questions about the overall
value of the rms holding those assets. InSeptember 2008, the crisis intensied and the
risk premium exploded from around 1.0 percentage point to more than 3.5 percentage
points. Panic set in, and the end of Wall Street investment banking was nigh.
In the course of two weeks in September 2008, the government took over the mort-
gage companies Fannie Mae andFreddie Mac, LehmanBrothers collapsedintobankruptcy,
Merrill Lynch was sold to Bank of America, and the Federal Reserve organized an $85
billion bailout of AIG. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chair Ben Bernanke
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 9
Figure 4: The S&P 500 Stock Price Index (Real)
1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
80
160
320
640
1280
2560
Year
Real Stock Price Index (ratio scale)
Note: The real value of the S&P500 stock price index declined by more than 50
percent between its peak in November 2007 and March 2008 before recovering
somewhat in recent months. Source: Robert Shiller, http://www.econ.yale.edu/

shiller/data.htm
met with Congressional leaders to outline the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Pro-
gram(TARP), withBernanke warning, If we dont do this, we may not have aneconomy
on Monday.
6
Financial markets declined sharply during this time, as shown in Figure 4. The S&P
500 stock price index fell by more than 50% from its recent peak in 2007, placing it
below levels from a decade earlier.
2.5. Oil Prices
If the decline in housing prices and the nancial crisis were not enough, the economy
also suffered from large movements in oil prices.
After nearly two decades of relative tranquility, oil prices rose in mid-2008 to lev-
els never seen before. These prices are shown in Figure 5. From a low of about $20
per barrel in 2002, oil prices peaked at more than $140 per barrel during the summer
of 2008. This seven-fold increase is comparable in magnitude to the oil shocks of the
6
This crisis period is laid out in vivid detail in Joe Nocera, As Credit Crisis Spiraled, Alarm Led to Ac-
tion, the New York Times, October 1, 2008.
10 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 5: The Price of Oil
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
Year
Price of Oil, per barrel (2009 dollars)
Note: Oil prices rose by more than a factor of 6 between 2002 and July 2008,
roughly comparable to the increase in the 1970s. Remarkably, prices then fell
off a cliff, returning to the $40 per barrel range. Source: The FRED database.
1970s. Other basic commodities such as natural gas, coal, steel, corn, wheat, and rice
also featured large price increases. Then, spectacularly, oil prices declined even more
sharply so that by the end of 2008 they hovered around $40 per barrel.
Why did these prices rise and then fall so sharply? It is instructive to consider the
case of oil more carefully. The rst fact to appreciate is that world oil consumption
has increased signicantly during this same period of sharply rising prices. For exam-
ple, during the rst half of 2008, a decline in oil consumption among OECD countries
(including the United States) was more than offset by increases in China, India, and
the Middle East. Rising prices coupled with rising quantities are a classic sign of an
outward shift in demand, and it appears that rising demand throughout the world
but especially among some rapidly growing emerging economies is a major driv-
ing force behind the increase in the prices of basic commodities. Shorter-term factors
such as supply disruptions, macroeconomic volatility (in the United States, China, and
elsewhere), and poor crop yields appear to have played a role in exacerbating the price
movements. The economic slowdown associated with the global nancial crisis then
relieved this demand pressure, at least partially, which goes some way toward explain-
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 11
Figure 6: Employment in the U.S. Economy
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
128
130
132
134
136
138
140
Year
Millions
Note: Total nonfarm employment peaked in December 2007, the date the reces-
sion is said to have started, at more than 138 million. More than 5.7 million jobs
have been lost since then. Source: The FRED database.
ing the recent declines. Nevertheless, it is difcult to justify both $140 per barrel in the
summer of 2008 and $40 per barrel more recently as both being consistent with funda-
mentals; some speculative elements may have played a role as well.
7
3. Macroeconomic Outcomes
Following the sharp increase in oil prices, the large decline in housing prices, and the
ensuing nancial turmoil, the macroeconomy entered a recession in December 2007.
The recession rst showed up in employment, as shown in Figure 6. Total nonfarm
employment peaked at 138 million in 2007. Since then, more than 5.7 million jobs have
been lost.
The recession shows up a bit later in short-run output. As seen in Figure 7, short-
run output is slightly positive at the start of 2008. By the start of 2009, however, output
7
On the recent sharp swings in oil prices, see James Hamiltons Oil Prices and Economic Fundamen-
tals online at Econbrowser, July 28, 2008 and his more detailed study, Understanding Crude Oil Prices
NBER Working Paper 14492, November 2008.
12 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 7: U.S. Short-Run Output,

Y
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
4%
3%
2%
1%
0
+1%
+2%
Year
Short-Run Output,

Y
Note: After its initial resilience to the nancial crisis, the real economy has declined sharply.
By the rst quarter of 2009, GDP was 3.6% below potential. Source: The FRED database and
authors calculations.
is 3.6% below potential. The recession can also be seen in the unemployment rate in
Figure 8. From a low in 2007 of 4.4 percent, the unemployment rate has been rising
sharply, reaching 8.9% in April 2009 and likely heading higher.
3.1. A Comparison to Previous Recessions
Table 1 provides an alternative perspective on the current recession. This table shows
some key statistics in two ways: averaged over previous recessions going back to 1950
and for the current recession. For example, during the typical recession, GDP falls by
about 1.7%. As of the rst quarter of 2009, GDP in the current recession had already
fallen by 2.4%. This number seems sure to worsen in the coming quarters as the reces-
sion continues.
The employment measures clearly indicate that this recession is worse than usual.
Nonfarm employment is down by 4.2%, compared with a typical fall of 2.1%. Similarly,
the unemployment rate in the current recession is up by 4.0 percentage points, com-
pared with 2.5 percentage points in the average recession.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 13
Table 1: Changes in Key Macroeconomic Variables: Previous Recessions and the Cur-
rent Recession
Average of previous Current recession
recessions since 1950 (as of April 2009)
GDP -1.7% -2.4%
Nonfarm Employment -2.1% -4.2%
Unemployment Rate 2.5 4.0
Components of GDP
Consumption 0.4% -1.0%
Investment -14.7% -25.3%
Government Purchases 1.2% 2.2%
Exports -1.5% -10.2%
Imports -4.4% -16.6%
Note: The current recession has recently begun to show up in GDP but is already large in terms
of employment. It also features a particularly large decline in consumption. Source: The FRED
database.
14 CHARLES I. JONES
Figure 8: The U.S. Unemployment Rate
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Year
Percent
Note: The unemployment rate has risen sharply since 2007, reaching 8.9% in
April 2009. Source: The FRED database.
The remainder of Table 1 explores the components of GDP and shows an important
way in which the current recession is atypical. On average during the last half century,
recessions are characterized by a relatively stable level of consumption it actually
rises by a small amount of 0.4%in past recessions. The severity of the current recession
is already evident inconsumption, which has fallenby 1.0%. Inmost recessions, house-
holds seek to smooth their consumption even though GDP is declining. This recession,
however, has been led in part by declines in consumption itself. One explanation for
this behavior is that the large declines in housing and the stock market have reduced
household wealth substantially. This is a decline in permanent income, and consump-
tion has fallen accordingly.
Investment and exports are also down sharply, much more than in the typical reces-
sion. Government purchases of goods and services is the one bright spot, having risen
by a modest amount.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 15
Figure 9: Ination in the United States (CPI)
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
Year
Percent
Excluding food
and energy
All items
Note: 12-month ination rates rose sharply during the rst half of 2008, driven largely by the
price of energy and food, peaking in July 2008 at 5.5%. Declining oil prices have reversed this
trend, and prices actually declined between December 2007 and December 2008. Excluding
food and energy, ination has been substantially more stable, though even this core ination
rate declined in recent months. Source: The FRED database.
3.2. Ination
Figure 9 shows ination since 2000, both for all items and for the so-called core
ination rate that excludes food and energy prices. The overall ination rate shows a
sharp swing in 2008, driven in large part by the movements in energy prices. The rise
in the price of oil in the rst half of the year leads the ination rate to peak at about
5.5% in the middle of the year. The sharp decline in the price of oil actually produces a
negative ination rate by the end of 2008. As of April of 2009, the overall CPI had fallen
by 0.6% over the previous twelve months.
In contrast, the core ination rate has been much smoother. Core ination was just
over 2.0% during the last several years. In the current recession, ination has declined
slightly, and the rate as of April 2009 was 1.9%.
Case Study: A Comparison to Other Financial Crises
How does the U.S. experience so far compare to outcomes in other nancial crises,
16 CHARLES I. JONES
Table 2: Average Outcomes of a Financial Crisis
Economic Statistic Average Outcome
Housing prices -35%
Equity price -56%
Unemployment +7 percentage points
Duration of rising unemployment 4.8 years
Real GDP -9.3%
Duration of falling GDP 1.9 years
Increase in real government debt +86%
Note: Financial crises are typically quite long and very costly. Source: Carmen
Reinhart andKennethRogoff, The Aftermathof Financial Crises HarvardUni-
versity working paper, December 2008.
and what might the future hold? Carmen Reinhart and Ken Rogoff have gathered data
on many of the major nancial crises that have hit the world in the last century, includ-
ing the Great Depression, Japan in the 1990s, Sweden in 1991, and the Asian nancial
crisis of 1997. Theyve studied closely how a nancial crisis affects the macroeconomy
along a number of key dimensions. Their results are summarized in Table 2.
The bottom line of their historical study is that nancial crises are typically quite
long and very costly to the economy. For example, the unemployment rate rises on av-
erage by 7 percentage points over the course of almost 5 years, government debt nearly
doubles, and real GDP declines by close to 10%. While there is variation around these
averages some crises are shorter and shallower while others are longer and deeper
these data suggest that during the typical nancial crisis, outcomes are much worse
than what weve seen to date in the United States. This could indicate that the cur-
rent crisis will not be as severe, but it seems more likely that further declines in the real
economy are coming over the next year.
End of Case Study
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 17
Figure 10: Economic Growth around the World, Historical and Forecast
1990 1995 2000 2005 2010
4
2
0
2
4
6
8
10
Year
Percent
World
Emerging economies
Advanced economies
Note: The IMF forecasts that world GDP growth in 2009 will be -1.3%, its slowest
rate since World War II. Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic
Outlook Update Global Economic Slump Challenges Policies, April 2009.
3.3. The Rest of the World
Another important feature of the current nancial crisis is that it is nowglobal in scope.
The advancedcountries of the world including Japan, Germany, the U.K., and France
are all inor headed for deeprecessions. Recently, for example, Japanannounced that
GDP in the rst quarter of 2009 fell at an annualized rate of more than 15%, its sharpest
decline since 1974.
Figure 10 shows GDP growth for the world as a whole going back to 1990, together
with forecasts by the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for 2009 and 2010. The IMF
forecasts that world GDP will actually decline in 2009, falling by 1.3%. The forecasts
for individual countries are also grim: GDP is projected to fall by 4.0% in the European
Union and by 6.2% in Japan. Growth in emerging markets, including China, is forecast
to slow signicantly.
There are at least two important implications of the global nature of this nancial
crisis. First, it means that exports are not going to be a major source of demand for the
United States or for any other country. In the 1990s, Japan could hope that demand
18 CHARLES I. JONES
from the rest of the world would mitigate its slump. Such hope is not available for the
world as a whole. Infact, declines inexport demand fromthe rest of the world will likely
be an important drag on GDP growth in many countries. Second, the global nature of
the crisis emphasizes that this recession is markedly different from much of what has
come before.
4. Some Fundamentals of Financial Economics
To understand the nancial crisis, it is helpful to have some familiarity with several
basic concepts in nance. As mentioned earlier, the current crisis is in many ways a
balance sheet crisis. This section explains what a balance sheet is, how the equity or
net worth of a company is determined, and the important concept of leverage and how
it makes companies and individuals very sensitive to relatively small declines in asset
prices.
4.1. Balance Sheets
Many of the basic issues involved in the nancial crisis can be illuminated by focusing
on the balance sheet of nancial institutions, other companies, and households. As
an example, consider the balance sheet of a hypothetical bank, displayed in Table 3.
This hypothetical bank is modeled very loosely on the large commercial banks, like
Citigroup or Bank of America.
8
A balance sheet consists of two columns. On the left are
the assets of the institution items of value that the institution owns. On the right are
the liabilities items of value that the institution owes to others.
In our example, the bank has three categories of assets. It has $1000 billion of loans
that it has made (suchas mortgages or loans to businesses). It has $900 billionininvest-
ments for example, the bank may ownsome Treasury bonds, some mortgage-backed
securities, and some collateralized debt obligations. Finally, the bank has $100 billion
in cash and reserves including reserves that it is required to hold on deposit with the
Federal Reserve. The total assets of the bank are therefore $2000 billion, or $2 trillion.
On the liability side, our hypothetical bank also has three categories. The main lia-
bility of most banks are the deposits that households and businesses have made. These
8
To see their actual balance sheets, take a look at http://nance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=BAC, for example.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 19
Table 3: A Hypothetical Banks Balance Sheet (billions of dollars)
Assets Liabilities
Loans 1000 Deposits 1000
Investments 900 Short-Term Debt 400
Cash and reserves 100 Long-Term Debt 400
Total Assets: 2000 Total Liabilities: 1800
Equity (net worth) 200
Note: The net worth of a company is the difference between its total assets and its total
liabilities. Because net worth is usually small relative to assets, a modest decline in the
value of assets can render a company bankrupt.
deposits are a liability to the bank they are funds owed to someone else. In our ex-
ample, the bank has $1000 billion of deposits. It also may have borrowed funds from
other nancial institutions, which are another kind of liability. Here, the bank has $400
billion in short-term debt (for example, 30-day commercial paper) and $400 billion in
long-term debt (such as 10-year corporate bonds). These liabilities total $1800 billion.
The reason this is called a balance sheet is that the two columns must balance. And
the key category that makes them balance is called equity or net worth or even some-
times simply capital. Equity is the difference between total assets and total liabilities
and represents the value of the insitution to its shareholders or owners (and hence is
owed to someone else, which is why it is reported on the liability side of the balance
sheet). In our example, the bank has a net worth of $200 billion.
Banks are subject to various nancial regulations, for reasons that will become clear
in a moment. For example, a reserve requirement mandates that banks keep a certain
fraction, such as 3%, of their deposits in a special account (on reserve) with the cen-
tral bank. Similarly, a capital requirement mandates that the capital (net worth) of the
bank be at least a certain fraction of the banks total assets, such as 6%. For the hy-
pothetical bank shown in Table 3, the bank appears to have about 10% of its deposits
held in reserves (and cash), and capital is 10% (=200/2000) of total assets. So this bank
20 CHARLES I. JONES
satises the reserve requirement and the capital requirement in our example.
4.2. Leverage
In an unforgettable scene from the 1967 movie, The Graduate, Dustin Hoffman plays a
young man, Benjamin, who gets career advice from one of his fathers business asso-
ciates, Mr. McGuire:
Mr. McGuire: I want to say one word to you. Just one word.
Benjamin: Yes, sir.
Mr. McGuire: Are you listening?
Benjamin: Yes, I am.
Mr. McGuire: Plastics.
If this scene were playing out today as an explanation for the nancial crisis, the one
word would be leverage. This word is largely responsible for the nancial regulations
outlined above and is at the heart of how a relatively small shock to the entire wealth of
the United States can be turned into a global nancial crisis.
Leverage is the ratio of total liabilities to net worth. For our hypothetical bank, this
leverage ratio is 9 (=1800/200). For every $10 of assets the bank holds, $9 is essentially
nanced by borrowing and only $1 is nanced by money put up by the shareholders.
Leverage then magnies any changes in the value of assets and liabilities in terms of
the return to shareholders.
To see why, consider what happens to our bank if it has a good year and its invest-
ments go up in value by $100b, from $900b to $1000b. These investments have earned
a return of 11% (=100/900). After the good year, the banks total assets are now $2100b
and its equity rises from $200b to $300b. The gain of $100b in equity, however, repre-
sents a 50% increase! The 11% return on investments gets magnied into a 50% return
to shareholders because of leverage.
A more familiar example of leverage is associated with a homeowners mortgage.
The newhomeowner may put 20%down and borrow80%of the value of the newhome.
If the house initially costs $500,000, the homeowner starts with $100,000 in equity in
the house. Now think about what happens if the price of the house rises by 10%, to
$550,000. Now the homeowner has $150,000 of equity and has made a 50% gain on
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 21
his or her investment. The reason the 10% price increase turns into a 50% gain to the
homeowner is because the original investment is leveraged through the mortgage.
Thats the great appeal of leverage: when prices are going up, a modest gain on a
house or other investment can be turned into a huge gain on the owners initial eq-
uity. But of course there is a downside to leverage as well. In the mortgage example,
the downside is easy to see: if house prices fall by 10% instead of rising by 10%, the
homeowner loses 50%of his or her equity.
9
If prices fall by 20%, the entire equity is lost.
Leverage magnies both the gains and the losses on investments.
Returning to our bank example, suppose market prices were to fall sharply so that
the banks investments were worth $600b instead of $900b. Total assets would also fall
by $300b, to a new level of $1700b. Even though the total value of assets has only fallen
by 15%, this change in market prices would entirely wipe out the banks equity: net
worth would go from +$200b to -$100b. The assets owned by the bank would no longer
be large enough to cover the liabilities that the bank owes to others. In this situation,
we say the bank is insolvent or bankrupt. When a bank or rm is highly leveraged, a
given percentage change in the value of its assets has a much larger proportional effect
on its net worth. This magnication is a result of leverage.
Before the nancial crisis, major investment banks had leverage ratios that were
even higher than in these examples. For example, when Bear Stearns collapsed, its
leverage was 35 to 1.
10
Roughly speaking, the major investment banks owned complex
investment portfolios, including signicant quantities of soon-to-be toxic assets, that
were nanced with $3 of their own equity and $97 of borrowing. Given such extraordi-
nary leverage, major investment banks were in a precarious position where a relatively
small aggregate shock could send them over the insolvency edge.
4.3. Bank Runs and Liquidity Crises
Another classic version of a nancial crisis that is easy to understand using balance
sheets is a bank run. During the Great Depression of the 1930s, depositors worried
about the possibility that banks might go under and not be able to return their de-
posits. At times, this led all depositors to converge on the bank at once to demand
9
The price of the house falls from$500,000 to $450,000, resulting in a loss of $50,000. The homeowners
equity therefore declines from its original level of $100,000 to $50,000, a 50% loss.
10
Roddy Boyd, The Last Days of Bear-Sterns Fortune March 31, 2008.
22 CHARLES I. JONES
their deposits back. Looking at the balance sheet in Table 3, one can see the problem.
The bank only has $100 billion in cash and reserves on hand to repay the depositors.
The majority of the banks assets are held in loans and investments, relatively illiquid
forms that are hard to turn into cash quickly at fair value. To repay all of its depositors,
the bank may be forced to call in outstanding loans and to sell some of its investments
quickly. To the extent that these actions lead the values of these assets to fall, the bank
run itself may cause the bank to have negative equity, a kind of self-fullling prophecy.
In 1933, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) was set up to provide gov-
ernment insurance for deposits, a measure that has largely eliminated this kind of bank
run.
A related problem on the liability side has occurred in the recent nancial crisis,
however. In this case, it is not the deposits that were the problem, but rather the short-
term debt. Financial institutions often have relatively large amounts of short-term
debt, in part to provide liquidity as they manage their deposits, loans, and investments.
An example is commercial paper, which is often traded with maturities of one week or
less. Banks may borrow in the commercial paper market to fund the cash entry on
the asset side of their balance sheet, which is used to manage their day-to-day com-
mitments. In the last months of 2008 following the collapse of Lehman Brothers, nan-
cial institutions became extraordinarily worried about lending money via commercial
paper to other nancial institutions that might become insolvent. Interest rates on
commercial paper rose sharply by more than 5 percentage points, and access to this
form of liquidity was sharply curtailed. To fund their daily operations, banks may then
be forced to sell some of their less liquid assets at re sale prices, reducing their net
worth potentially all the way to insolvency.
4.4. Financial Wrap-Up
Leverage is like the genie that emerges from the magic lamp. When asset prices are
rising, leverage can turn a 10% return into a 50% return. In the period leading up to the
current nancial crisis, the genie was granting wishes and nancial institutions earned
huge prots by expanding their leverage. When rms take leveraged bets that pay off 9
times out of 10, they can have long runs of seemingly amazing returns.
The problem occurs when the genie inevitably catches you in a slip of the tongue.
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 23
The declines in housing prices since 2006 and the decline in the stock market have
combined with leverage to threaten the solvency of many nancial institutions. Be-
cause the nancial system is so integrated nancial institutions borrow and lend
large sums with each other every day in normal times problems in a few banks can
create a systemic risk for the nancial system as a whole. Paul ONeill, a former Trea-
sury secretary under President Bush, summarized this risk with a nice analogy: if you
have ten bottles of water and one is poisoned, but you dont knowwhich, no one drinks
water.
11
5. Summary
1. The U.S. economy has suffered several major shocks in recent years. Initially
these shocks included a large declining in house prices and a spike in the prices
of oil and other commodities.
2. The decline in house prices reduced the value of mortgage backed securities. Be-
cause of leverage, this threatened the solvency of a number of nancial institu-
tions, including major investment banks. Risk premiums rose sharply on many
kinds of lending, and the stock market lost about half its value.
3. These shocks have combinedtoput the U.S. economy andmany economies through-
out the world into a nancial crisis and a deep recession, likely the largest since
the Great Depression.
4. Balance sheets are an accounting device for summarizing the assets, liabilities,
and net worth (or equity) of an institution. This can be a bank, a household, or a
government, for example.
5. Leverage is the ratio of liabilities to equity. Financial institutions are typically
highly leveraged; for example, $10 of assets may be nanced by $1 of equity and
$9 of debt, a leverage ratio of 9 to 1. Major investment banks before the nancial
crisis were even more highly leveraged, on the order of 35 to 1.
6. Leverage magnies both returns and losses, so that small percentage changes in
the value of assets or liabilities can be enough to entirely wipe out equity, causing
11
Deborah Solomon, Market Leader: Questions for Paul ONeill New York Times, March 30, 2008.
24 CHARLES I. JONES
an institution to become insolvent, or bankrupt.
7. During the height of the nancial crisis, the solvency of numerous nancial insti-
tutions was called into question. Because nancial rms are interlinked through
a complex web of loans, insurance contracts, and securities, problems in a few -
nancial institutions can create problems in many others, which is called systemic
risk.
6. Key Concepts
assets, balance sheets, bankruptcy, capital, capital requirements, equity, the global sav-
ing glut, insolvency, leverage, liabilities, net worth, securitization, systemic risk
7. ReviewQuestions
1. By roughly howmuch have housing prices fallen during the nancial crisis? What
about the stock market?
2. How severe is the current recession? What pieces of economic data would you
cite to support your answer?
3. What is a balance sheet? What is net worth?
4. What is leverage, and why is it so important in understanding the nancial crisis?
8. Exercises
1. The latest data on the nancial crisis: Pick two gures from this chapter and
update them to include the latest available data. What does this tell you about
how the economy has evolved in response to the nancial crisis?
2. The current state of the European economy: By now, you are relatively familiar
with recent economic events in the United States. But what about Europe? Write
a bit about the state of the economy in the Euro area (to keep the question man-
ageable) over the last several years. What has happened to ination, real GDP
THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS: OVERVIEW May 22, 2009 25
growth, and unemployment? What about a key policy interest rate set by the Eu-
ropean Central Bank (ECB) (Hint: the ECB sets several key interest rates including
a deposit rate the interest rate the ECB pays on deposits from banks and a
lending rate the interest rate it charges for overnight loans. All are useful and
interesting. To keep us all on the same page, lets look at the lending rate)? An ex-
tremely helpful resource for this exercise is the ECBs Statistical Data Warehouse:
http://sdw.ecb.europa.eu. (You may nd it convenient to make a brief table of
this data or even to copy some of the ECBs graphs.)
3. Leverage in the nancial system: Choose two nancial institutions and look up
their balance sheets online (for example, Yahoo Finance provides this data in
an easily-accessible form at http://nance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=GS). What is the
leverage ratio of the two companies youve chosen? For each $100 of assets, how
much is nanced with equity and how much with debt? By what percentage
would assets have to decline in value in order to bankrupt these nancial insti-
tutions?
4. Systemic risk: Consider the following balance sheets for two hypothetical nan-
cial institutions, Bank B and Bank C:
Bank Bs Balance Sheet
Assets Liabilities
Cash 1000 Deposits 1400
Loan to Bank C 500
Total Assets: ??? Total Liabilities: ???
Equity (net worth) ???
26 CHARLES I. JONES
Bank Cs Balance Sheet
Assets Liabilities
Mortgage backed securities 800 Deposits 200
Loan from Bank B 500
Total Assets: ??? Total Liabilities: ???
Equity (net worth) ???
(a) Fill in the missing entries in the balance sheets, denoted ???.
(b) What is the leverage ratio in each bank?
(c) Suppose housing prices fall sharply and the mortgage backed securities held
by Bank C fall in value to only $500. What happens to Bank Cs net worth?
(d) The shortfall in Bank Cs equity means that it cannot repay the loan it re-
ceived from Bank B. Assume Bank C pays back as much as it can, while still
making good on its deposits. What happens to the net worth of Bank B?
(e) Discuss briey how this is related to systemic risk.

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