The Credit Crisis Challenges and Opportunities in Dealmaking

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							The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View
       2009 JRCLS Annual Conference
             Harvard Law School
              February 14, 2009



                Randall D. Guynn
                Head of the Financial Institutions
                Group
                Davis Polk & Wardwell
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Background
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers




                                                         2
Background – How did we get here?

 Same pattern as almost every
  other mania, panic and crash
  before this one:
   Cheap credit →
   Excessive optimism →
   Pricing bubble (real estate and
    commodities) →
   Bubble pops (price collapse that
    is still collapsing) →
   Extreme uncertainty about “true”
    asset values →
   Excessive (or wise?) pessimism



                                       3
Background – How did we get here? (Cont’d)

 The financial sector is the most immediate and hardest hit
 Characteristics of financial institutions
   High leverage
   Illiquid long-term assets
   Extremely short-term liabilities (e.g., demand deposits)

 These characteristics make financial institutions susceptible to “runs
  on the bank”
 Run on a bank (or other FI) will result in sudden and unexpected
  death spiral
   FIs are different from widget companies, which typically slide slowly into
    bankruptcy
   FIs almost always fail suddenly and unexpectedly
   This time is no different from the past
   Main Street vs. Wall Street                                                  4
Background – How did we get here? (Cont’d)

 Rational response makes things worse
   Circle the wagons
   Increase and hoard cash
   Reduce amount of credit extended
   Otherwise reduce leverage
   Inverse money multiplier effect

 Results in severe contraction of credit throughout the system
   Hurts everyone – FIs, widget companies, consumers
   Negative externality like air pollution




                                                                  5
Background – How did we get here? (Cont’d)

 Inverse money multiplier magnifies contraction of credit (money)
    – Money multiplier: M * 1/R, where M = amount deposited in a single bank
      and R = fractional reserve requirement
    – Amplifies expansion of credit in normal times when banks are permitted
      and choose to hold only a fraction of cash reserves to satisfy demand
      deposit claims
    – Magic of money multiplier in normal times: Assume 10% reserve
      requirement (R), every $100 deposited in a bank will multiply by 10
      times into $1,000 of credit throughout system
    – Tragedy of inverse money multiplier: If banks are legally required or
      choose to circle the wagons during a financial crisis, so that reserves
      grow from 10% to 20%, the amount of credit available in the system will
      shrink by 50% or $500, not by 10% or $100




                                                                            6
Background – How did we get here? (Cont’d)

 Historical precedents
   1700 BC: Joseph in Egypt
    – Seven Years of Plenty, Seven Years of Famine (Gen 41)
    – By the end, Joseph had bought all the herds of cattle and “all the land of
      Egypt” for Pharaoh in exchange for food (Gen 47:13-26)
   1637: Collapse in tulip prices → banking crisis in Europe
   Banking Panic of 1837 (caused failure of Kirtland Safety Society)
   Banking Panic of 1907 (JP Morgan restores confidence)
   The 1929 Crash and the Great Depression (1930s)
   Savings & loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s
    – Precipitated by collapse in the price of agricultural commodities, oil and
      real estate
   The Global Financial Crisis of 2008
                                                                               7
Background – How did we get here? (Con’d)

 What was different this time?
 Global macro economic factors
   Excess savings in rapidly developing countries (China) invested in debt of
    industrialized countries, driving down interest rates
   Cheap exports from developing countries (esp. China, India) kept inflation
    low
   Increased productivity kept inflation low
   U.S. housing and monetary policy, GSEs and securitization drove down
    housing interest rates
   Excessive optimism and cheap credit resulted in real estate bubble, spike
    in consumer debt and financial institution leverage
   Increased demand from developing countries resulted in bubbles in
    commodities prices


                                                                                 8
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         9
Introduction – How bad is it likely to be? (Cont’d)

 Who knows?
 This crisis is far worse than the S&L crisis of the late 1980s and early
  1990s
 Will it be as bad or worse than the Great Depression?




                                                                        10
Introduction – How bad is it likely to be?

 Factors that made things worse (or better?) this time
   The very instruments that helped manage credit risk, reduce the cost of
    credit and increase the availability of credit
    – Securitizations of mortgage loans (e.g., mortgage-backed securities)
    – Securitizations of securitizations (e.g., collateralized debt obligations, or
      CDOs, and CDO-squared)
    – Credit default swaps (CDSs)
   Excessive confidence (as it now turns out) in financial models
   Failure of rating agencies to update credit rating models with changes in
    the marketplace
   Mark to market or model (or “fair value”) accounting rules




                                                                                 11
 Real-Estate-Related Securities

   Home             Originators            Securitization Re-Securitization:
  Owners             /Lenders              (Underwriters)       CDO                            CDO2                 Investors


                                        100%                    11%
                                                                                                                     Hedge
                                                                          Super                 AAA                  Funds
                                                 AAA                      Senior
                                                                           AAA
                      Banks             28%                                                                         Pension
                                                                8.6%                            BBB
                                                  AA                                                                 Funds
                                                                             AAA
                                        20%
                                                   A                          AA
                                                                              A                                       Other
                                        11%                                                    Equity
                                                 BBB                         BBB                                       Inv.
                                         7%                                                                           Banks
                                            Residual/Equity                  Resi
                                         0%                      7%

1) Lender makes    2) Lender issues        3) Bonds backed by         4) Investments       5) New CDOs can          6) Investors buy
   mortgage loan      secured                 mortgages                   may become          be created from           customized
   to home            certificates            created in the              re-securitized      “select” tranches         financial
   owners             backed by loans         primary market              (bonds based        of existing CDOs          instruments
                                                                          on bonds)           with a further “re-
                                                                                              rating” of risk

                                                                                                                               12
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         13
Timeline of Significant Events
              Summer 2007 – Summer 2008

                                                                                       Spring 2008
                        Summer 2007                                        •Continued collapse in real estate prices
               • Real estate prices start to collapse                      •Continued large CDO markdowns
               • Spike in early delinquencies of                           •Rescue of Bear Stearns by JPM
                 2006-2007 subprime mortgages                              •Fed discount window opened to I-
                                                                           banks
                                                                           •Treasury blueprint
Summer 2007




                                                                                                                                        Summer 2008
                                            Fall 2007
                               •Leveraged credit market dries up
                               •Billions of MBS/CDO markdowns                                           Summer 2008
                                                                                             •Interbank credit markets locking up
                                                                                             •Spike in oil / agricultural prices
                                                                                             •Fannie, Freddie, FI mkt caps plummet
                                                                                             •Fed as fin markets stability regulator
                                                   Winter 2007-2008
                                                                                             •Indymac fails
                                          •Sovereign wealth funds to the
                                          rescue                                             •Treasury gets authority to rescue
                                                                                             Fannie/Freddie
                                          •Rescue of Northern Rock by UK
                                          govt

                                                                                                                                       14
Spike in Early Subprime Loan Delinquencies

                           Recent Vintages Show Very Poor Underwriting




   Source:                                                               15
   Federal Reserve staff circulations from
   First American Loan Performance data
Residential Housing Bubble and Collapse

                  S&P / Case-Schiller Home Price Index
     200

     190

     180

     170

     160

     150

     140

     130

     120

     110

     100
           2000    2001   2002     2003   2004   2005   2006   2007 Q3-2008


            Source: Standard & Poor’s
                                                                              16
Timeline of Significant Events
              Summer 2007 – Summer 2008

                                                                                       Spring 2008
                        Summer 2007                                        •Continued collapse in real estate prices
               • Real estate prices start to collapse                      •Continued large CDO markdowns
               • Spike in early delinquencies of                           •Rescue of Bear Stearns by JPM
                 2006-2007 subprime mortgages                              •Fed discount window opened to I-
                                                                           banks
                                                                           •Treasury blueprint
Summer 2007




                                                                                                                                        Summer 2008
                                            Fall 2007
                               •Leveraged credit market dries up
                               •Billions of MBS/CDO markdowns                                           Summer 2008
                                                                                             •Interbank credit markets locking up
                                                                                             •Spike in oil / agricultural prices
                                                                                             •Fannie, Freddie, FI mkt caps plummet
                                                                                             •Fed as fin markets stability regulator
                                                   Winter 2007-2008
                                                                                             •Indymac fails
                                          •Sovereign wealth funds to the
                                          rescue                                             •Treasury gets authority to rescue
                                                                                             Fannie/Freddie
                                          •Rescue of Northern Rock by UK
                                          govt

                                                                                                                                       17
Timeline of Significant Events (Cont’d)
                  September 2008

                     Weekend 1
                 •Freddie, Fannie bailout
                                                                                         Weekend 4
                                                                                  •Citigroup rescues Wachovia
                                                                                  •Fortis, Dexia are
                                     Weekend 2                                    nationalized
                            •Lehman Bros fails
September 2008




                            •Merrill Lynch sells itself to




                                                                                                                                          October 2008
                            BofA




                                                   Week 3
                                    •AIG rescued
                                    •Treasury proposes $750bn                                                       Sept 30
                                    EESA/TARP
                                                                                                       •House rejects EESA/TARP
                                    •Primary reserve money market fund
                                                                                                       •Dow falls record 778 pts, $1.3
                                    “breaks the buck”
                                                                                                       trillion
                                    •Treasury announces guaranty
                                    program for money market funds
                                    •SEC temporary ban on short sales
                                                                   Weekend 3
                                                         •Treasury releases EESA/TARP bill
                                                         •MS, GS become bank holdcos
                                                         •WaMu fails, JPM buys all deposits

                                                                                                                                         18
 Timeline of Significant Events (Cont’d)
                       October 2008
                                        Week 1
               • Senate approves EESA / TARP
               • House reconsiders and President signs; EESA / TARP
                 enacted
               • FDIC insurance coverage increased to $250,000
                                                       Week 2
                            • Fed announces Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF)
                            • U.K. announces bank rescue package




                                                                                                                                             November 2008
                            • Treasury announces bank capital purchase program (policy
                              shift)
October 2008




                            • FDIC announces Temporary Liquidity Guarantee Program
                              (TLGP)



                                                                   Week 3
                                                • Swiss National Bank makes $54 bn loan to UBS
                                                • Germany passes €500 bn rescue package


                                                                                                             Week 4
                                                                                         • First wave of regional banks eligible for
                                                                                           Treasury’s capital purchase program are
                                                                                           identified
                                                                                         • National City rejected – purchased by PNC with
                                                                                           help of CPP money

                                                                                                                                            19
 Timeline of Significant Events (Cont’d)
                     November 2008
                           Week 1
               • Barack Obama elected President
               • Democratic sweep of Congress




                                    Week 2
                      • Fed, Treasury announce expanded
                        investment in AIG, $150 billion




                                                                                                                                    November 2008
                      • Democrats urge aid for auto makers
October 2008




                                                                Week 3
                                                  • Amex becomes BHC
                                                  • Treasury announces that troubled
                                                    asset purchase program is on hold;
                                                    stock market drops 20% in two
                                                    weeks; financial stocks plummet
                                                    even further
                                                                                                         Week 4
                                                  • CIT applies to become a BHC
                                                                                           • Citigroup receives additional $20
                                                  • Hartford, Genworth, Lincoln National     billion from TARP plus government
                                                    acquire thrifts and apply for TARP       guarantee of a $306 billion pool of
                                                  • GMAC announces that it applied to        troubled assets
                                                    become BHC                             • Fed announces $200 bn TALF
                                                                                             program
                                                                                           • Fed announces $100 bn GSE debt        20
                                                                                             purchase program
 Timeline of Significant Events (Cont’d)
                   December 2008 – February 2009

                      December 2008
               • TARP loans $17.4 bn to GM and
                 Chrysler
               • Madoff ponzi scheme revealed –
                 est $50 bn in potential losses
               • Fed approves CIT’s and GMAC’s
                 applications to become BHCs
               • TARP gives $6 bn in financial              January 2009




                                                                                                                                  November 2008
                 assistance to GMAC               • BofA receives additional $20 bn in
               • Consumer spending plummets         TARP investment and a $118 bn
October 2008




               • Unemployment spikes                guarantee of troubled assets
                                                  • Bush Administration requests TARP
                                                    II on behalf of President Elect Obama
                                                  • Obama inauguration
                                                  • Geithner confirmed as new Treasury
                                                    Secretary                                        February 2009
                                                  • UK announces asset guarantee            • New limits on executive
                                                    scheme                                    compensation for FIs who receive
                                                  • Germany announces good bank / bad         TARP money in future
                                                    bank scheme                             • COP, SIG reports on TARP
                                                                                            • SEC roasted for missing Madoff
                                                                                              ponzi scheme
                                                                                            • Fed revises TALF program
                                                                                            • Geithner announces TARP II plans
                                                                                            • Obama $800 bn stimulus bill

                                                                                                                                 21
Spike in Unemployment



                             8.0
                             7.5
       Unemployment Rate %




                             7.0
                             6.5
                             6.0
                             5.5
                             5.0
                             4.5
                             4.0
                             3.5
                               1998         2000        2002   2004   2006   2008


                              Source: Bureau of Labor
                              Statistics
                                                                                    22
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         23
TARP and Other Government Relief Programs


 TARP I
   Capital Purchase Program ($250 billion)
   Systemically Significant Failing Institutions Program (AIG)
   Targeted Investment Program (Citi, BofA)
   Asset Guarantee Program (Citi, BofA)
   Automotive Industry Program (GM, Chrysler)
   TALF Program (with NY Fed)

 TARP II
   Good bank / bad bank?
   Asset purchases?

 Treasury’s $50 billion temporary money market guarantee

                                                                  24
TARP and Other Government Relief Programs

 Other Government Relief Programs
   FDIC
    – Temporary increase in deposit insurance to $250,000
    – Temporary Debt Guarantee Program
    – Temporary Transaction Account Guarantee Program
   Federal Reserve
    – Primary Dealer Credit Facility
    – Term Auction Facility
    – Temporary Securities Lending Facility
    – Commercial Paper Funding Facility
    – Asset Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund Liquidity
      Facility
    – Money Market Investor Funding Facility
    – Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility (TALF) (non-recourse)   25
26
27
TARP I — Evolution

 Initially, the TARP facility was expected to be used to purchase
  mortgages and other real-estate related assets.
   Asset purchases were intended to establish reliable market values
    for these illiquid assets.
 Instead, TARP’s first use was a Capital Purchase Program (CPP)
  meant to recapitalize the U.S. banking system.
 Two Fundamental Public Policy Shifts
   Asset Purchase Program to the CPP
   Control for Moral Hazard vs. Encourage Public Confidence
 On November 12, 2008, Treasury officially announced that the
  development of an Asset Purchase Program was on hold.



                                                                     28
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         29
Legal, Regulatory and Policy Issues and Reactions

 What is the source of Treasury’s, the Fed’s or the FDIC’s legal
  authority for taking control of or investing in private-sector financial
  institutions?
   Fannie and Freddie Conservatorship and Financial Assistance: Expressly
    authorized by new federal statute enacted on July 30, 2008
   Fed Actions: Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act grants power to
    lend to anyone under “unusual and exigent circumstances” (first time
    power exercised since 1932)
   AIG: Section 13(3) of Federal Reserve Act
   $750 billion TARP (EESA)

 Would Raise Serious Legal Issues in the Absence of Express
  Congressional Authorization
   See the Steel Seizure Cases (1952), in which the Supreme Court held that
    President Truman’s seizure of steel mills during the Korean War was
    unconstitutional because unauthorized by Congress
   31 USC 9102 – Prohibition on federal agency acquiring corporation        30
    without express statutory authority
Legal, Regulatory and Policy Issues and Reactions
(Cont’d)

 Precedents
   Reconstruction Finance Corporation (1932): Established by express
    Congressional action to recapitalize the troubled U.S. banking industry
    during the Great Depression. Dissolved in 1957.
   Resolution Trust Corporation (1980s): Established by express
    Congressional action to resolve failed savings associations. Later
    dissolved.

 Government initially followed policy to wipe out common and
  preferred shareholders and senior debt as a condition to government
  assistance
   Common shareholders in Indymac, Bear Stearns, Freddie, Fannie,
    Lehman, AIG and WaMu mostly or completely wiped out
   Pros: Reduces moral hazard
   Cons: Deters new money when a financial institution needs it most;
    encourages strategic behavior by senior debt counterparties
                                                                              31
Legal, Regulatory and Policy Issues and Reactions
(Cont’d)

 Government shifted policy under TARP from asset purchase program
  to capital purchase program
 Government also shifted policy from trying to limit moral hazard
  caused by intervention to restoring public confidence
   Only minor dilutive impact on common shareholders
   Pari passu with existing preferred stock
   Junior to senior and subordinated debt
   Rationale: When we find ourselves on the edge of a cliff looking down, we
    can worry about moral hazard tomorrow. Today’s issue is restoring public
    confidence to encourage new and existing equity investment from private
    sector

 The most FAQs have become: Is $700 billion enough? Why not just
  nationalize the banks?

                                                                          32
Perfect Storm for More Regulation




                                    33
Legal, Regulatory and Policy Issues and Reactions
(Cont’d)
 Regulatory Response - More regulation
   Likely a lot more and harsh
   Main Street vs. Wall Street

 Fed will likely become the systemic risk regulator
 System-wide regulatory consolidation and rationalization more likely
   Treasury Blueprint
   Federal insurance charter and regulator
   CDS clearing house and other regulation of CDS and OTC derivatives
   Merger of CFTC and SEC
   Merger of OTS and OCC

 Scapegoating
   E.g., FBI investigations of the management of recently failed or bailed out
    companies                                                                 34
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         35
Interesting Factoids

 Weekend work: rescues almost always happen on weekends when
  markets are closed
   Window is from the close of U.S. markets on Friday until the opening of
    the Asian markets on Sunday night (U.S. time)

 Freddie and Fannie
   One of the few “genuine” conservatorships in U.S. history (other
    conservatorships are virtually all really “pass-through” receiverships /
    conservatorships to simulate a “bridge bank” device)
   Powers exercised were only one month old

 AIG
   Too big and too entangled globally to fail
   Not previously regulated by the Fed; almost exclusively regulated by the
    states or foreign insurance regulators

                                                                               36
Interesting Factoids (Cont’d)

 Morgan Stanley / Goldman Sachs
   Unprecedented “one-day” conversions into bank holding companies
   Instantly ranked among the five largest bank holding companies in the
    U.S.

 Citigroup / Wachovia
   First use of the “systemic risk” exception to the “least-cost resolution”
    condition for an FDIC-assisted open bank transaction

 Stampede to Become a BHC: MS, GS, AMEX, CIT, GMAC
 Stampede for TARP funds
   Insurance companies buy thrifts to become S&LHCs to qualify for TARP
    money
    – Hartford, Genworth, Lincoln National
   Auto-industry bailout
                                                                                37
The Financial Crisis: A Preliminary View

 Introduction
   Symptoms
   How did we get here?
   How bad is it likely to be?

 Timeline of Significant Events
 TARP and Other Government Relief Programs
 Legal, Regulatory and Political Issues and Reactions
 Interesting Factoids
 Questions and Answers


                                                         38

						
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