Market-based bank capital regulation

Monday, 13 October 2014: 4:50 PM
Jeremy Bulow, Ph.D. , Economics, Stanford, Standford, CA
Paul Klemperer, Ph.D. , Oxford University, Oxford, United Kingdom
Today’s regulatory rules, especially the easily-manipulated measures of regulatory capital, have led to costly bank failures. We design a robust regulatory system such that (i) bank losses are credibly borne by the private sector (ii) systemically important institutions cannot collapse suddenly; (iii) bank investment is counter-cyclical; and (iv) regulatory actions depend upon market signals (because the simplicity and clarity of such rules prevents gaming by firms, and forbearance by regulators, as well as because of the efficiency role of prices). One key innovation is “ERNs” (equity recourse notes -- superficially similar to, but importantly distinct from, “cocos”) which gradually “bail in” equity when needed. Importantly, although our system uses market information, it does not rely on markets being “right.”

“This paper is part of the mini conference on "The Future of Large Financial Institutions" at the 2014 fall meetings of the International Atlantic Economic Society.  Sessions on this and related themes are expected to be continued at the spring 2015 meetings in Milan and the fall 2015 meetings in Boston.”