Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira...

24
Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily correspond to those of the European Central Bank

description

1. Pressure points for cross-border financial crisis management

Transcript of Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira...

Page 1: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis

management

Pedro Gustavo TeixeiraWashington D.C., June 8, 2006

The views expressed do not necessarily correspond to those of the European Central Bank

Page 2: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Contents

1. Pressure points for cross-border financial crisis management

2. Designing cooperation agreements

3. Designing simulation exercises

4. Challenges and policy suggestions

Page 3: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

1. Pressure points for cross-border financial crisis management

Page 4: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Definition of financial crisis management arrangements

• Policy tools and procedures for limiting damages and spillovers when:– A financial institution (or more) is unable to

meet its obligations due to liquidity / solvency problems

– The financial systems faces severe and binding liquidity constraints

– Market infrastructures are hindered by operational problems or other disturbances

Page 5: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Global financial stability architecture• Domestic and segmented financial

stability functions– Central banks, supervisors, deposit insurance,

treasuries

• International standards – Home-country control/ mutual recognition

• Cooperation structures – Basel Committee, FSF, EU committees

Page 6: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Pressure points for dealing with cross-border spillovers

• Communication and information-sharing– if it is inefficient, decision-making may be sub-optimal

• Coordination of decision-making– division between home/host responsibilities may be challenged

• Conflict of interests of each authority– national mandates vs cross-border externalities

• Complexity of constellations of authorities for– Detecting crisis events– Sharing local knowledge– Assessing cross-border systemic risk

Page 7: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

2. Designing cooperation agreements

Page 8: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

European experience• 2003 MoU between EU banking supervisors

and central banks (51 authorities)

• 2005 MoU between EU banking supervisors, central banks and treasuries (76 authorities)

Aiming at:• Preserving the stability of the financial system of

individual Member States and of the EU as whole• Facilitating detection and assessment of systemic

risk at cross-border level• Facilitating coordination of decisions between

authorities in a systemic crisis with spillovers in several countries

Page 9: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

1st component: Information-sharing provisions• Who receives, pools/ disseminates

information?– Role of home-/host-country authorities, central

banks/supervisors

• What information should be shared?– General information on the crisis (structure of the

financial institution(s), authorities involved, urgency)– Information on banks (capital and liquidity positions,

exposures to different risks)– Information on systemic risk (counterparties, markets

and market infrastructures that may be affected)

• How does information flow cross-border?– Special channels, confidentiality safeguards

Page 10: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

2nd component: Provisions on coordination of decision-making

• Clarifying responsibilities for crisis management– home-country supervisors vs. host-country central banks– responsibility for banking groups– overall crisis manager (s)

• Ensuring prior notification or consultation among authorities of policy measures– compatibility with national laws– without prejudice to swift decision-making

• Coordination of public statements• Risk-sharing (potential costs) between

countries

Page 11: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

3rd component: Provisions for managing conflict of interests• Mismatch between national mandates and need to

consider cross-border externalities of the crisis– Risks and pay-offs not evident– Social cost at the cross-border level potentially greater

than domestic, but … accountability is domestic

• Conflicts of interest cannot be removed but managed / highlighted through mechanisms such as– pooling of information – joint assessments – Other procedures for consideration of systemic impact

at the cross-border level

Page 12: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Design challenges• Drafting

– risk of general provisions and exceptions– identifying possible institutional and legal constraints in

advance

• Moral hazard– the existence of ex ante arrangements may give the

perception of public intervention– transparency of arrangements (also in line with IMF Code on

transparency of monetary and financial policies)

• Infrastructure for communication– contact lists, internet site, teleconference facilities

• Lack of practice/ memory (dormant periods)– As with any tool, authorities need to become familiar with

using it through regular financial crisis simulation exercises

Page 13: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

3. Designing financial crisis simulation exercises

Page 14: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

European experience• EU-wide simulation exercise 2003 with

banking supervisors and central banks

• EU-wide simulation exercise 2006 with banking supervisors, central banks and treasuries

• ECB/ Eurosystem stress-testing exercises

• Regional simulation exercises in the Nordic countries

• Domestic exercises between authorities

Page 15: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Generic features• Neutrality principle - exercises not designed to

– test validity of institutional arrangements– highlight vulnerabilities in financial systems (systems are

stylized) – test individual authorities (“Laboratory-environment”)

• Open in terms of the resolution of the crisis– no “right answer” against which participants could be judged

• Diverse propagation channels – institutions, markets, market infrastructures – increase the potential for spillovers– uncertainty on whether shock is idiosyncratic or systemic

• Incentives-framework– to highlight conflicts of interest, participants are subject to

different domestic and cross-border incentives for considering policy actions

• High-speed developing crisis– to simulate time pressure and constrain cooperation

Page 16: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Design of a simulation exercise: stages of crisis management

National level

Cross-borderlevel

Triggering event

How are propagation channels identified,

information collected, and systemic risk assessed?

How is a crisis detected and identified?

How is decision-making processed, what conflicts emerge, and is it coordinated with other authorities?

Contagion to markets,

institutions, infrastructures

Policy tools

Page 17: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

LogisticsDistribution of materials

(e.g. Website)

Flow of communication between the participants through paper, email and/or teleconference.

Participant

Authority A

Participant

Authority C

Participant

Authority B

Participant

Authority E

Participant

Authority D

Participant

Authority F

Moderators

“Actors” representing

external entities

Page 18: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Potential findings

• Insights into real-life financial crises in terms of – Time pressure– Imperfect information– Complexity of analysis of cross-border systemic implications – Different responsibilities and incentives of home/host-authorities – Different incentives for supervisors, central banks, treasuries

• Path-dependence in crisis management– Different modes of cooperation and information-sharing in the

stages of the crisis (domestic/cross-border) affects the assessment of system risk, which in turn affects ultimately policy choices

• Exercises not so realistic regarding– Participants’ “pre-disposition” to play the exercise– Greater scope for coordination issues in real crises

Page 19: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Usefulness of simulation exercises• Planning phase:

– better understanding of the transmission channels for shocks to the financial system

• Running of the exercise:– better understanding of information flows and

decision-making processes

• Evaluation phase:– identifying potential pressure points in arrangements– enhancing crisis management arrangements

Page 20: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

4. Challenges and policy suggestions

Page 21: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Challenges to cross-border financial crisis management

• Institutional– Clear/ transparent/ credible allocation of

responsibilities in crisis situations– Coordination and alignment of policy decisions

• Analytical– Cross-border/-sectoral/-functional sharing and

processing of information– Assessment of cross-border systemic risk

Page 22: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Value-added of ex ante arrangements: mitigating potential coordination failures

• Cooperation agreements:– Signaling the authorities’ commitment to cooperation– Clarifying responsibilities and roles – Setting information-sharing procedures– Setting-up a crisis management infrastructure

• Simulation exercises:– Understanding the workability of financial stability

arrangements in a crisis with cross-border ramifications – Testing the efficiency of information flows– Practicing the assessment of cross-border systemic

threats– Testing the possibilities for a (un) coordinated policy

response to a crisis

Page 23: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Policy suggestions

• The pressure points for cross-border crisis management may lead to inefficient or costly outcomes if tackled in a disorganised manner

• Cross-border arrangements should not aim at resolving such pressure points, but instead providing authorities with a procedural structure for tackling them

• In addition to cooperation agreements and simulation exercises, other arrangements may include:– Standards on best practices– Development of operational networks between authorities– Contingency planning

Page 24: Designing arrangements for cross-border financial crisis management Pedro Gustavo Teixeira Washington D.C., June 8, 2006 The views expressed do not necessarily.

Thank you!