見到網上好多人以為依家美國不加息, 所以買短債好安全sure win, 而手持現金是失賺錢機會太笨了, 但本人寧願手持現金都不想將來連現金都收唔返 !
www.zerohedge.com
by Monetary Metals
A number of commentators have predicted that the rules of the Basel III bank regulations will cause gold to skyrocket
(no, this article is not about our view that gold does not go up, that
it’s the dollar going down, that the lighthouse does not go up, it’s the
sinking ship going down in the storm).
Will
it? It would be easy to say—as with all of their other predictions of
gold to infinity and beyond—“wait and see.” But where’s the fun in that?
We’d rather look into the nature of the claim, how banks operate, and
what the regulation actually says.
So
who wants to understand a bank balance sheet, and regulators’ view of
bank risk? In other words, who wants to understand whether gold will
skyrocket?
If you’re still with us, we assume you do. We will try to keep this brief.
The Bank Balance Sheet
A
bank borrows to finance its lending. It makes money, by paying a lower
interest rate on its borrowing than it charges on its lending. We can
shortcut the language of borrowing and lending, and simply say that
banks issue liabilities to fund their assets.
We
will not focus on the interest rate differential, as it is not
essential to our discussion today. Except one thing is important.
Long-term bonds normally pay a higher interest rate than short-term
notes (though right now, the market is backwards, called yield curve inversion, where 10-year Treasury bonds pay a lower rate than 1-month Treasury bills).
This
gives banks a strong incentive to use short-term liabilities to fund
long-term assets. The cost of funding is lower, and the interest earned
on the asset is higher. But this creates a risk. To see it, let’s use an
extreme case: using demand deposits to fund 30-year mortgages.
According to the FDIC, as of this writing, the national average for
checking accounts is 0.06%. According to the St. Louis Fed, a 30-year
mortgage is 4.28%. A bank could make 4.22% by funding 30-year mortgages
with checking deposits (before expenses). Not a bad business. But
there’s a catch.
Depositors can withdraw their funds by writing a check!
And
they would do so as the slightest suggestion that the bank was risky.
The issue is not whether the bank is solvent by conventional measures.
The accepted definition of solvent is assets > liabilities. Or,
perhaps, revenues > expenses. That’s not the issue here.
The
bank with checking deposit liabilities and 30-year mortgage assets is
not insolvency. The problem is the mismatch of maturities. Keep in mind
that liabilities are the source of funding. Picture borrowing from Peter
to lend to Paul (Paul pays you 5% and you pay Peter 2%). If Peter
demands his money back, but your contract with Paul says that he can pay
it over 30 years, you are caught in the middle.
The
first thing a bank would do in such a situation, is try to sell the
mortgage. There is a market for mortgages, and if the bank can sell the
mortgage at full value, then the problem is solved. It can pay the
depositor.
However, if all banks were engaged in this extreme degree of maturity transformation,
then two things are certain to happen. One, the scheme will blow up.
And two, when it does blow up, the mortgage market will go no bid. Just when the bank needs to sell mortgages, other banks need to sell also. And there will likely be no buyers.
Banks
will be either unable to sell mortgages, or they will incur dreadful
losses if they are forced to stoop to whatever bid they can find. This
is the recipe for not just a run on one bank, but a financial crisis.
Risk as Perceived by Regulators
Note
that there are two separate problems here. There is a risk that the
liability could be pulled at any time, and there is a risk that the
asset might only be saleable at a loss.
The
liabilities of a bank, in aggregate, represent its capital. A bank has
several different types of capital that it can use. There is a spectrum
of risk, ranging from equity on one side to demand deposits (or
interbank borrowing) on the other.
Since
the bank’s owners have no right to make the bank buy back their shares,
bank equity capital is the safest capital. But the downside is that it
is also very expensive. No bank can be in business by selling shares to
lend the cash raised. Banks want to use equity sparingly.
Demand
deposits are much cheaper (basically free in the US). As we showed
above, the downside is that demand deposits can be pulled at any time.
In
between equity and demand deposits are other liabilities, such as
long-term bonds. A bank can sell 10-year bonds. The cost is much higher
than demand deposits, but lower than equity. Or it can take time
deposits, say a 5-year CD.
On
the asset side, there is also a spectrum of risk, ranging from
short-term Treasury bills on one extreme, to long-term mortgages on the
other. A bank might buy only short-term bills. That would be safe, but
not profitable as they don’t normally pay much. Or it could buy
long-term bonds, but as we showed above, the risk is that if the bank
needs to sell it will incur a big loss. And that loss can further break
down into variability of the value of the collateral (residential real
estate in this case) and bond market conditions.
If
banks were strictly private companies, the banks would find ways to
operate safely. The equity holders bear the first risk of loss, so the
owners would have every incentive to manage risk prudently. Indeed
historically, when they were free to do so, they did so.
But today they are not.
We
have a pervasive regime of moral hazard. There is deposit insurance,
monetary policy, lender of last resort, and of course bailouts. The net
effect is to socialize losses, which offers a totally different
incentive to bank owners. Moral hazards encourage banks to take as much
risk as they can get away with, since gains are theirs to keep.
To compensate for this perverse incentive, they enacted banking regulation.
Regulatory Policy
Banking
regulators attack each side of the balance sheet separately. For the
liabilities—again, this side is called “capital”—there are tiers. The
regulator’s goal with capital is to estimate how much capital the bank
can rely on, when it’s under stress. That is, how much of its funding
will not or cannot be pulled by investors who are under their own stress
or simply panicking.
For
the assets, regulation sets risk weightings. The regulator wants to
assess the likely liquidation value of each asset, not in normal times
but when the market is under stress. This includes the risk that the
issuer of the asset (e.g. bond) will default, and the risk that the
value of the underlying collateral or the instrument itself, could be
lower.
There
are formulas and the details get complicated. But the essence of this
idea is captured in the concept of Net Stable Funding Ratio. This is a
calculation of how much funding (liabilities) will be there relative to
how much funding each assets need. Equity capital and long-term bonds
are considered very stable. Demand deposits and interbank overnight
lending are not. T-bills are considered not to need stable funding, as
they can always be liquidated or will mature quickly. Mortgages need a
high ratio of stable funding.
If
you picture the bank getting pinched by twin pincers, that’s right. One
is that funding is pulled by bank creditors, while the other is that
the bank struggles to sell assets to repay them.
美國加發短債原因係全世界政府都不再對美元有信心(失去儲備地位/背後無任何高價值物品支持)),各國大量拋售長期美債,而新長債又無人肯買!
回覆刪除而美國負債嚴重,近乎破產邊緣,又大使至年年(13年)赤字預算,所以現在狂發短債要錢!