Reserve Bank of India
Dated: April 28, 2017
A Bank Should Be Something One Can “Bank” Upon
(Dr. Viral V Acharya, Deputy Governor – April 28, 2017 – FICCI FLO Mumbai Chapter1)
(Dr. Viral V Acharya, Deputy Governor – April 28, 2017 – FICCI FLO Mumbai Chapter1)
I am grateful to the Federation of Indian
Chambers of Commerce and Industry – FICCI Ladies Organisation, Mumbai
Chapter, for inviting me to speak today. I salute FLO’s mission, and
wish the very best to the incoming office bearers on their efforts to
empower and educate women, unlocking a potential workforce for the
Indian economy that can both balance gender distribution of jobs and
identify new sources of enterprise and entrepreneurship.
I hope that by
explaining today the important role that banks play in an economy, I can
make a small contribution, offering if not a flower at least a petal,
to help the financial planning undertaken by women workers, educators
and entrepreneurs.
I wish to try and simplify the mechanics of
how a bank works, why we put our savings into banks, what does a bank do
with our savings, when should we question which bank are we banking
with, and why when such questions are asked en masse, is there a banking
crisis and economic growth comes to a screeching halt. I will then draw
implications for the current condition of the Indian banking sector and
suggest some ways to restore it to healthier levels.
The gist of what I want to say can be summarized in one line message – A Bank Should Be Something One Can “Bank” Upon,
inspired by the real meaning behind banking upon something, a statement
of credibility, of confidence, of trust – something that ideally a bank
must earn over time by making prudent choices.
To understand this, we need to first grasp three simple concepts: what are bank deposits,
what are bank loans, and that bank deposits can be demanded immediately
by depositors but bank borrowers may not repay their loans exactly at
that time.
So let us work step by step.
What are bank deposits?
Crucially, the deposit can be redeemed with
immediacy. I can show up at the bank ATM or at the bank teller,
demanding that my money be paid back to me – Show me the money! Why
might I need to do this? A bank deposit is the place where I save for
the rainy day – my health expenses, my tuition fees, my day to day
expenses. Some of these needs are predictable, some random; each time I
withdraw at the ATM or the teller, or write a cheque or do a wire
transfer, I am demanding my money from the bank. Each instance I do not
demand my money back, I am rolling over the deposit to the next
instance.
Bank deposits are thus savings that I have
kept with a bank. I trust them to be safe and to be demandable at will. I
am happy to earn a low interest rate on them as they provide me
valuable liquidity services, allowing me to meet my day to day and the
occasional lumpy payment needs.
What are bank loans?
There are many depositors like me parking
their savings in the bank. Viewed this way, the bank is a safety vault
or a storage technology. However, most of the time, the deposits are not
being withdrawn and are simply being rolled over. Even when withdrawn,
the deposits are not being redeemed at the same time. For instance, my
health expenses are not coincident with those of my neighbor. In other
words, there is much saving in the bank that is lying idle.
Let us now bring into picture others in the
economy who are potential borrowers. A bright young woman down the
street has been a successful consultant, but wants to have a shot at
building a new enterprise. She needs financing beyond her savings to put
her bright ideas to test. There is a new construction just completed
and several young couples, first-time home buyers, are looking to
purchase houses there. They have some capacity to make down-payments for
the properties but must avail of extra monies that they can repay over
the course of their lives. An old family needs money for medical
expenses to treat a long-term illness. They cannot afford to spend out
of their savings, but they do own a property against which they would
like to borrow.
These potential borrowers can visit the bank branch to meet such financing needs.
The bank makes loans to these individuals and families, assessing their
ability to repay the loans, signing appropriate agreements to claim
repayments in due course, and attaching the property and other assets as
collateral that it can have access to in case the repayments fall
through for some reason.
Such loans are bank’s assets. They typically
earn a higher rate of interest than bank deposits and make banking
activity an attractive proposition.
Demand deposits are short-term; bank loans are long-term
This way, a bank takes shape. It has
liabilities, the right-hand side of its balance-sheet, in the form of
deposits that must be repaid when depositors so demand; it has assets,
the left-hand side of its balance-sheet, in the form of bank loans that
have some fixed points of time at which the bank can command repayments.
By being so organized, the bank is performing
the economic function of maturity transformation. A deposit, which is
potentially demandable at any instance, has effectively been lent out
through financial intermediation in the form of a longer-term bank loan
that is not making repayments at each instance.
And yet… the beauty of the arrangement is that
most of the time, this works out. The day my health expenses arise and I
take out money from the bank, my neighbor and others have likely
received monthly paycheques, a part of which remain deposited in the
bank, or that same day some loan repayments have been made, extending
the savings pool of the bank and allowing it to meet my deposit
withdrawals.
In background, financing has been made
available to new entrepreneurs, first-time home buyers and aging
parents. Their undertakings are creating a whole second-round of
economic activity, in the form of job creation at new enterprises,
construction and cement industry, and medical services and hospitals.
Those involved in these activities have their own saving and borrowing
needs, and will in turn deal with their banks.
Banking, in this manner is the life-blood of an economy,
channels savings in the form of demand deposits into borrowings in the
form of bank loans or bank credit, fuels and lubricates growth, and
improves everyone’s welfare.
All of our lives would be easy, including of
central bankers, if banking worked as serenely as I have described so
far. But, of course, that would be too good to be true. There are risks,
there are tools to deal with these risks, and yet occasionally, there
are banking crises. So let me turn to these next.
What are the risks from maturity transformation and how can a bank manage them?
What if by coincidence, the bank receives a
series of withdrawal requests at once. There could be an epidemic in the
area of its operations; may be the bank serves a community that is
buying a lot of gold for Akshaya Tritiya; or there is a wealth shock to
the farming community it serves due to poor monsoon and new deposits do
not come in at the expected rate.
In such a scenario, when many depositors need
to withdraw their monies at once, the bank faces risk from maturity
transformation. Given the coincident money demand, it is no longer
sufficient to simply manage deposit withdrawals with new deposits and
repayments on existing loans. What options does the bank have to manage
these risks to ensure that it will show the money to its depositors when
they need it and thus retain their trust?
To this end, let me briefly introduce three concepts: bank liquidity, bank capital, and inter-bank markets.
Bank Liquidity
One simple idea is that a bank need not deploy
all of its deposits for extending bank loans. It can save some purely
as a reserve or a buffer to meet the unexpected coincidence in deposit
withdrawals. The benefit of such bank liquidity is that it is an
impeccable defense as long as withdrawals are smaller than the size of
the reserve. The cost is that by not being able to extend bank loans on
part of its deposits, economic activity is compromised.
Bank Capital
Another idea is that a bank need not fund its
extension of bank loans only with deposits in its liability structure.
It can also raise some other forms of non-demandable liabilities. For
example, the banker can put his own capital, beyond the savings needs,
into the bank. A large bank can also raise public equity by being listed
on a stock exchange. This way, the impact of the bank’s unexpected
deposit withdrawals can be made smaller relative to the overall size of
the bank and the loan repayments it receives.
Such bank capital would be supported through
profits that a bank makes, by charging loan rates that exceed deposit
rates and net of the costs of its operations. Bank capital would then be
the first line of defense in case bank faces unexpected withdrawals:
bankers can take less bonus out of the bank; dividends being paid out to
bank equity could be temporarily suspended; and in fact, bankers and
equity owners can inject new finance to meet the temporary needs
anticipating that future profits will nevertheless render such capital
injection profitable for them.
Inter-bank Markets
An even more involved idea is for the bank to
try and raise liquidity on the fly, from other banks (more generally,
other financial intermediaries). Not all banks may be in regions hit by
the epidemic or natural disaster. As long as these banks trust that the
bank in need of liquidity only has a temporary need but has a high
quality of long-term assets otherwise, they can lend their liquidity
surplus to the bank in need. This would be an inter-bank deposit. At
other times, the surplus bank may be unprepared to deposit its money but
instead may simply buy some of the needy bank’s assets, creating an
inter-bank market for asset sales. In extremis, the surplus bank can
simply assume all liabilities of the needy bank, and in return, take
over the entire bank itself, creating a market for inter-bank mergers.
It should be clear then that a bank has many
tools to manage the risk of maturity transformation, the risk that
deposits are demanded with immediacy while its assets are yet to make
full repayments. The worse the quality of its assets, the less a bank
can rely on cash flows from assets to meet unexpected withdrawals, and
the more it must pre-arrange in the form of liquidity and capital. The
tools – liquidity, capital and inter-bank markets – are not mutually
exclusive though they clearly affect each other, and are more attractive
at some times than others.
With such tools to manage its risks, can we not always bank upon our bank?
One possibility is that the bank has raised
little equity capital and also held little liquidity of its own. Once
depositors know this, they realize that the only way they can be
redeemed against their withdrawals is if the bank can use inter-bank
markets to raise liquidity. As I explained, this would be possible only
if the bank’s assets are deemed good enough to repay the inter-bank
transaction in future. But then the following question arises: what if
the asset quality of the bank is suspect as it has betted the bank’s
money on the upside leaving depositors at risk of losing their savings
if the bets don’t pay off? And, even if the asset quality is not
entirely suspect, what if the inter-bank markets dry up themselves,
which could happen if there is in fact no healthy bank, or only a few
healthy banks around as most banks betted the economy’s savings
imprudently?
Systemic shock, bank runs, financial disintermediation
In essence, if an economic tsunami – like a
massive house price crash or global economic collapse or
underperformance in many industrial sectors – comes and hits the banking
system, and it had chosen to remain heavily exposed to it by being on
the shores, so that a large portion of its assets is deemed to be risky
at once, then an unexpectedly large deposit withdrawal could be rather
hard to meet for any bank. Worse, when this happens, if some depositors
start being repaid by the bank, other depositors fear that bank
liquidity is getting depleted and their savings might be at risk given
the underlying assets are either not safe or not liquid enough in
inter-bank markets. Now, these depositors may start demanding their
deposits too. And a bank “run” starts. Fearing the asset-quality signal
revealed by such a run at one bank, depositors could start running on
other banks too, especially ones with similar assets and a full-fledged
banking panic takes hold.
When this happens, the entire banking system
is at the risk of being disintermediated; payments and settlements of
financial transactions can come to a standstill; banks have no capacity
on balance-sheet to make new loans to new entrepreneurs, first-time home
buyers and old families; the economic activity can come to a grinding
halt. There are banks around, but no banking, the life-blood of the
economy, to channel savings to productive uses and for job creation.2
The present Indian context
Let me now turn to what all this means for the
present Indian context. To put things in perspective, let me mention
that the recently released Global Financial Stability Report by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) brings out the following salient
facts:
1. Indian industrial sector is now among the
most heavily indebted in the world in terms of the ability of its cash
flows to meet its bank loan repayments3 ;
and,
2. Indian banking sector comes out as worse-off compared to other emerging economies in terms of how little bank capital it has set aside to provision for losses on its assets, i.e., on its non-performing loans, made primarily to the industrial sector.4
and,
2. Indian banking sector comes out as worse-off compared to other emerging economies in terms of how little bank capital it has set aside to provision for losses on its assets, i.e., on its non-performing loans, made primarily to the industrial sector.4
What does it mean to have little bank capital
as provision for losses? I like the following analogy. A bank not
keeping adequate capital buffer to absorb losses on its loans that are
more or less known to be arriving soon is akin to not preparing to
rescue with emergency a person who has slipped off the terrace of a
skyscraper, and instead in the midst of his almost surely fatal descent,
hoping that the laws of gravity would somehow freeze and work
differently this time. While such under-provisioning problem extends to
some of the private banks too, the scale of the problem is three to four
times magnified in case of public sector banks.
By and large, this scenario meets the adverse
conditions of the narrative I provided about banking and banking panics.
But in our context, several questions immediately come to mind: Why
should I worry about whether I can bank upon my bank when my deposit is
insured by the government? More so, if my deposits are with a
state-owned bank? Why should I bother about my bank’s asset quality?
The double-edged sword of deposit insurance and state ownership of banks
Answering these questions is crucial to
understanding how our banking sector problems are likely to play out. A
moment of reflection reveals that as long as I trust the deposit
insurance and the guarantee of the state behind the public sector banks,
I have no good reason to run and pull my deposit out of an insured
deposit or a state-owned bank. The catch is this. When banks are in poor
health, it does affect the potential borrowers. Once a bank’s asset
quality is adequately impaired, the bank does not grow its lending book
much with fresh loans. Bank management of a thinly capitalized bank is
interested in primarily making two kinds of loans. First, ever-greening
of existing bad debt – throwing more money after the bad, so as to help
the borrower repay past loan, not acknowledge its true quality, and
simply kick the can down the road. Second, risky loans that give banks
high returns so that it can make a last-ditch effort to rebuild capital
quickly – doubling up bets in a casino when first round of gambling has
all gone sour. Faced with such borrowing prospects, healthy borrowers
who have access to alternate forms of finance may be able to switch out
of bank borrowing. Financial intermediation, however, is likely to grow
at an anemic pace, and many deserving borrowers such as the ones I have
alluded to, likely to remain starved of credit.
Ironically, the presence of large safety net
of deposit insurance and state ownership, which ensure that there are
likely to be no bank runs, end up eroding any disciplining force that
gets the bank health restored to a state where the economy can bank upon
its banks to perform the economic function of fueling and lubricating
growth. Deposit insurance and state ownership help the sick patient
survive but on their own do not guarantee good health; they may prevent
financial instability but do not restore credit growth to levels that a
vibrant economy needs.
And, indeed, recent global experience has
shown that governments need to be watchful as to how large the safety
net adds up to relative to its own capacity to provide for it. Countries
such as Ireland and Spain engaged as a response to their banking sector
woes in 2008 with massive guaranteeing of bank deposits and other
liabilities. This, however, ended up being a Pyrrhic victory as they
emerged with troubled balance-sheets themselves, raising their debt to
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) ratios from healthy to questionable levels,
and triggering sovereign debt crises. [SLIDESHOW]
Bank resolution options
It is with the objective of avoiding such a
contingency under any circumstance that I wish to propose that we deal
with the ailing public sector banks in creative ways instead of just
propping them up with state aid.5
Let me elaborate. We keep hearing clarion
calls for more and more government funding for recapitalization of our
public sector banks. Clearly, more recapitalization with government
funds is essential. However, as a majority shareholder of public sector
banks, the government runs the risk of ending up paying for it all. The
expectation of government dole outs might have been set by the past
practice of throwing more money after the bad. Take for instance our
bank recapitalization plan of 2008-09 after the global financial crisis:
banks that experienced the worst outcomes received the most capital in a
relative sense. Most of these banks need capital again.
We must not allocate capital so poorly,
recreate “Heads I Win, Tails the Taxpayer Loses” incentives, and sow the
seeds of another lending excess. There are better ways to do it. Let me
offer five options:
1. Private capital raising:
The healthier public sector banks could have raised private capital by
issuing deep discount rights in 2013, and some can still do so now. They
must be required to do this to share the government’s burden of
recapitalizing banks. It might be a good way to restore some discipline
and get the bank shareholders, boards and management to more seriously
care about the quality of lending decisions.
2. Asset sales:
Some banks will have assets or loan portfolios that are in good enough
shape to be sold in the market. Modern banks no longer just make bank
loans but also hold non-core assets such as insurance subsidiaries,
market-making divisions, foreign branches, etc. Such non-core assets can
be readily sold. Other assets could be collected across banks and
organized into different risk profiles, so as to build transparency and
trust with healthier banks and other intermediaries with an interest in
purchasing them. Such asset sales can generate some of the needed
recapitalization.
3. Mergers:
As many have pointed out, it is not clear we need so many public sector
banks. The system will be better off if they are consolidated into
fewer but healthier banks. After all, we do have cooperative banks and
micro-finance institutions to provide community-level banking. So some
banks can be merged, as a quid pro quo for timely government capital
injection into the combined entity. It would offer the opportunity to
rejig management responsibility away from those who have under-performed
or dragged their feet the most. Synergies in lending activity and
branch locations could be identified to economize on intermediation
costs, allowing sales of real estate where branches are redundant.
Voluntary retirement schemes (VRS) can be offered to manage headcount
and usher in a younger, digitally-savvy talent pool into these banks.
Historically, bank stress of the order we face has almost always
involved significant bank restructuring.
4. Tough prompt corrective action:
Undercapitalized banks could be shown some tough love and be subjected
to corrective action, such as the revised Prompt Corrective Action (PCA)
guidelines recently released by the Reserve Bank of India. Such action
should entail no further growth in deposit base and lending for the
worst-capitalized banks. This will ensure a gradual “run-off” of such
banks, and encourage deposit migration away from the weakest public
sector banks to healthier public sector banks and private sector banks.
It is not rocket science to figure out where the growth potential in our
banking sector lies and deposit growth should be allowed to reflect
that.
5. Divestments:
Undertaking these measures would improve overall banking sector health,
creating an opportune time for the government to divest some of its
ownership of the restructured banks, as it has over time in many other
sectors of the economy. Perhaps re-privatizing some of the nationalised
banks is an idea whose time has come? All this would reduce the overall
amount the government needs to inject as bank capital and help preserve
its hard-earned fiscal discipline, which along with stable inflation
outlook and the diverse nature of our growth engine, appears to have
made India the darling of foreign investors at the present moment. We
should grapple this macroeconomic stability to our shores with hoops of
steel.
Let me conclude
I wish to encourage you to reflect on all
this, read about the current state of Indian banking sector in
newspapers and economic writing, try to make sense of it from first
principles, and ask the question if we have a banking sector that our
economy can bank upon.
At any rate, I hope that I have provided
enough food for thought for the weekend so when you do a financial
transaction next week – with a bank, a mutual fund, a stock broker, or
an insurance company – you will be tempted to follow the river along
which the money flows in that transaction from its source to its
destination, invariably finding a few banks along the way!
And if you find the rafting exciting enough,
do apply to the Reserve Bank of India where we are looking to rebalance
our gender distribution of personnel that has gone a bit askew. We are
ready to have in our workforce dedicated women such as all of you. Thank
you.
Source- RBI
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