The Great Bank Robbery


September 3, 2011

The Great Bank Robbery

by Nassim Nicholas Taleb and Mark Spitznagel

For the American economy – and for many other developed economies – the elephant in the room is the amount of money paid to bankers over the last five years. In the United States, the sum stands at an astounding $2.2 trillion for banks that have filings with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Extrapolating over the coming decade, the numbers would approach $5 trillion, an amount vastly larger than what both President Barack Obama’s administration and his Republican opponents seem willing to cut from further government deficits.

That $5 trillion dollars is not money invested in building roads, schools, and other long-term projects, but is directly transferred from the American economy to the personal accounts of bank executives and employees. Such transfers represent as cunning a tax on everyone else as one can imagine. It feels quite iniquitous that bankers, having helped cause today’s financial and economic troubles, are the only class that is not suffering from them – and in many cases are actually benefiting.

Mainstream megabanks are puzzling in many respects. It is (now) no secret that they have operated so far as large sophisticated compensation schemes, masking probabilities of low-risk, high-impact “Black Swan” events and benefiting from the free backstop of implicit public guarantees.

Excessive leverage, rather than skills, can be seen as the source of their resulting profits, which then flow disproportionately to employees, and of their sometimes-massive losses, which are borne by shareholders and taxpayers.

In other words, banks take risks, get paid for the upside, and then transfer the downside to shareholders, taxpayers, and even retirees. In order to rescue the banking system, the Federal Reserve, for example, put interest rates at artificially low levels; as was disclosed recently, it also has provided secret loans of $1.2 trillion to banks. The main effect so far has been to help bankers generate bonuses (rather than attract borrowers) by hiding exposures.

Taxpayers end up paying for these exposures, as do retirees and others who rely on returns from their savings. Moreover, low-interest-rate policies transfer inflation risk to all savers – and to future generations. Perhaps the greatest insult to taxpayers, then, is that bankers’ compensation last year was back at its pre-crisis level.

Of course, before being bailed out by governments, banks had never made any return in their history, assuming that their assets are properly marked to market. Nor should they produce any return in the long run, as their business model remains identical to what it was before, with only cosmetic modifications concerning trading risks.

So the facts are clear. But, as individual taxpayers, we are helpless, because we do not control outcomes, owing to the concerted efforts of lobbyists, or, worse, economic policymakers. Our subsidizing of bank managers and executives is completely involuntary.

But the puzzle represents an even bigger elephant. Why does any investment manager buy the stocks of banks that pay out very large portions of their earnings to their employees?

The promise of replicating past returns cannot be the reason, given the inadequacy of those returns. In fact, filtering out stocks in accordance with payouts would have lowered the draw-downs on investment in the financial sector by well over half over the past 20 years, with no loss in returns.

Why do portfolio and pension-fund managers hope to receive impunity from their investors? Isn’t it obvious to investors that they are voluntarily transferring their clients’ funds to the pockets of bankers? Aren’t fund managers violating both fiduciary responsibilities and moral rules? Are they missing the only opportunity we have to discipline the banks and force them to compete for responsible risk-taking?

It is hard to understand why the market mechanism does not eliminate such questions. A well-functioning market would produce outcomes that favor banks with the right exposures, the right compensation schemes, the right risk-sharing, and therefore the right corporate governance.

One may wonder: If investment managers and their clients don’t receive high returns on bank stocks, as they would if they were profiting from bankers’ externalization of risk onto taxpayers, why do they hold them at all?  The answer is the so-called “beta”: banks represent a large share of the S&P 500, and managers need to be invested in them.

We don’t believe that regulation is a panacea for this state of affairs. The largest, most sophisticated banks have become expert at remaining one step ahead of regulators – constantly creating complex financial products and derivatives that skirt the letter of  the rules. In these circumstances, more complicated regulations merely mean more billable hours for lawyers, more income for regulators switching sides, and more profits for derivatives traders.

Investment managers have a moral and professional responsibility to play their role in bringing some discipline into the banking system. Their first step should be to separate banks according to their compensation criteria.

Investors have used ethical grounds in the past – excluding, say, tobacco companies or corporations abetting apartheid in South Africa – and have been successful in generating pressure on the underlying stocks. Investing in banks constitutes a double breach – ethical and professional.

Investors, and the rest of us, would be much better off if these funds flowed to more productive companies, perhaps with an amount equivalent to what would be transferred to bankers’ bonuses redirected to well-managed charities.

Nassim Nicholas Taleb is Professor of Risk Engineering at New York University and the author of The Black Swan. Mark Spitznagel is a hedge-fund manager.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2011.
http://www.project-syndicate.org

14 thoughts on “The Great Bank Robbery

  1. The United States may be the beacon of the Free World but it is also the center of the world’s Capitalism. Malaysia’s banking industry is over regulated. At the other end of the spectrum would be the U.S. where the banking industry is unregulated. That is the root cause of the current recession. The banks unregulated have bundled loans and have sold them off to the secondary market knowing the bundling was not made according to the rules, later to be picked up by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. The U.S. Treasury has had to pump funds into these banks to keep them afloat. Instead they are now sitting on large piles of cash and not lending out so the U.S. economy could itself afloat.

  2. U.S. President Obama has worked to introduce changes in the banking practices which have allowed banks to rake in millions as a result of charges levied on personal accounts. It used to be that if you used your debit card and it exceeds your current balance by US 1.00 and the bank approves the transaction, you get charged with US39. Now they cannot do that if the amount is between US 1.00 – US5.00; and customers will have first to enter into a written agreement with the bank. It used to be that if you overdraw your account, it was seen as the customer applying for an overdraft. Over here the small man is at the mercy of banks – big and small. It is capitalism at its worst.

  3. In Malaysia if you are not happy with the services provided by banks, you could protest noisly at the counter, thump your fists in frustration and yell at the bank manager, complain and ask for waivers but over here you would be staring at the face of security who would be called faster than you could bat an eyelid.

  4. All i remember about bankers in this blessed country is this disgustingly shallow (one writer described it as ‘cheesy’), sycophantic, totally mindless ego trip for a doddering old risk taker. Money, no matter how virtual, seems to make fools out of everyone. Watch this my friends, and puke politely:

  5. For bankers, “Victory” means that they somehow always seem to rip everyone off – at every turn and flip of the coin/banknote. Their social conscience is limited to enriching themselves by playing everyone against each other. They are averse to ‘risk’ and refuse loans to those who need it most, yet their telemarketers target those who need it least. Yet they tinker around with unimaginable sums for ‘investments’ and other instruments of monetary sorcery, which the average layman is oblivious to.

    It is indeed a puzzle, as to why God in all his Wisdom created such creatures. Perhaps, it is to point out the fact that “Money makes money” – a self delusion as old as mankind himself. Money is the only thing in the Universe that can replicate God.

    Honestly though, we should just shoot bankers who ask for bailouts due to their own negligence and incompetence; and yes charge the family for the bullet or services rendered for the rest of mankind.

  6. The problem of exorbitant compensation for executives in banks and corporations exists here in Malaysia. Our GLCs and banks are equally guilty. They are too big to fail and when they are in trouble, they expect bailouts from the government. Shareholders and taxpayers are having to bear the burden of corporate folly and greed. I wonder what shareholders are doing about this matter. In our country, shareholders are a rather timid lot. Institutional investors like the EPF and PNB are often in league with the Boards of GLCs and the banks.–Din Merican

  7. “….our shareholders are a rather timid lot. Institutional investors like the EPF and PNB are often in league with the Boards of GLCs and the banks” .Din Merican

    I don’t think we are a timid lot. Local investors make noise and their presence felt at AGMs and EGMs but being a minority and possessing a rather apathetic outlook of the stock market, economy and anything connected to the BN Government, we tend to either condone or give in to the demands of the directors.

    I say this for myself having attended such meetings in the past. The informed few are very vocal but the rest tend to ride with the tide.

  8. The Great Bank Robbery? No, a very prolonged con-trick which everyone at the top was aware of. So why was nothing done? Good question… Just wait for the publications coming off the presses right now.

  9. The Great Bank Robbery was a result caused by the deregulation of banking systems by the previous Feds Chairman, Alan Greenspan, an American money God!

    God sent, Malaysians have been snapping up properties there at Third World Price, one in life times. Hope you all benefited!

  10. RIGHTWAYS : Alan Greenspan may have been involved in SOME deregulation but in my opinion the real culprit was none other than Reagan. He. together with Thatcher will one day be seen to have been the real twins of deregulation.

    In the UK, they were smart and saw right through her. But not before she had caused havoc with her country, where society has never really recovered. In the US, deregulation coupled with an equally ludicrous buzz-word – “small government” – meant that the made-in-Hollywood President was able to dig the free-market knife deep into his country.

    Did not take long for a few to see huge pickings for free and with no risk. For them it was an unbelievable bonanza – for which the taxpayer has yet to understand will take years if not decades to pay off.

    And to rub in the salt, guess what? A lot of (Nobel Prize) economists are now saying it was “better than any other system available”

  11. Banks and GLCs are in a win – win situation. Money is of no object to them because of availabilty of public funds. The taxpayer is always there to bail them out.

    As for banks the time has come to seperate their retail function from their investment function. This sounded like a great idea when it was first mooted. But today it is curse. Further, the Central Bank does not tell us how many dollars a bank can lend in loans for evey dollar deposited.

    This kind of system has led to the development of “plantocracy” the sudden accumulation of wealth and the thier placement in noble investemtns in equal speed. And finally, when a man who steals a ckhicken gets a heavier jail sentence than a man who commits white-collar crime what message are we sending to those who are active in this sudden accumulation of wealth?

  12. Isa Manteqi , you are right.

    It takes decades and hundred years to see the rots if we can’t see the history in true perspectives. Those who distort facts and truths will not have good ending, their offspring will suffer sooner or later. Better to let them suffer to learn good lessons.

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