Sober Look | Nov 05, 2012 04:53AM ET
Finally here is an easy to follow, comprehensive, well researched, and unbiased paper from FRBNY (Tobias Adrian and Adam Ashcraft) on the so-called shadow banking (many thanks once again to Kostas Kalevras for pointing it out). A few comments:
I. This chart from the paper shows the breakdown of the "traditional" vs. the "shadow" banking market sizes. It is important to point out the precise definition of traditional banking sources of funds.
Traditional Intermediation [sources of funding] refers to net interbank liabilities [banks borrowing from each other] plus checkable and savings deposits of depository institutions plus reserves of life insurance companies and pensions plus [unsecuritized] corporate debt.
IV. What many people (particularly the mass media) don't fully appreciate is that much of the securitization activities - which if done properly can be extremely helpful to the US consumers and to the economic growth as a whole - were started by the US government.
FRBNY: In many ways, the modern shadow banking system originated in the government sector. Securitization was first conducted by government-sponsored enterprises (GSE), which are comprised of the FHLB system (1932), Fannie Mae (1938), and Freddie Mac (1970). The GSEs have dramatically impacted the way in which banks are funded and the way in which they conduct credit transformation: The FHLBs were the first providers of term warehousing of loans, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pioneered the originate-to-distribute model of securitized credit intermediation.
Like banks, the GSEs fund their loan and securities portfolios with a maturity mismatch. Unlike banks, however, the GSEs are funded not through deposits, but through capital markets, where they issue short- and long-term agency debt securities. These agency debt securities are bought by money market investors and real money investors such as fixed-income mutual funds.
The funding functions performed by the GSEs on behalf of banks and the way in which GSEs are funded are the models for wholesale funding markets. The GSEs use several securitization techniques. They use term loan warehousing services provided by the FHLBs. They also use credit risk transfer and transformation through credit insurance provided by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Securitization functions are provided by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Maturity transformation is conducted on the GSEs’ balance sheets through retained portfolios. These securitization techniques first used by the GSEs were adopted and imitated by banks and nonbanks to generate the nongovernmental shadow banking system. The adaptation of these techniques gave rise to the securitization-based, originate-to-distribute credit intermediation process.
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