It is a pleasure to be here at
Widener University and to join the list of Federal Reserve
officials who have addressed this distinguished audience. As you
know, the current economic expansion is now the longest in our
nation's history. This is due, in part, to a combination of good
fiscal and monetary policies. However, more than anything that we
do in Washington, D.C., the economy's strength is the direct
result of the myriad private decisions made on a daily basis by
you and all Americans. In a very real sense, you are the heroes of
this story, and you deserve to be commended.
Having said that, it is
important to be mindful that now is the most important time for
realism, prudence, and vigilance by both policymakers and the
public at large. We should be mindful that generally good economic
times can soften the impact of--and often mask totally--poor
judgments. Eventually, however, those judgments will have
detrimental consequences. Let me focus on three areas of realism
that are required in this time of historic opportunity: the
financial sector, individual decisions, and the international
sphere.
Realism in the Financial
Sector
As you know, at the end of last year, the Congress passed and the
President signed into law a bill to modernize the financial
industry of the United States. This law, the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, presents opportunities and challenges for the financial
sector, which must be approached realistically and prudently. The
most obvious opportunity for the financial sector now is one of
ongoing consolidation and broadening--consolidation largely in
continuing response to the end of legal constraints on
geographical operations and broadening as financial institutions
take advantage of the opportunities to expand lines of business
offered by the act. The consolidation movement among banking
organizations, of course, predates the passage of the most recent
financial modernization law. In fact, it is reasonable to believe
that the forces for consolidation and broadening were so strong
that they provided an impetus for the repeal of Glass-Steagall,
following a generation of effort not only by the Congress but also
by financial institutions and regulators. Nevertheless, by
enhancing certainty about what can be done and how it can be done,
I believe that the financial modernization law will likely bring
an increase in mergers among firms that had been specializing in
different financial services. These mergers will be undertaken to
take advantage of the perceived synergies and cost advantages
imagined from such combinations. If synergies in back office
operations or in delivery of service can be captured, such
linkages might well provide a more efficient, and hence less
costly, delivery of complementary services.
The extent of consolidation and
broadening remains in question, however, which gives rise to the
second opportunity: the opportunity to deepen specialization. In a
world of large, full-service providers, I think there will be
demand for specialty providers. These niche players presumably
will be smaller and potentially more competitively agile than the
larger competitors. The ability to foresee the creation of
important specialty competitors requires no more than an ability
to generalize from other industries, such as retailing, in which
consolidation has existed side by side with the emergence of
successful specialty businesses.
Another opportunity open to the
financial sector is the continuation of the impressive trend
toward globalization and international consolidation. Major
overseas markets are becoming more open, although the degree of
openness varies from market to market. "Big bangs" have
occurred in major markets, and privatization is the norm in a
number of others. Of course, wisely or not, some still demand
"national champions," and others worry about privatizing
the "crown jewels." Importantly, the sophistication,
scale, and scope that firms are building domestically, both here
and in Europe, translates easily into a global platform. Examples
abound: not only the success of U.S. securities firms in European
and Asian markets but also European banks in the United States.
Also, the emergence of the euro
as a successful global currency, with the payments infrastructure,
unified monetary policy, and converging fiscal policies that are
associated with it, creates an attractive, large market. This is a
market that U.S. firms have found, and will continue to find,
hospitable and in which European cross-border mergers will, no
doubt, continue. And, of course, the deepening of technology
capabilities in most financial institutions means that management
on a global scale, particularly risk management, is now feasible
as well as necessary.
This dynamic presents many
challenges. The most obvious is in achieving the benefits and
promise of consolidation and broadening. As we have seen, mergers
between banks do not all achieve the full promise originally
envisioned. In some cases, post-merger integration skills are
found wanting, as the challenge of providing seamless service
while integrating disparate back offices and branch networks
proves to be beyond the skills of management. In other cases, the
dynamics of newly acquired businesses prove unpredictable and
leave even experienced managers explaining revenue shortfalls and
earnings disappointments. As we know, markets can be unforgiving
of such surprises, and boards of directors often follow the market
signal and punish the top management thought to be responsible for
failure. An obvious difficulty is the inability to predict which
merger will be successful, with the winners not just cost-cutters
but those who know how to develop new sources of revenue. While in
general the early experience in large, cross-industry
consolidation appears to be successful, we have not yet had the
test of a slowing economy. Until we have gone through a full
business cycle, it is hard to know how strong the business case
for integration truly is.
Second, we must be cautious in
assuming that more-diversified and larger firms are inherently
less risky. One of the ongoing challenges in the emerging world of
high-tech finance is risk management. The experiences of the last
two-and-one-half years indicate that the speed of market
movements, combined with the scale of financial endeavor, can lead
to a rapid reversal of fortune for even the most sophisticated
market participants. Models are inherently backward-looking, and
even the best of them have not proven to be foolproof in sounding
the alarm for newer risks. There is evidence that banking
organizations, and probably financial institutions more generally,
will use the benefits gained from diversification to increase the
risk in the individual components of their portfolios. Indeed,
some activities now permissible in financial organizations, such
as merchant banking, have high average returns, but those returns
mask a wide variance in result, with some outcomes quite
detrimental to profits and potentially to organizational vitality.
In practice, the results will differ from firm to firm, but
appropriate disclosure and risk-management practices will become
even more important. I am heartened, I might add, by what seems to
be the fact that U.S. bank risk-management skills paid large
dividends--although clearly not avoiding all losses--in the Asian
financial crisis a couple of years back.
A major reality of financial
institutions is that their businesses are ultimately built on
understanding and trust by both retail consumers and wholesale
counterparties. The third, and most ephemeral, challenge is to
build scale and complexity and still maintain understanding and
trust while protecting proprietary information. The debate about
privacy that accompanied the modernization discussion in the
Congress reflects the challenges and constraints that lie ahead.
On the wholesale side the challenge is to reveal to the market
enough about risk and performance to allow for full and accurate
evaluation by counterparties without disclosing proprietary
information. Future LTCMs will be expected by counterparties to be
much less opaque. Similarly, the ongoing review of the role of
publicly issued subordinated debt for large and complex
organizations is another example of the expectation that such
organizations will be held to a higher test of transparency in
order to build counterparty understanding and trust.
In addition to realism in
considering the opportunities that the new law allows, bank
managers must be prudent in managing and monitoring the
performance of banks. There has been a recent decline in
profit-growth expectations among equity analysts. The consensus
view among analysts appears to be that the industry will
experience earnings-per-share growth in a range of 10 to 12
percent over the next five years. This is a respectable growth but
is somewhat lower than the growth experienced in the last five
years.
I hope that bank managers are
keenly aware of the risk profiles of their companies and are not
inclined to take additional risks to hit earnings targets. Banks
are clearly trying to diversify their earnings streams. They will
need to monitor carefully the performance of newer products
developed and marketed during the 1990s in response to broad
consumer needs. While we have enjoyed record expansion, the
prospects for a business and an economic downturn must be factored
into pricing decisions. Credit and underwriting decisions should
take into account realistic downside sensitivity analysis.
Prudence in Individual
Investment and Borrowing Decisions
However, financial institutions are not the only economic actors
who need to maintain realistic expectations and to exercise
prudence and caution during this period. Individuals must exercise
ongoing vigilance in their personal financial behavior. In
particular, individuals should recognize that in this era of
technology-induced growth, high growth goes hand in hand with high
uncertainty and, for newer companies, volatility in their
financial performance. This means that accurately valuing a
company in the high-growth industries is dauntingly complex.
Therefore, individual investors are best advised to consider a
range of scenarios, including not just the rosy outcome of
possible success but also the very real one of potential failure.
History clearly demonstrates that for every successful start-up
the vast majority find success elusive.
Individuals would also be well
advised to consider a range of personal financial scenarios.
Perhaps based on expectations of solid income growth, which we all
hope will be borne out, households have increased their debt
faster than their disposable personal income in every quarter over
the past five years. Despite increased borrowing, however, the
household debt service burden, as conventionally measured to
include consumer and mortgage debt, remains below the levels
reached in the 1980s. This burden has been held down in recent
years by falling interest rates and a shift toward longer maturity
mortgage debt. Nonetheless, even in good economic times it is
prudent for households to be prepared for a range of outcomes, not
just the most optimistic ones.
Caution in the Global Economy
While being cautious, let me not convey a pessimistic tone,
because I believe that the four major forces currently driving the
domestic economy could well provide the underpinning for a new era
of prosperity in the global economy. The first of these forces is
the creation of, and massive investment in,
technology--particularly information and communication
technologies. Technology is thought to have played an important
role in the increase in productivity--the output of goods and
services per hour of labor--that is currently providing momentum
for the economy of the United States. The second major force is
business deregulation. The removal of unnecessary government
regulation started more than twenty years ago during the
administration of President Gerald Ford but gathered momentum
during the Carter years. Deregulation allowed businesses, indeed
forced businesses, to focus more clearly on the competitive market
place, with lessened constraints and increased flexibility. The
third major force is more prudent fiscal policy. The latter part
of the 1990s has been characterized by government surplus, which,
many believe, has freed investment resources for private-sector
investment.
The final major change was the
reduction of both actual inflation and the expectation of
inflation as a necessary component of personal and business
decisionmaking. This trend began during the early 1980s, and it
has reached the point of fruition only in the past few years.
Relatively stable prices have allowed businesses and households to
plan their economic affairs with a general expectation that the
value of investments will not be eroded through a pernicious
increase in the general price level. Indeed, price level stability
has reinforced the impetus provided by deregulation for businesses
to manage their affairs with a priority on efficiency.
These developments are not
unique to the United States. While our nation was the first to
achieve the full benefits of these forces, they have been at work
globally as well. Software and capital goods embodying newer
information and communications technology are a major export of
the United States. Other nations have their own domestic
equivalents of our Silicon Valley and Route 128, whether they are
called Bangalore in India or Helsinki in Finland. We are probably
ahead in experiencing the benefits of newer technologies, but
other countries will certainly catch up.
The other three factors, which
are preconditions to achieving the benefits of technology, are
showing signs of advancing outside the United States, although the
pace differs from country to country. Most industrialized
economies have debated, and are continuing to debate, the question
of how to free businesses from unnecessary regulation and what
governments can and should do to make labor markets more flexible.
This issue is clearly the focus of much attention currently in
Europe. A number of emerging-market economies have privatized
state-owned enterprises and generally are reducing regulation. The
United Kingdom and Japan put into place financial deregulation in
the 1980s and earlier in the 1990s.
Additionally, much of the
industrialized world has governments following a path of smaller
deficits and eventually smaller debt. The 1992 Maastricht Treaty,
laying the groundwork for the unification of much of Europe into a
single market with its own currency--the euro--is the most obvious
but not the only example of this trend. Finally, the emerging
consensus among politicians, policymakers, and the general public
in many nations is that any benefits of inflation are at best
ephemeral and that inflation ultimately is highly destructive. The
efforts being made by countries that have experienced periods of
inflation, such as Brazil and Argentina, to avoid a recurrence of
those experiences is instructive in this regard. Inflation has
been coming down in both industrialized and emerging-market
economies during the 1990s.
However, achieving sustained
global growth requires certain improvements. This potential global
prosperity demands sounder banking institutions in all countries,
particularly those that are still heavily dependent on bank-based
financial intermediation, and more-stable financial systems,
putting a special burden on supervisory and regulatory authorities
to remain vigilant. Similarly, technology allows for a more
intertwined financial system, which again requires discipline by
both the private sector and the public sector to remain
successful. Finally, a global economy built around higher levels
of technology and greater competition in markets for goods,
services, and labor input will nevertheless also include persons
or regions who by fortune or skill are not fully prepared to
participate in a world economy. Those on the outside of this
highly productive economy, be they our fellow citizens or entire
nations and regions, will require special consideration from the
national and international authorities with responsibility for
providing economic assistance.
Conclusion
In concluding, let me reiterate that the prosperity now
experienced by the United States, and potentially to be shared by
the rest of the world, is certainly a welcome development. It is
clearly the goal of the Federal Reserve to follow policies that
will help extend this prosperity for as long as possible. However,
it is also important for the financial sector and other members of
the private sector here in the United States, and for market
participants, banks, and regulators in other countries, to remain
vigilant if this expansion is to continue here and to spread
globally. We are in the midst of a period of enormous opportunity,
one that can be extended and strengthened if we are realistic,
remaining mindful of our obligations to act responsibly, both
individually and collectively.
In this context, for managers in
the financial sector acting responsibly includes recognizing that
not all financial institutions can successfully consolidate or
profitably take advantage of every new power. For individuals,
personal financial decisions--both investment and
borrowing--should take into consideration the possibility that the
most optimistic expectations of corporate or personal financial
success might not come true. Finally, nations seeking to replicate
the growth experience of the recent past in the United States
should recognize that the current expansion is built, in part, on
an underpinning of a sound financial system, including both
healthy institutions and well-functioning capital markets, as well
as solid supervision and regulation. I hope that we all recognize
these lessons so that our age of opportunity reaches its full
potential.
Thank you for your attention.