From: Global Research
Global Research, October 13, 2014
Concerns are growing that we are heading for another banking crisis,
one that could be far worse than in 2008. But this time, there will be
no government bailouts. Instead, per the Dodd-Frank Act, bankrupt banks
will be confiscating (or “bailing in”) their customers’ deposits.
That includes local government deposits. The fact that public funds
are secured with collateral may not protect them, as explained earlier here.
Derivative claims now get paid first in a bank bankruptcy; and
derivative losses could be huge, wiping out the collateral for other
claims.
In a September 24th article titled “5 U.S. Banks Each Have More Than 40 Trillion Dollars In Exposure To Derivatives, Michael Snyder warns:
Trading in derivatives is basically just a form of legalized gambling, and the “too big to fail” banks have transformed Wall Street into the largest casino in the history of the planet. When this derivatives bubble bursts (and as surely as I am writing this it will), the pain that it will cause the global economy will be greater than words can describe.
The too-big-to-fail banks have collectively grown 37% larger since
2008. Five banks now account for 42% of all US loans, and six banks
control 67% of all banking assets.
Besides their reckless derivatives gambling, these monster-sized
banks have earned our distrust by being caught in a litany of frauds. In
an article in Forbes titled “Big Banks and Derivatives: Why Another Financial Crisis Is Inevitable,”
Steve Denning lists rigging municipal bond interest rates, LIBOR
price-fixing, foreclosure abuses, money laundering, tax evasion, and
misleading clients with worthless securities.
Particularly harmful to local governments have been interest rate swaps misrepresented as protecting government agencies from higher rates.
Yet as Michael Snyder observes:
At this point our economic system is so completely dependent on these banks that there is no way that it can function without them. . . . We are steamrolling toward the greatest financial disaster in world history, and nobody is doing much of anything to stop it.
Sidestepping the Steamroller
California Governor Jerry Brown sees it coming. Rather than
rebuilding the state’s crumbling infrastructure, rehiring teachers and
other public employees, and taking other steps to restore the Golden
State to its former prosperity, he has proposed a constitutional amendment requiring all excess state revenues to go into a rainy day fund to prepare for the next crisis.
But there is a better way forward.
In North Dakota – the only state to post a budget surplus every year
since 2001 – the state owns its own bank. When the state last went
over-budget in 2001 due to the Dot.com crisis, it merely issued itself
an extra dividend through the Bank of North Dakota – the only
state-owned depository bank in the country – and the next year it was
back on track.
Other local governments would do well to follow suit, not just for
the promising profit potential, but as protection against a “bail in” of
public deposits.
Forming their own banks can also protect local governments from a
looming and unaffordable rise in municipal bond interest rates. State treasurers fear that the Fed’s September 2014 exclusion of municipal bonds from
the category of “high quality liquid assets” that big banks must hold
will drive up bond rates, as it shrinks the market for those bonds and
drives up the interest required to attract buyers.
There is also the big money local governments lose to Wall Street just in fees. A 2013 study found that the city of Los Angeles spends over $200 million annually on big bank fees and management – more than its budget to maintain its extensive streets and highways.
In a recent press conference, Mayor Javier Gonzalez of Santa Fe raised provocative questions facing all elected officials today. He said:
Right now our bank is Wells Fargo. They serve the City according to our contract. But they also take city revenues, taxpayer dollars, and they use those taxpayer dollars as part of their loan portfolio that goes to places outside of Santa Fe and certainly outside of New Mexico. And when you think of that most basic concept of taxpayer money being used to earn revenues for national banks that have reduced their small business lending by 53%, you have to pause and wonder – is this the best structure for our community?
Addressing these concerns, Mayor Gonzalez has launched a formal
process to study the feasibility of a city-owned bank of Santa Fe.
Public banking efforts are also underway in other cities and states.
How to Start a Bank Overnight
Forming a state or municipal public bank need not be slow or
expensive. An online bank could be run out of the Treasurer’s office and
operational in a few months. And the bank could be turning a profit
immediately – without spending the local government’s own revenues.
How? The way Wall Street does it with
our public deposits and investments: by leveraging. We could reclaim
those funds and put them to work for our local economies.
The bank could be capitalized with a bond issue (borrowing from the
public), and this capital could be leveraged into a loan portfolio that
is about eight times the capital base. The bond issue could be financed
with 1/8th of the interest accruing from this portfolio. The remaining 7/8th could be pocketed as profit.
This profit could be earned immediately and without risk, by buying
municipal bonds rather than issuing loans. That move could also help
municipalities, by guaranteeing that their bond rates remain low in the
face of threatened interest rate rises on the private market.
How to Start a Bank at Virtually No Cost or Risk
To demonstrate the safety and viability of the model, the bank can start small and build from there. For startup capital,
a new bank needs anywhere from a few million to $20 million nationwide.
(The amount varies from state to state.) To be cautious and
conservative, however, let’s say $40 million.
Many cities have this money available in “rainy day” or reserve
funds. Many others have substantial investments, often under performing,
that could be more responsibly invested as an equity position in a bank.
In California, for example, a whopping $55 billion is languishing in
the Treasurer’s Pooled Money Investment Account, earning a mere 0.23% interest.
Moving a portion of those funds into the state’s own bank would just
be good portfolio management. State pension funds are another investment
option.
If surplus funds are not available, capital can be raised with a bond
issue. (That is how the Bank of North Dakota got its start in 1919.)
Assume the interest due on these bonds is 3%. The local government’s
cost of funds will be $1.2 million annually.
At a 10% capital requirement, $40 million is sufficient to capitalize
$400 million in loans. But again assume the bank is started
conservatively at a 20% capitalization, for a loan portfolio of $200
million.
To make those loans, the bank will need deposits. These can be
acquired without advertising or other costs, by moving $200 million out
of the local government’s existing deposit account at JPMorgan Chase or
another Wall Street bank. (In North Dakota, all of the state’s revenues
are deposited by law in its state-owned bank.) Assume the new bank pays
0.3% interest on these deposits, or $0.6 million annually as its cost of
funds.
To satisfy the 10% reserve requirement for deposits (something
different from the capital requirement), $20 million of this deposit
pool would be held in reserve. The remaining $180 million are counted as
“excess reserves,” which can be used to make an equivalent sum in loans
or bond purchases.
Assume the excess reserves are used to buy local municipal bonds
paying 3% annually. The return to the bank will be $5.4 million less
$0.6 million in interest on the deposits, for a total of $4.8 million
annually.
To recoup the cost of the bond issue, $1.2 million can be paid from
these profits as a dividend to the local government. The bank will then
have a net profit of $3.6 million annually; and this profit will have
accrued to the local government as the bank’s owner, without needing to
advance any money from its own budget.
What if the state needs its deposits for its budget?
That is the beauty of being a bank rather than a revolving fund: banks do not actually lend their deposits, as the Bank of England recently acknowledged. Rather, they createdeposits
when they make loans. If the state or local government needs more cash
for its operating expenses than the bank has kept in reserve, the bank
can do what all banks do: it can borrow. And if it has grown to be a
large bank, it can borrow quickly and cheaply – from other banks through
the Fed funds market at 0.25%, or from the money market at 0.15%.
A smaller public bank might want to keep a larger cushion of deposits
in reserve for liquidity purposes. If it keeps 30% in reserve, in the
above example $140 million would be left to invest in bonds, generating
$4.2 million annually in interest. Deducting $1.8 million as the cost of
servicing deposits and capital, the bank would still generate $2.4
million in profit, while providing a safe place to park public revenues.
What of the bank’s operating costs? These can be kept quite low. The
Bank of North Dakota operates without branches, tellers, ATMs, retail
services, mega-salaries or mega-bonuses. All those saved costs fall to
the bank’s bottom line.
Ballpark operating expenses for a small but growing public bank with a
President, Chief Financial Officer, Chief Lending Officer, Chief Credit
Risk Management Officer, Compliance Officer, and the systems required
to support a banking function are estimated at under $1 million per
year. A start-up focused on municipal bonds could be operated for even
less. This expense could come out of the initial $40 million in
capitalization, again without impairing the local government’s own
operating budget.
Manifesting the Bank’s Full Potential
Once a charter has been obtained and sound banking practices have
been demonstrated, the capital ratio can be dropped toward 10%. When the
bank has built up a sufficient capital cushion, it can begin to work
with community banks and other financial institutions for the broad
range of commercial lending that creates jobs and prosperity and
generates profits as non-tax revenue for the municipality, following the
Bank of North Dakota model.
The public bank can also invest in infrastructure loans to the state or local government itself. Interest now composes about half of
capital outlays for public projects. Since the local government will
own the bank, it will get this interest back, cutting infrastructure
costs in half.
These are just a few of the possibilities for a publicly-owned bank,
which can provide security from risk while generating a far greater
return on the local government’s money than it is getting now on its
Wall Street deposit accounts. As we peer into the jaws of another
economic meltdown, moving our public funds into our own banks is an
investment we can hardly afford not to make.
Ellen Brown is an attorney, founder of the Public Banking Institute, and author of twelve books, including the best-selling Web of Debt. In The Public Bank Solution, her latest book, she explores successful public banking models historically and globally. Her 200+ blog articles are at EllenBrown.com.
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