Stress Testing Was Supposed to Work For All Banks

Please note that we are not authorised to provide any investment advice. The content on this page is for information purposes only.


At the height of the financial crisis, in February 2009, US authorities announced an innovative policy designed to restore confidence in the financial system: the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program, better known as the stress test.

Taking their supervisory duties unprecedented step further, regulators would reveal to the public detailed bank-by-bank results of a thorough inspection of balance sheets – outing weak banks as such and endorsing the strength of sound ones.


At the height of the financial crisis, in February 2009, US authorities announced an innovative policy designed to restore confidence in the financial system: the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program, better known as the stress test.

Taking their supervisory duties unprecedented step further, regulators would reveal to the public detailed bank-by-bank results of a thorough inspection of balance sheets – outing weak banks as such and endorsing the strength of sound ones.

With this information, the hope was that investors would regain their willingness to invest in US financial institutions. Therefore, it proved.

Reflecting on the effectiveness of stress tests, Tim Geithner (former US Treasury secretary and a key architect of the policy) called this approach to disclosure and transparency “remarkably effective.”

Perhaps in recognition of this effectiveness, the Dodd-Frank Act – the most comprehensive overhaul of US banking legislation since the Great Depression, enacted five years ago this week – mandates a range of annual, publicly disclosed tests covering the majority of the US banking system.

At about the same time US lawmakers started work on Dodd-Frank in 2009, European authorities were conducting their own stress tests, but the design and effectiveness of these tests stood in stark contrast to the US. Most importantly, there was no disclosure of individual bank results. The tests met with wide disbelief and delivered few or none of the benefits of the US stress tests.

How can we explain European authorities’ failure to use stress tests effectively? In addition, what are the broader lessons for government policy during a financial crisis?

These are the questions we ask in our paper “Runs versus Lemons: Information Disclosure and Fiscal Capacity.” We think once can find the answers in understanding the link between a government’s willingness to publicly disclose information about banks and its capacity to raise tax revenue to pay for its expenditures (its fiscal capacity).

Information disclosure

Economic theory provides powerful arguments in favor of information disclosure. The financial system is a vast and complex web of contracts ultimately linking those in need of financing with savers.

Economists have come to understand that, in situations when one of the parties to such a contract has better information, markets can break down due to what we call adverse selection.

Our research builds on the seminal work of economist George Akerlof. The “lemons” in our title is a reference to his celebrated article on adverse selection, in which he uses the market for used cars (a “lemon” is a defective car) as an example of how markets can function inefficiently when sellers have better information about the quality of their goods than buyers.

Imagine that there are strong and weak banks looking for financing. If an investor were able to tell them apart, she would demand a lower return to finance a strong bank because it is likelier to pay her back.

What if only bankers know whether their bank is strong or weak and investors have no way of finding out? In this case, she would demand a return that guarantees a profit irrespective of the strength of the bank to which she lends. If this return is too high for strong banks to find it worthwhile to borrow, these banks will choose not to seek funding – the safest banks will self-select out of the market (hence adverse selection).

If only weak banks stay in the market, investors will demand even higher returns, resulting in only weak banks receiving funding, if any get funding at all. Therefore, banks grant fewer loans and do so at high interest rates. If the government steps in to reveal strong and weak bank, there is order restoration and strong banks can borrow at low and weak ones at higher returns.

Disclosure’s drawbacks

Unfortunately, there are also drawbacks to disclosing information, which stem from the way banks raise funds to make loans.

Banks accept deposits that can usually be withdrawn at a moment’s notice and use the proceeds to provide loans that are usually for a fixed period and without recall. (For illustration, we refer to “banks” and “deposits,” but the arguments apply equally to any financial institution, such as a money market fund or an investment bank, that funds longer-term assets with shorter-term liabilities.)

Banks therefore transform very short maturity deposits into longer maturity loans, which leaves them vulnerable to bank runs (as in our title). A run happens when many depositors demand their money back at the same time. If a bank is unable to call back loans quickly enough to meet these demands, it will eventually be unable to repay depositors and have to file bankruptcy.

Imagine again that there are strong and weak banks, and to begin with, depositors are unable to tell them apart. What if all bank depositors suddenly learned that their bank is weak? They will run to withdraw their money, causing the bank to fail.

As we learned at great cost during the financial crisis, bank failures can be very expensive and have far-reaching consequences. Governments are therefore reluctant to risk causing them by announcing that some banks are frail.

Lemons or bank runs

It would appear that any government deciding on how much information to produce and disclose has to choose between adverse selection and runs.

However, governments can (and very much do) use their ability to spend today and tax tomorrow to prevent bank runs. If a stress test reveals banks weak, the government can promise to repay those banks’ deposits in full. As long as the government can afford to keep its promises, this deposit insurance convinces depositors in weak banks not to withdraw their money, saving the banks from bankruptcy.

Again, the same argument applies to other types of insurance. For example, during the crisis, the US Department of the Treasury announced guarantees for investors in money market funds.

In our work, we show that governments with deeper pockets are able to offer more comprehensive deposit insurance programs and are therefore more willing to undertake and disclose informative stress tests. In contrast, fiscally constrained governments cannot afford to guarantee as many deposits and will therefore not risk disclosing detailed information that could cause bank runs.

This is our explanation for the contrasting experiences of US and European authorities.

At the time of the crisis, there was no mechanism in place that would pass part of the bill for guaranteeing the deposits of a Spanish bank to a German taxpayer – the European Union lacked a common resolution mechanism for banks.

In the US, on the other hand, the federal government can use taxes raised in New York to pay for spending in California. Supported by this much larger fiscal backstop, US authorities could afford to be much more transparent about the state of the banking system.

Runs versus lemons: why US bank stress tests succeeded while Europe’s failed is republished with permission from The Conversation

The Conversation

About The Conversation PRO INVESTOR

Independent source of news and views, sourced from the academic and research community.