Market-Based Stress
Test May Relieve Anxiety
Axel Merk
Merk Hard Currency
Fund
May 7, 2009
The stress test may be causing
more harm than good. Why? Regulators should always have a good
assessment of the health of financial institutions. If there
are deficiencies in the process applied to regulate banks, then
the process for the system as a whole should be reviewed.
Instead, what we have is an
ad-hoc test put together to gauge the health of banks. A regulator
came up with the idea that counterparty risk is bad, hence, banks
that deal with a lot of counterparties ought to have a greater
capital cushion. This may sound good on paper, but has unintended
consequences. Who says that the formula applied by the regulator
is the right one? Does the regulator understand the appropriate
methodology to weigh all the risks of the bank? It seems to us
that the guidelines published in the government's white paper
on the stress test were somewhat crude. Specifically, it may
create an incentive for banks to cut low-risk relationships and
focus on riskier ones. The reason? The riskier relationships
tend to be more profitable (unless the counterparty fails); so
if a bank must cut back its exposure regardless, why not cut
from the boring and less profitable "bread and butter"
businesses?
Make no mistake about it: banks
may still require more capital and there are more challenges
ahead. In our opinion, an arbitrary stress test does not resolve
the issues at hand and may only serve to create new problems.
What financial institutions - indeed all investors and businesses
- need is clarity surrounding regulations and taxation. In order
to plan ahead, it is destructive for policy makers to constantly
change the rules of the game.
Obviously, regulators need
to do their job, but there will always be market participants
who are a step ahead of the game. Rather than being outraged
every time someone abuses the system - and such abuse will always
happen as greed is part of human nature - we need to provide
incentives for such greed to be channeled in such a way that
we do not have a global meltdown when things get out of hand.
A way to achieve this may be to let the market decide on the
total capitalization of financial institutions and thus the ability
of those institutions to lend.
One way to have the private
sector determine how much a financial institution may lend is
to require financial institutions to periodically raise money.
If, for example, financial institutions were required to issue
subordinated debt, representing 10% of all loans extended, the
private sector would rein in any institutions that don't pass
the free market's natural "stress test" by adjusting
the available capital. If the cost of borrowing were too high
for a financial institution, it would need to shrink its loan
portfolio. Such subordinated loans could be staggered, so that
refinancing is required on a periodic basis. If, say, every year,
one tenth of subordinated debt were to be refinanced, it would
allow an orderly shrinking of the bank's balance sheet should
market conditions warrant.
We all have a stake in this.
Our Senior Economic Adviser and former St. Louis Fed President
William
Poole has been an advocate of this concept for some time.
We urgently need a discussion of market-based solutions to rein
in the regulatory circus that is potentially creating more harm
than good.
Healthy financial institutions
are needed to foster economic growth. We need to ensure money
flows from weak hands to strong hands. In our opinion, present
policies achieve exactly the opposite, as taxpayer money is used
to prop up bad institutions at the expense of stronger business
models. To reverse this, we need to get the government out of
the micromanagement of these firms. We need to put mechanisms
in place to allow money to be drained from these weaker institutions
without jeopardizing the financial system as a whole. This may
be achieved by phasing in a market-based approach to the funding
of financial institutions.
On a separate note, we will host numerous events
at the Las Vegas Money Show (May 12-14). Please come and
visit us - we would love to see you there (click here
for more information and to register); not only will we discuss
the economy and the dollar, we will also provide a first preview
of "SustainableWealth",
a book written by Chief Investment Officer Axel Merk.
SustainableWealth, due in bookstores this fall, is about
understanding how the greater economic universe works, how that
may affect your finances, and how to manage those finances to
seek financial stability. Click here
to be notified when the book becomes available.
We manage the Merk Hard and
Asian Currency Funds, no-load mutual funds seeking to protect
against a decline in the dollar by investing in baskets of hard
and Asian currencies, respectively. To learn more about the Funds,
or to subscribe to our free newsletter, please visit www.merkfund.com.
May 5, 2009
Axel Merk
Contact
Merk
©2005-2012 Merk Investments
LLC. All Rights Reserved.
The views in
this article were those of Axel Merk as of the article's publication
date and may not reflect his views at any time thereafter. These
views and opinions should not be construed as investment advice
nor considered as an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer
to buy shares of any securities mentioned herein. Mr. Merk is
the founder and president of Merk Investments LLC and is
the portfolio manager for the Merk Hard and Asian Currency Funds.
Foreside Fund Services, LLC, distributor.
The Merk
Asian Currency Fund invests in a basket of Asian currencies.
Asian currencies the Fund may invest in include, but are not limited
to, the currencies of China, Hong Kong, Japan, India, Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and
Thailand.
The Merk
Hard Currency Fund invests in a basket of hard currencies.
Hard currencies are currencies backed by sound monetary policy;
sound monetary policy focuses on price stability.
The Funds may
be appropriate for you if you are pursuing a long-term goal with
a hard or Asian currency component to your portfolio; are willing
to tolerate the risks associated with investments in foreign currencies;
or are looking for a way to potentially mitigate downside risk
in or profit from a secular bear market. For more information
on the Funds and to download a prospectus, please visit www.merkfund.com.
Investors should
consider the investment objectives, risks and charges and expenses
of the Merk Funds carefully before investing. This and other information
is in the prospectus, a copy of which may be obtained by visiting
the Funds' website at www.merkfund.com or calling 866-MERK FUND.
Please read the prospectus carefully before you invest.
The Funds primarily
invest in foreign currencies and as such, changes in currency
exchange rates will affect the value of what the Funds own and
the price of the Funds' shares. Investing in foreign instruments
bears a greater risk than investing in domestic instruments for
reasons such as volatility of currency exchange rates and, in
some cases, limited geographic focus, political and economic instability,
and relatively illiquid markets. The Funds are subject to interest
rate risk which is the risk that debt securities in the Funds'
portfolio will decline in value because of increases in market
interest rates. The Funds may also invest in derivative securities
which can be volatile and involve various types and degrees of
risk. As a non-diversified fund, the Merk Hard Currency Fund will
be subject to more investment risk and potential for volatility
than a diversified fund because its portfolio may, at times, focus
on a limited number of issuers. For a more complete discussion
of these and other Fund risks please refer to the Funds' prospectuses.
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