UNIVERSITY OF WESTMINSTER
Financial Crisis Analysis The Great Recession of
2008 Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1
ANH PHAN
Financial Crisis Analysis The Great Recession of 2008
Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 1
Table of Contents
I) Commercial bank during the crisis period: the roller coaster effect .......................................................... 2
II) Government regulations: the string to hold the giant not to fall .............................................................. 5
III) Banking and sovereign debt cries: the devil twins ................................................................................. 8
References ................................................................................................................................................... 11
Financial Crisis Analysis The Great Recession of 2008
Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 2
I) Commercial bank during the crisis period: the roller coaster effect
“I have always been afraid of banks.”
Andrew Jackson-seventh President of the United States (Brainz, 2013)
Despite taking the quote from Andrew Jackson, former president of the United States,
who strongly distrusted with banks’ involvements in the economy, we cannot deny many
contributions of the financial sector to the greater development of the society. However, as
globalization has become a remarkable trend, for over the last ten years, the banking system has
been exposure to many fluctuations, such as the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. Through the
performance of Barclays over the last ten years, a top UK commercial bank, in term of its
services and products offered, banking system’s developments from 2001 to 2011 will be
examined.
For Barclays, due to the fact that it has become a multinational bank, this company not
only provides clients with retail bank services, but also wholesale banking, investment banking,
wealth and investment management services, and insurance (Financial Times, 2012). Barclay has
diversified their markets into eight segments, including UK Retail and Business Banking (UK
RBB), Europe Retail and Business Banking (Europe RBB), Africa Retail and Business Banking
(Africa RBB), Barclaycard, Barclays Investment Bank, Barclays Corporate Banking, Wealth and
Investment Management (Financial Times, 2012). Therefore, Barclays has been following the
trend which is under the impact of deregulation and globalization that transform banks into an
entire new model. Since 1979, net interest margin for Barclays Group in the UK had decreased
from 3.9% to 1.1% in 2006; meanwhile UK banks’ non-interest income has a significant increase
to 57.6% of gross income in 2006 (University of Westminster, 2012). Non-interest incomes are
those which came from trading, securitization, advisory fees, and brokerage commissions
(Brunnermeier and Dong, 2012).
To examine Barclays’ performance, we will divide their operational process into three
stages: the pre-crisis era (2001-2006), the crisis era (2007-2008), and the post-crisis era (2009-
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 3
2011). During the pre-crisis era, Barclays had a steady growth, which was shown in the slightly
increase of profitability, earning per share, and growth margin. Within six years, Barclays’ profit
before tax raised from £3,425m to £7,136m, which was 23% average increase per year,
especially 35% at the end of 2006 (Barclays, 2006). The earning per share also showed a strong
development of Barclays, from 36.8 pence in 2001 to 71.9 pence in 2006 (Barclay, 2006). The
Tier 1 capital ratio of the company was always above 7%, as well as total net capital resources
above 11%, demonstrated the strength in core capital base of the bank following the regulation
under Basel 1. However, as Bessis (2010) debated, the 8% capital ratio of Basel 1, which is
considered capital as the last “line of defense,” could not prevent the crisis to happen in 2008. On
the stock exchange market, shares of Barclays increased its value steady during this pre-crisis
period. Only after 2002, due to the slightly decrease in profit, the margin went down; yet after
positive signals of 2006 annual report, Barclays’ stock index reached the peak of 755.59 on
January 2007 (Graph 1).
Chart 1: Barclays’ stock index (Source: Financial Times)
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 4
The crisis period would begin when the subprime market in the United States started to
expose problems in mid-2007 (Bessis, 2010). However, the collapse of Northern Rock on
September 2007 had shocked the entire financial system in the UK. In Chart 1, we can clearly
observe the dramatically decline of Barclays’ stock index since the last quarter of 2007. At the
end of 2008, Barclays’ profit before tax decreased to £6,077m and earning per share decreased to
59.3 pence (Barclay, 2008). The stock index touched its trough on Feb 2009 at the value of 89.20
(Chart 1). Beside systemic risk, banks are vulnerable due to their balance sheet structure. On the
balance sheet, unlike manufacturing firm, banks hold a lower amount of equity assets (Casu and
other authors, 2006). If some loans cannot be repaid, banks will have to accept these losses by
their capital buffer; thus, bank will be technically insolvency if the losses exceed the capital level
(Casu and other authors, 2006). Despite the decrease in profit, asset on Barclays’ balance sheet in
2008 was nearly doubled due to the significant increase of derivative assets (from £248,088m in
2007 to £984,802m in 2008) (Barclay, 2008). The reasons were the Pound Sterling depreciation
against both US Dollar and Euro, as well as the Goldfish acquisition of Barclaycard (Barclay,
2008).
In the post-crisis period, despite a spectacular increase in profit before tax to £11,642,
more than 100% increase compare to 2008, year of 2010 and 2011 would be more difficult for
Barclays (Barclay, 2009). Moreover, since 2009, the Tier 1 capital ratio raised up to more than
10% to deal with potential failures. The earning per share suffered from the crisis that only
valued at 24.1 pence in 2009 (Barclay, 2009). The unstable development of Barclays throughout
three years is the result of public confidence decreasing, especially in mortgage lending area.
In 2007, Barclays and other banks were having the same problem with securities backed
by bad debt and risky mortgage loans (Economist, 2007). However, any changes were
impossible right before crisis broke out. Barclays, as well as other commercial banks around the
world, should reexamine their management, especially risk management, to avoid future failures.
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 5
II) Government regulations: the string to hold the giant not to fall
“Financial crisis requires governments”
Timothy Geithner, United States Secretary of the Treasury (Brainy Quote, 2013)
The quote from Timothy Geithner, the Unites States Secretary of the Treasury, has
explained the important presence of governmental interventions during crisis period in
reestablishing the financial stability. To many people, the financial system should be liberated
from many governmental regulations, believing that competitions will be refrained under such
condition (Bessis, 2010). However, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis raises public question
whether the government should expand a greater regulation towards the banks. Nevertheless, it
is necessary to understand the rationales and objectives of regulation to answer the above
question.
The most important objective of the regulation is to sustain systemic stability of the
financial sector (Casu and others authors, 2006). Casu and other authors (2006) believe the major
ideology behind this objective is due to the greater costs of bank failures compared to private
costs. Although the core activity of banks is to act as intermediaries, they are responsible for a
payment mechanism for the economy, as well as unaccountable amount of money of investors
and savers (Pilbeam, 2010). However, externalities problem arises when financial system
dominates economical activities, which means the financial sector problems will cause a severe
damage to the economy (Pilbeam, 2010).
Following Bassis (2010), after experiencing a period of price increasing in real estate
market that helped people transform sub-prime loan into prime mortgage, the housing prices in
both the U.S. and the UK began to decline from the mid of 2007. Due to the decline of the
market, banks’ assets value (from loans issued to investors) would be fall below the liabilities,
and their net worth (capital) became negative value (Ball, 2011). Banks’ assets are illiquidity,
thus difficult to be sold in the absence of the secondary market and usually banks are pushed to
sell at the loss, pushing the house prices even lower (Casu and other authors, 2006).
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 6
Furthermore, banks were interconnected, which meant they borrow from each other for capital
(Casu and other authors, 2006). Thus, when one bank falls, a contagion effect, or “domino
effect,” will happen and lead to a systemic risk, the potential failure of many others (Bassis,
2010).
The Northern Rock was the victim of this crisis scenario. Northern Rock had chosen the
strategy in which dependent on the wholesale market’s liquidity and transformed loans into
mortgages, which later became a trap of maturity mismatch that created liquidity risk (Brummer,
2008). When people could not repay their borrowings, capital was hardly to be motivated and
banks significantly decreased the amount of lending, which is considered as credit crunch (Ball,
2011).Credit crunch was what Northern Rock had to face when banks stopped lending each
other. Nevertheless, even though Basel 1 (set up minimum requirement capital) and Basel 2
(enhanced credit risk regulations) had been designed in order to use capital as a last “line of
defense” for avoiding failures under such difficult circumstances, it failed to achieve the goal
during the 2008 crisis (Bassis, 2010). The concept of “too big to fail” should also be considered
to minimize influences towards the economy when big financial institutions fail (in the case of
Northern Rock).
The second important objective of regulation is to protect customers and small retail
clients from being exploited by the monopolistic (Casu and other authors, 2006). Asymmetric
information is one of the rationales that explain why regulation must be implied. Credit ratings
are among ways in which governments try to minimize the negative outcomes of asymmetric
information. However, there are two problems originated with rating agencies. In 2006, rating
agencies failed to estimate the default rates of subprime mortgages because it was just invented
in 2000 (Ball, 2011). Another problem arises from conflict of interest because these agencies are
in fact paid with high prices to rate mortgage-backed securities; therefore agencies have to
compete with each other that somehow led to an easy grading (Ball, 2011).
Moral hazard, a problem that the insured event is more likely to occur compared to if it is
not insured, is another rationale for the regulation (Pilbeam, 2010). A deposit insurance
protection has been an argument for this problem. Even though the deposits will be guaranteed to
be repaid in a certain amount if banks fail, it stimulates both depositors and banks’ managers to
gamble by investing their money into riskier business ventures. Under IMF research, it showed
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 7
that countries with deposit insurance fall into crisis more often (Ball, 2011). Therefore, deposit
insurance must be reformed, in which must return the deposit to depositors as soon as possible;
and it is needed to ensure investors are not so protected that they are tempted to ‘predatory
lending,’ which customers are encouraged to take on more debt (Pilbeam, 2010).
Governmental regulations can be considered as a double-edged blade, which yield
positive and negative outcomes for the financial system. It is argued that this is an expensive way
of protecting the fair business environment. However, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis once
again affirms the role of the government in stabilizing the financial system. Without the
government interferences, the fall of banking system will entail by the collapse of economy.
Financial Crisis Analysis The Great Recession of 2008
Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 8
III) Banking and sovereign debt cries: the devil twins
Can the people unquestionably believe in everything that the government(s) propagates?
Even though governments are legal representatives of their people, they do make mistakes.
Furthermore, outcomes of governmental decisions affect not only an individual or a group of
people, but also an entire nation and the whole world. Sovereign debt has been always a
controversial issue when policymakers pursue a legal piece of governmental spending.
Unfortunately, the relationship between banks and governments over this issue has been a
hotspot after the dramatic 2008 Global Financial Crisis.
Following Nelson (2012), sovereign debt, or public debt, is the debt that the government
incurs throughout their spending activities. It appears that sovereign debt has substantially
increased after the 2008 crisis, especially in developed countries such as Eurozone countries and
the United States. In future, among those countries, the significant shift in amount of aging
population will expand health care costs, the major budget spending of government. Moreover,
by providing fiscal stimulus packages and nationalizing private-sector debt, as Nelson (2012)
believes, sovereign debts have been boosted up. After the subprime market collapse in 2007,
Bear Stern bail out in March 2008 and the Anglo Irish nationalization in January 2009 are
examples of governmental measures to preserve the whole system from systemic risk, the
propensity of entire system collapses due to the interconnections among financial institutions
(Bessis, 2010). While these aids need time to be effective, Mody and Sandri (2011) argue that
the weak financial sector will reduce the growth speed that leads to the rise in debt-to-GDP ratio;
thus the enforcing relationship between sovereign debt and banking crises would be difficult to
be resolved.
Towards the Eurozone, Greece is facing these hard-chewing twin crises. Despite the
membership of EU, as an emerging economy, Greece suffered a tremendous increase of
sovereign debt after the 2008 crisis (Ball, 2011). Obviously, when the public debt reaches a
threshold, there is an incentive that governments are going to default, which likely to decrease
their credibility (Mody and Sandri, 2011). Losing the faith in Greece’s situation, assets holders
and creditors punished Greece with new debt, increasing the interest rate of Greece government’s
bonds from 4.7% to 8.0% (Ball, 2011). Due to the downgrade of government credibility,
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 9
domestic banks will also be graded lower that makes it more difficult and costly to obtain funds
from wholesale funding and deposits (CGFS, 2011). Moreover, in countries with high sovereign
debt, there is an incentive that banks hold larger percentage of government bonds as capital
(CGFS, 2011). Recall that when the financial system is working inefficiently, households, firms,
and the governments are less likely to channel capital to others in an effective way. Therefore,
both public and private sectors are affected by high debts due to the lack of capital that
eventually add to the sovereign vulnerability (CGFS, 2011).
As Mody and Sandri (2011) believe, in fact, governmental recapitalizations for banks will
reduce debt rations because capital injections will minimize banks’ equity loss on GDP, hence
limiting the raise of debt. However, it is difficult in balancing both GDP fall prevention and
recapitalizing fiscal costs avoidance. Government could only leverage financial sector at some
degree, which satisfies regulatory requirements; yet investors usually demand a larger capital
buffers during the crisis time (Mody and Sandri, 2011). As a result, it is suspected that in several
circumstances, governmental recapitalizing funds will be creditable (Mody and Sandri, 2011). In
case of Greek, government could have pursued expansionary monetary policy; however,
monetary policies of the Eurozone countries are decided by the European Central Bank (Ball,
2011). Thus, Greece government, as well as Eurozone countries that are having a similar
situation, such as Italy, Portugal, and Spain, can only cut their spending and wait for aids from
others EU nations. This aspect has revealed a weakness of mutual currency system. Due to the
different characteristics, obviously, there will be imbalance between developed and developing
countries in EU. Mody and Sandri (2011) analysis showed that weak competitiveness and low
growth countries will lengthen the crises. Moreover, with Eurozone, due to the close connections
among financial institutions, sovereign tensions can create a spillover problem to foreign banks
and governments that are holding bonds of a crisis country. With Eurozone, cross-border
interbank exposures and claims on non-financial entities are key channel which could lead to the
contagion over the financial system of entire Eurozone. The uncertainty of the Eurozone
countries should be examined with careless reforms in both private and public sectors because
sovereign debt and banking crises enforce each other. At the point when it reaches worldwide,
this blend crisis must be resolved at international stage.
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Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 10
In conclusion, through the current Eurozone crisis, we have explored some aspects of its
relations with the past 2008 crisis, as well as pointing out how banking and sovereign debt crises
have an enforcing relationship. Nevertheless, this crisis has sparked a problem among developed
economic around the world. The combination of governmental overspending and bubble values
of the market has shaken the foundation of capitalism economy. It is essential for governments
around the world, especially developed countries, to correct errors not only in banking system,
but also in governmental system.
Financial Crisis Analysis The Great Recession of 2008
Financial Markets and Institutions BEQM 509.1 Page 11
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