By William K. Black

The reason we have recurrent, intensifying financial crises is because we learn the wrong lessons from our prior crises and actively make things worse. The consistent explanation for our making things worse is that dogmas lead to “doubling down” on failed faith-based policies. The dominant ideologues in the U.S. and Europe on financial policies are theoclassical economists and their fellow choir members – neoclassical economists. A small article in the Wall Street Journal provides a classic example of the continuing destruction driven by these dogmas.

The WSJ article, of course, sees none of this. It fails to distinguish between two very different concepts. The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is supposed to regulate “national banks” – the largest banks. The first concept is where examiners’ offices are located. The OCC uses “resident” examiners in the largest banks. This means that hundreds of OCC (and Fed) examiners have offices in the huge banks. Resident examiners are a terrible idea because they invariably “marry the natives.” When the Fed “marries the natives” it constitutes incest because the NY Fed (which examines many of the largest bank holding companies) has traditionally been one branch of the inbred Wall Street family. The OCC, under Presidents Clinton and Bush, was nearly as bad because it was engaged in a “race to the bottom” with the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) to see which could “triumph” as the worst federal banking regulator.

If the OCC proposal was to cut back dramatically on resident examiners in order to beef up normal examination frequency and scope that would a very good thing that we could applaud. That would be the obvious fix that any effective supervisor would have implemented as soon as he or she was appointed. This is the second concept that the OCC could have meant by its proposal. It does not appear that the second concept is what the OCC’s leadership has in mind. Their system has increasingly deemphasized examination in favor of off-site monitoring (analysts in government office buildings looking at their computers). The OCC has not announced that it adopting an increase in examination frequency or the scope of examinations as a result of its decision to reduce the number of resident examiners.

We Know How to Make Examination and Supervision Succeed

In a normal examination the examiners’ offices are located in a federal building but the examination takes place in the bank’s offices. These examinations are our paramount function as banking regulators. In a well-functioning regulatory agency everyone adds value, but none of us can succeed if the examiners fail. During the S&L debacle, the reason we were able to reregulate successfully, to bring thousands of successful enforcement actions, and hundreds of civil actions, and to make it possible for the Department of Justice to obtain over 1,000 felony convictions in cases it designated as “major” was the examiners’ success. George Akerlof and Paul Romer recognized this point.

The S&L crisis, however, was also caused by misunderstanding. Neither the public nor economists foresaw that the regulations of the 1980s were bound to produce looting. Nor, unaware of the concept, could they have known how serious it would be. Thus the regulators in the field who understood what was happening from the beginning found lukewarm support, at best, for their cause. Now we know better. If we learn from experience, history need not repeat itself (Akerlof & Romer 1993: 60).

“The regulators in the field” were our examiners. Similarly, when we drove “liar’s” loans out of the industry in 1990-1991 we were able to do so because our examiners identified the fact that the loans were inherently fraudulent. Our modern financial crises have all driven by epidemics of accounting control fraud. Only examiners can identify and document these frauds. Examiners also serve as our “scouts” who keep the rest of us apprised as to how the industry is changing. Examiners are the indispensable component of any effective financial regulatory agency and they must function through onsite examinations in which they can not only see the documents but judge the credibility of the bank employees and officers.

The people who do not spot developing credit quality crises – and never have – are office analysts. The worst of these office analysts are economists. They do not simply fail to spot accounting control frauds – they praise them. They were the leading problem that slowed, and in the case of junk bonds halted, our regulatory and supervisory crack down on the S&L control frauds.

There are some exceptionally capable examiners and supervisors who understand exceptionally well how to create a superb examination force integrated into an overall agency to conduct effective, vigorous supervision. Anyone serious about improving examination would start by bringing in Chris Seefer and Dick Newsom to design and train the examination forces that have become so degraded over the last two decades. Anyone serious about integrating the examiners with the supervisory, enforcement, and regulatory aspects of the agency would start by bringing in Mike Patriarca. You go with people who have a track record of enormous success.

The OCC Carefully Studies How to Make Examination Worse

Or, if you are OCC Comptroller Thomas Curry, you hire Jonathan Fiechter and a band of failed “international” regulators who have never faced an epidemic of accounting control fraud.

“Mr. Curry, who took the reins at the OCC in March 2012, asked external experts to review the agency’s examination program and recommend changes. In a report last year those experts—which included regulators from other countries—suggested the large number of on-site examiners hindered the OCC’s ability to spot risky activities building in multiple institutions at once and suggested the agency scale back its program. Mr. Curry said Wednesday he would accept many of those recommendations, vowing to institute a new regime for rotating examiners among banks and to beef up groups of staff who specialize in evaluating various types of financial activities. Jonathan Fiechter, a former OCC official who led the external review, said the OCC’s announcement Wednesday was a positive step, but ‘the follow-up and meaningful implementation of the planned actions are critical.’”

The Fiechter report is available on line.

If You Want to Fail, Hire an Architect of Failure like Fiechter

The only virtue of making Fiechter, one of the important architects of regulatory failure, the OCC’s “expert” on effective regulation is that it reaffirms our family saying that it is impossible to compete with unintentional self-parody. The international “experts” the OCC chose lack even Fiechter’s familiarity with accounting control fraud epidemics.

Fiechter’s report describes a disaster waiting to happen – and prescribes responses that will make it worse. While the article describes Fiechter as “a former OCC official,” his claim to infamy is as acting director (from late 1992- mid-1996) that did so much to ruin the OTS and set the stage for the most recent crisis. (Think about the implications of that for a moment: President Clinton left an “acting” director that he inherited from President Bush in charge of a federal agency for four years – and then replaced him with a part-time director.) Fiechter was an avid supporter of the “Reinventing Government” crusade during the Clinton-Gore administration that gutted the FDIC and the OTS. The FDIC lost over three-quarters of its staff and the OTS over half its staff. The gravest damage, however, was Fiechter’s elimination of the vital loan underwriting rule that we had used to drive liar’s loans out of the S&L industry in 1990-1991 and his embrace of the regulatory “race to the bottom” in which OTS attempted to have weaker rules than the banking regulators.

The Fiechter “study” made only the barest pretense of being a study. For example, “the on-site work of the team … took place from October 28 to November 5, 2013…. The nature of the exercise did not permit an in-depth analysis of any particular areas.” Yes, an entire week and not a single area considered “in-depth.” OK, but they could have used their time when they were not “on-site” at the OCC to read the key OCC documents. Except, they didn’t do that: “The team did not review the extensive set of OCC supervisory handbooks and supervisory guidance.” Oh, and their “on-site” visit consisted largely of reading documents selected by the OCC for their review. There was no pretense that Fiechter was conducting an independent review.

The Existing and Coming Disasters that Fiechter’s Team Ignored

Fiechter is a conventional neoclassical economist who shares the usual tribal taboo about fraud. In my experience, he is never deliberately evil. His every instinct, however, is contrary to what it takes to be an effective regulator. As a result, he actively makes the banking environment far more criminogenic as an unintentional consequence of his embrace of the three “de’s”: deregulation, desupervision, and de facto decriminalization. His report to the OCC, unsurprisingly, never mentions the words “fraud” or “crime” even though stopping the fraud epidemics that drive our financial crises is the OCC’s paramount function.

Even though at the time Fiechter’s report was being compiled the regulators and prosecutors were under severe criticism for the failure of the banking regulators to make criminal referrals and the failure of DOJ to prosecute it does not even mention the need to reestablish the criminal referral coordinators and systems that are essential to successful prosecutions. Indeed, the Fiechter report is so bad that it does not even contain a substantive discussion of enforcement. Enforcement is a critical OCC function, and it has been eviscerated, but Fiechter’s group ignored the problem.

The other obvious crisis that exists and will get far worse is the systemically dangerous institutions (SDIs) that pose the grave and gratuitous threat to the global economy, make “free markets” impossible, and enshrine the crony capitalism that is the gravest threat to representative government. The Fiechter report mentions their existence, but no plan or even goal to shrink them to the point that they no longer cause these three grave harms.

The Fiechter Report Documents a Coming Disaster: and Makes it Worse

The Fiechter report provides two critical facts that should have been the focus of the WSJ story and the OCC’s response to the report. First, the OCC is already suffering from a serious shortage of examiners. Second, a “high proportion of OCC examiners are at or near retirement age.” The serious shortage is about to become a crisis. Examiners are cheap – financial crises are catastrophically expensive. The current crisis cost over 10 million American jobs and an estimate $21 trillion loss in GDP. To respond to the S&L debacle, we doubled our examination force – hiring 750 new examiners. We did this over the fierce opposition of OMB, which responded by threatening to make a criminal referral against Federal Home Loan Bank Board Chairman Edwin Gray for the “crime” of closing too many insolvent S&Ls. Now ask yourself how often you have heard Curry, the Treasury Secretary, and President Obama demanding that Congress approve immediate authority for the OCC to hire 500 examiners?

Does Fiechter’s report contain a clarion call for such hiring authority? No. Instead, they call for privatizing further.

“To further address staffing shortfalls devise a program to use retirement-eligible staff as mentors and explore how to accelerate the integration of private sector experts into the examination force.”

Privatizing the examination function is a prescription for disaster. The crisis was caused in considerable part by the claim that examiners could rely on “private sector experts.”

The Fiechter report primarily endorses the OCC’s “strategic plan” for personnel, but that “plan” is a non-plan that does not even seek a substantial expansion of its examination force. Bold is concept foreign to the OCC’s leadership and Fiechter’s team.

Fiechter Endorses the Regulatory Race to the Bottom

I have explained Fiechter’s adoption of the regulatory race to the bottom strategy when he headed the OTS. There were multiple races to the bottom. The international race to the bottom was “won” by the City of London, but the losers were consumers and investors throughout the U.S. and the EU. The Fiechter report is so pathetic that it endorses the race to the bottom as a “good reason” for OCC “policy paralysis” when bank CEOs lead “undesirable practices” such as accounting control fraud.

“‘[P]olicy paralysis” could be for good reasons (e.g., the wish to have a level playing field that does not inadvertently drive undesirable practices into non-OCC supervised institutions or into the shadow banking sector)….”

Fiechter’s language is so obtuse that his parenthetical is probably not understandable to most people. What he is saying is that it could be “good” for the OCC not to crack down on an “undesirable practice” (such as making fraudulent liar’s loans) because the frauds might respond by dropping their national bank charter (which makes them subject to OCC regulation) and instead getting a charter from the FDIC or the Fed or forming a mortgage bank that would be unregulated (i.e., in “the shadow banking sector”). It may help to know that the OCC is funded by assessments from those it regulates, so if banks give up their charters as “National Banks” the OCC’s budget falls and it may have to fire (RIF) its already inadequate staff. This conflict of interest causes despicable reasons for failing to crack down vigorously on “undesirable practices” to be labeled “good reasons” by anti-regulators like Fiechter and Curry.

Fiechter Finds a Sick OCC Culture – and Suggests Making it Worse

OCC examiners have been so infected with this “race to the bottom” disease that they seek to evade the law and protect favored banks from the statutory consequences of their bad actions.

“OCC staff raised concerns that legally-mandated consequences made some examiners hesitant to downgrade CAMELS ratings because such consequences were viewed as inappropriate in particular cases. In particular, there may be some hesitation in instances when an institution falls between a ‘2’ and ‘3’ (sometimes referred to as a ‘borderline’ or ‘dirty 2’) to rate the institution a ‘3’ because of automatic consequences for the institution of certain downgrades, such as a restriction on the institution’s operations.”

The Fiechter report goes on to encourage this violation of the law by OCC examiners even though experience has shown that the examiners’ evasions of the Prompt Corrective Action law have greatly increased losses. The Fiechter report encourages future violations by spreading this bald-faced lie:

“Unlike the OCC, intervention actions in the foreign jurisdictions are not ‘hard wired’ to risk ratings. Intervention is proportionate and appropriate to the circumstance driving increased risk. While this provides flexibility to examiners’ recommendations, an accompanying peer review of supervisory actions ensures greater consistency across institutions. All of the foreign jurisdictions felt that having this additional supervisory flexibility associated with ratings downgrades was more effective in influencing institutional behavior.”

Other than the first sentence, each sentence in the paragraph is untruthful. Banking regulatory “intervention” by the EU, for example, during the lead up to the crisis was neither “proportionate” nor “appropriate.” It was farcical. “Peer review” did create a certain “consistency” in EU banking regulation – it was consistently farcical. The EU anti-regulators did not use their “flexibility” to “influence institutional behavior.” First, they rarely downgraded bank ratings. Second, they used the “flexibility” consistently to avoid taking “effective” actions – they looked for every excuse not to “influenc[e] institutional behavior” to prevent the mounting disaster. It is sick to note the OCC examiners’ sick culture arising from the regulatory race to the bottom and then add a passage claiming (dishonestly) that the sick culture is the international norm because it is a brilliantly successful policy.

Fiechter’s report makes an explicit recommendation designed to help examiners evade the (highly desirable) requirements of the Prompt Corrective Action Act.

“Consider ways to incorporate more flexibility into CAMELS ratings. One approach would be formally splitting the ‘2’ rating into a ‘2’ and ‘2+,’ which would allow for more directional guidance to an institution.”

How much money did we have to pay to create this disgraceful and dishonest report that encourages evasions of a law even though all our experience is that the evasions increase costs and disproportionately favor the largest and most politically powerful banks?

A Report Composed of Consultant Jargon

The Fiechter report goes on at length about the supposed critical need for the OCC to specify its “risk appetite” in numerous contexts. The entire exercise is an extension of long-discredited “reinventing government” jargon that claimed that all would be well if government officials were willing to take greater risks – by which they meant trusting the industry’s self-reporting.