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Federal Reserve: Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Is What Scares Us About Banks In Physical Commodities

Federal Reserve: Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Is What Scares Us About Banks In Physical Commodities thumbnail

The Federal Reserve took a potential step Tuesday to limit big banks’ activities in physical commodities, publicly outlining concerns with bank investments in ventures that can lead to deadly oil spills, pipeline ruptures and natural gas explosions.

The expected move comes after months of criticism by U.S. lawmakers that large banks’ recent expansion into businesses such as oil fields and tankers, metals warehouses, and chemical pipelines poses risks to the U.S. economy and financial system. Industrial companies, such as MillerCoors, and lawmakers, including Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), also have raised concerns about possible manipulation of key commodities markets, which may boost banks’ profit while leading to higher costs for households and manufacturers.

In its request for public comment, the Fed appeared skeptical of the benefits of banks’ involvement in physical commodities. The Fed pointed out several environmental disasters that resulted from physical commodities activities, such as the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico and the 2010 explosion of a power plant in Middletown, Conn., that killed six people. BP alone had recognized $42.2 billion in losses as of last year as a result of the oil spill, the Fed said. Having banks involved in physical commodities puts them at risk of similar catastrophes, the Fed suggested, which could lead to a big bank’s failure.

While the Fed detailed numerous concerns and suggested several ways to mitigate risks posed by banks’ involvement in physical commodities, it took no further action. It posed some two dozen questions, but didn’t state any timelines for answers. And the Fed said it’s not guaranteed to issue new rules or otherwise rein in banks’ activities in the sector.

Though Michael Gibson, the Fed’s head of supervision and regulation, plans to tell the Senate Banking Committee on Wednesday that the regulator expects to “engage in additional rulemaking in this area,” according to a copy of his prepared remarks, for the foreseeable future banks can continue operating like they have over the past decade and reap profits off their metals, storage, transportation and energy businesses.

“I suspect … this will continue to be a slow process and this release is more focused on placating legislators than affirmatively restricting activities of the [banks],” said Joshua Rosner, managing director at independent research firm Graham Fisher & Co.

Brown, who has been pressing the Fed to act since July, said the Fed’s decision, “while a step forward, is still overdue and insufficient.”

“It has been almost 15 years since the passage of Gramm-Leach-Bliley, more than a decade since the first bank received approval from the Fed, and more than five years since investment banks became bank holding companies,” Brown said. “Each day that we wait to rein in these activities means that end users and consumers will pay higher commodity and energy prices, and taxpayers will continue to be exposed to excessive risks at Too Big to Fail banks.”

The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999 enabled financial companies to enter the physical commodities business. Fed decisions since then have allowed banks to expand those activities to include aluminum warehouses, mines and power plants. Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, commodities giants that converted to banks in 2008 during the height of the crisis, have continued their physical commodities activities.

The financial crisis led some banks to boost their physical commodities activities. That expansion, plus recent catastrophes like the BP oil spill, has alarmed some Fed officials, the regulator said.

The Fed, in fact, appeared to go to extraordinary lengths to highlight recent disasters in an effort to convey its concerns. The Fed noted the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan, degraded a power plant and resulted in a nuclear disaster. It also pointed to the 2013 derailment in Canada of a cargo train carrying crude oil that killed 47 people and the recent collision of a train carrying crude oil with a train carrying grain near an ethanol plant in North Dakota.

The industrial sector and government organizations charged with overseeing it have struggled with safety issues, the Fed noted.

“Recent events have increased concerns regarding the ability of companies to mitigate potentially extraordinary tail and other risks,” Gibson said in his prepared remarks. The financial crisis, he said, also “highlighted the danger of underappreciated tail risks,” or the danger of an extremely rare and destabilizing event.

Concerns about these commodities activities aren’t new. Some Fed officials internally have been warning for years about the risks. Besides the risk of a large bank’s failure as a result of an environmental disaster, there’s also the potential for banks to manipulate their physical commodities holdings to benefit their positions in financial instruments such as derivatives.

Norman Bay, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s enforcement chief, plans to tell the Banking Committee that market manipulators can rig energy markets by using trades of physical commodities to move prices in a way that benefits their overall financial position, according to his prepared remarks.

In such a scheme, Bay said, “The manipulator may lose money in its physical trades, but the scheme is profitable because the financial positions are benefitted above and beyond the physical losses.”

Rosner and Saule Omarova, a law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill who served as a special adviser for regulatory policy at the Treasury Department during the George W. Bush presidency, argue that traders at banks that own physical commodities assets have a natural incentive to use inside knowledge gleaned from their co-workers to generate profits from trades of derivatives tied to the underlying commodities.

Bay said the regulator is hamstrung in its ability to bring certain cases because it lacks access to data from financial markets that are held by other federal regulators, notably the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

In its request for public comment, the Fed pointed to concerns about “undue concentration of resources, decreased or unfair competition, conflicts of interests, unsound banking practices, or risk to the stability of the United States banking or financial system.”

Some federal regulatory officials have said that these concerns have existed for years inside the Fed and other agencies. Omarova said that among U.S. regulators, the Fed is best equipped to act. Its powers are expansive, and banks have little option but to follow the Fed’s demands, she said.

Fed supporters reckon that the regulator deserves the benefit of the doubt as its top officials have been busy over the past few years implementing a host of new rules in hopes of preventing another financial crisis, from requiring banks to reduce their reliance on debt to producing new restrictions on trading activities.

The Fed appears to be finally focusing on the risks associated with physical commodities. It said it is now weighing its options. The regulator said it could restrict certain activities, heighten requirements for banks that engage in certain physical commodities businesses, or in effect make it so expensive for banks to play in physical commodities that banks may conclude it’s simply not worth the hassle.

Some banks, such as Morgan Stanley, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase, already have announced they either are exiting key physical commodities activities, shuttering certain units or are weighing potential sales of parts of their operations. Their moves coincide with recent scrutiny by the Fed and U.S. lawmakers.

In its public request for information, the Fed, which in 2003 began allowing some banks to enter certain physical commodities markets after the banks argued the activities were “complementary” to the financial side of their business, appeared skeptical of the “complementary” argument now that banks have said they are exiting certain markets. The Fed said the moves suggest the relationship between physical commodities and related derivatives “may not be as close as previously claimed or expected.”

The Fed also appeared doubtful that moves by banks to insulate themselves from liability would sufficiently protect them from an environmental disaster.

Public confidence in a bank facing potential liability from an environmental catastrophe “could suddenly and severely be undermined,” the Fed said. The bank could be shut out of financial markets while counterparties assessed the bank’s liability, potentially a long process that could put the bank at risk of failure.

“Although the likelihood of a catastrophic event is small in the short term, catastrophes involving physical commodities continue to occur, and the resultant damages are very difficult to measure, even after the event has occurred, and may be extremely large,” the Fed noted.

The Fed also pointed out that because banks have not yet had to face the fallout from an environmental disaster resulting from their physical commodities activities, it’s unclear how resilient they’d be should one occur.

“The absence of such an experience may hinder [banks’] ability to assess the efficacy of their safeguards,” the Fed noted.

Rosner said it was unfortunate the Fed chose not to take more decisive action, such as banning banks from participating in certain physical commodities activities, “given the Fed’s own acknowledgement that they are lucky the hand grenade has not yet exploded in their hand up till now.”

Despite its apparent concerns, it’s unclear what eventual action the Fed may take, or when it will decide its review is complete. The Fed in effect asked the public for advice on what it should do.

In the meantime, counterparties to banks involved in physical commodities — and investors in those banks — now have a public document from the Fed detailing how a bank could face trouble in the event of a physical commodity-related calamity.

“The systemically destabilizing impacts that could occur in the face of catastrophe involving one of these businesses leads one to wonder whether releasing a document without prohibiting the riskiest of these activities only exacerbates the chances that counterparties would step away if such a catastrophe happened tomorrow,” Rosner said.

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7 Comments on "Federal Reserve: Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill Is What Scares Us About Banks In Physical Commodities"

  1. J-Gav on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 5:57 pm 

    “Possible manipulation of key commodities markets.” Somebody please pick me up off the floor …

  2. rockman on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 7:34 pm 

    “…BP alone had recognized $42.2 billion in losses as of last year as a result of the oil spill, the Fed said. Having banks involved in physical commodities puts them at risk of similar catastrophes, the Fed suggested, which could lead to a big bank’s failure.”.

    I doubt it. In my 39 years not once have I seen a bank take a working interest position in the drilling of any well. A working interest owner in a well is liable for any accidents and the associated costs. A bank may have loaned money to a company drilling a Macondo like well or may have bought stock in a company drilling such a well. But if the well goes horribly wrong as did Macondo the most a bank might lose is that loan amount or a big chunk of the stock equity. The bank is never going to be on the hook like BP et al were.

    Maybe the feds don’t want the banks to grant risky loans or own stock in companies which are involved in any commodities. That’s a completely different issue. Tossing out the Macondo blowout is one of the biggest red herrings I’ve seen in a long time. It’s as if they are trying to use the Mother of All False Fears to sell their position. Or maybe it’s no more complicated that the author doesn’t really understand the business and is making an honest though foolish mistake.

  3. Northwest Resident on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 7:49 pm 

    “…given the Fed’s own acknowledgement that they are lucky the hand grenade has not yet exploded in their hand up till now.”

    Big PR announcement that the Fed is “moving” to prevent banks from taking a risk that the banks have never suffered a loss from to date. WTF!?

    There is more to this story than meets the eye, that’s pretty much a guarantee. Maybe the Fed is trying to scare the banks away from involvement with commodities because they have reason to believe that the commodities “market” is going to suffer some catastrophic losses in the near future, and The FED doesn’t want the banks to lose their shirts on loans (which we, the taxpayers, would need to bail out again). Something like that? Of course they can’t just tell us the truth — that would be totally out of character.

  4. ghung on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 9:14 pm 

    I imagine the Fed wants to reign in the big banks the same way Obama wants to reign in the NSA. It’s about public perception.

  5. DC on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 9:19 pm 

    But, unlimited market fraud and manipulation is proof that the ‘free-market’ is working as intended! Cant have actual limits placed on banks activities. How will banks be able to inflate the next bubble now that amerika has milked the over-priced, shoddily built home bubble to death?

  6. J-Gav on Wed, 15th Jan 2014 10:35 pm 

    Ghung – I dunno – they might want to but do they have the power? Then again, some of the rascals ensconced therein might not really want to at all, if you see what I mean …

    They may not be ‘one big happy family,’ but the elites still know how to steer money-making trends their way, if nothing else and, as Makati keeps warning, there’s always war to kick-start a new cycle of “prosperity.”

    Big banks, millionaire politicians, insurance companies, Big Ag, Big Pharma, the security and surveillance industries, the internet/media-throttling communications moguls …

    You know as well as many others here and there what we’re up against. I’m not sure there’s going to be a lot of ‘reigning in’ during our march toward authoritarianism, or, as Sheldon Wolden puts it: “inverted totalitarianism.”

    In other words, if there’s no groundswell movement in the U.S.A. to at least counter, if not reverse, this tendency, it will soon be game-over for democracy.

    What form could such a resistance movement take? It would have to be non-violent (they’re armed to the gills) but nobody knows since most are busy doing other stuff … Well, there’s always the heartening efforts made by a dedicated few in some communities which may yet have a chance of coming through, if not unscathed, at least alive and with some vibrancy. You seem to be one of the active and lucky ones who has already managed a fair portion of that transition (more than just in theory). Follow through man, and good luck to your community.
    PS – I realize this is a long comment on such a short post but it’s been building up for a while…

  7. ghung on Thu, 16th Jan 2014 5:07 am 

    Thanks, J-Gav. My comment about Obama and the NSA was more about Obama’s impotence than anything else. In the same sense, the Fed won’t do anything to upset the apple cart too much. I’m sure they all at least have a clue how leveraged all of their systems are.

    As for the rest, I understand the futility of pushing on strings. My first rule of resistance is to render no aid; starve the beast. It’s not a perfect plan, and it’s more about living with one’s self than affecting the process.

    Who knows? If enough people realize they don’t need most of this stuff they’ll avoid the frustration of not having it when it’s gone. They’ll do something else; make other arrangements that don’t involve trashing the planet. That’s way down on my list of probabilities though. My view of humanity’s future is essentially Darwinian.

    Passive resistance; watch it play out from the cheap seats. The best most old men can hope to do is to try and explain this mess to those who’ll inherit it.

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