In: Finance
What Was the Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis ?
The savings and loan (S&L) crisis was a slow-moving financial
disaster that came to a head in the 1980s and 1990s and resulted in
the failure of nearly a third of the 3,234 savings and loan
associations in the United States between 1986 and 1995. It began
during the volatile interest rate climate, stagflation, and slow
growth of the 1970s and ended with a total cost of $160
billion—$132 billion of which was borne by taxpayers. Key to the
S&L crisis was a mismatch of regulations to market conditions,
speculation, as well as outright corruption and fraud, and the
implementation of greatly slackened and broadened lending standards
that led desperate banks to take far too much risk balanced by far
too little capital on hand.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: Regulations
Restrictions placed on S&Ls at their creation via the Federal
Home Loan Bank Act of 1932— such as caps on interest rates on
deposits and loans—greatly limited the ability of S&Ls to
compete with other lenders as the economy slowed and inflation took
hold. For instance, as savers piled money into newly created money
market funds in the early 1980s, S&Ls could not compete with
traditional banks due to their lending restrictions. Add in a
recession (sparked by high interest rates set by the Fed in an
effort to end double-digit inflation), and S&Ls were left with
little more than an ever-dwindling portfolio of low-interest
mortgage loans. Their revenue stream had become severely
tightened.
By 1982 the fortunes of S&Ls had turned. They were losing as
much as $4 billion per year after having turned a healthy profit in
1980.
How the Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis Unfolded
In 1982, in response to the poor prospects for S&Ls under
current economic conditions, President Ronald Reagan signed
Garn-St. Germain Depository Institutions Act, which eliminated
loan-to-value ratios and interest rate caps for S&Ls, and also
allowed them to hold 30% of their assets in consumer loans and 40%
in commercial loans. No longer were S&Ls governed by Regulation
Q, which led to a tightening of the spread between the cost of
money and the rate of return on assets.
With reward uncoupled from risk, zombie thrifts began paying higher
and higher rates to attract funds. S&Ls also began investing in
riskier commercial real estate and even riskier junk bonds. This
strategy of investing in riskier and riskier projects and
instruments assumed that they would pay off in higher returns. Of
course, if those returns didn’t materialize, it would be taxpayers
[through the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation
(FSLIC)]—not the banks or S&Ls officials—who would be left
holding the bag. That's exactly what eventually happened.
At first, the measures seemed to have done the trick, at least for
some S&Ls; by 1985, S&L assets had shot up by over 50% (far
faster growth than banks). S&L growth was especially robust in
Texas. Some state legislators allowed S&Ls to double down by
allowing them to invest in speculative real estate. Still, more
than a third of S&Ls were not profitable, as of 1983. Meantime,
although pressure was mounting on the FSLIC's coffers, even failing
S&Ls were allowed to keep lending. By 1987 the FSLIC had become
insolvent. Rather than allowing it and S&Ls to fail as they
were destined to do, the federal government recapitalized the
FSLIC. For a while longer, the S&Ls were allowed to continue to
pile on risk.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: Fraud
The 'Wild West' attitude among some S&Ls led to outright fraud
among insiders. One common fraud saw two partners conspire with an
appraiser to buy land using S&L loans and flip it to extract
huge profits. Partner 1 would buy a parcel at its appraised market
value. The duo would then conspire with an appraiser to have it
reappraised at a far higher price. The parcel would then be sold to
Partner 2 using a loan from a S&L, which was then defaulted on.
Both partners and the appraiser would share the profits. Some
S&Ls knew of—and allowed—such fraudulent transactions to
happen.
Due to staffing and workload issues, as well as the complexity of
such cases, law enforcement was slow to pursue instances of fraud
even when they were aware of them
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: Resolution
As a result of the S&L crisis, Congress passed the Financial
Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA),
which amounted to a vast revamp of S&L industry regulations.
One of the most significant actions of the FIRREA was the creation
of the Resolution Trust Corporation, which had the goal of winding
down the failed S&Ls that regulators had taken control of. It
also put forth minimum capital requirements, raised insurance
premiums, limited S&Ls' non-mortgage and mortgage-related
holdings to 30%, and required the divestment of junk bonds. When
all was said and done, the Resolution Trust Corp. had liquidated
more than 700 S&Ls.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: Aftermath
The S&L Crisis is arguably the most catastrophic collapse of
the banking industry since the Great Depression. Across the United
States, more than 1,000 S&Ls had failed by 1989, essentially
ending what had been one of the most secure sources of home
mortgages. The S&L market share for single-family mortgages
before the crisis was 53% (1975); after, it was 30% (1990).
The one-two punch to the finance industry and the real estate
market most likely contributed to the recession of 1990-1991, as
new home starts fell to a low not seen since World War II. Some
economists speculate that the regulatory and financial incentives
that created a moral hazard that led to the 2007 subprime mortgage
crisis are very similar to the conditions that led to the S&L
crisis.
Important: The savings and loan (S&L) crisis led to the failure
of nearly a third of the 3,234 savings and loan associations in the
United States between 1986 and 1995.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: Everything's Bigger in
Texas
The crisis was felt doubly hard in Texas where at least half of the
failed S&Ls were based. The collapse of the S&L industry
pushed the state into a severe recession. Bad land investments were
auctioned off, causing real estate prices to plummet. Office
vacancies rose significantly, and the price of crude oil dropped by
half. Texas banks, such as Empire Savings and Loan, took part in
criminal activities that further caused the Texas economy to
plummet. The bill for Empire's eventual default cost taxpayers
about $300 million.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: State Insurance
The FSLIC was established to provide insurance for individuals
depositing their hard-earned funds into S&Ls. When S&L
banks failed, the FSLIC was left with a $20 billion debt that
inevitably left the corporation bankrupt, as premiums paid into the
insurer fell far short of liabilities. The defunct company is
similar to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) that
oversees and insures deposits today.
During the S&L crisis, which did not effectively end until the
early 1990s, the deposits of some 500 banks and financial
institutions were backed by state-run funds. The collapse of these
banks cost at least $185 million and virtually ended the concept of
state-run bank insurance funds.
Savings and Loan – S&L – Crisis: The Keating Five Scandal
During this crisis, five U.S. senators known as the Keating Five
were investigated by the Senate Ethics Committee due to the $1.5
million in campaign contributions they accepted from Charles
Keating, head of the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association. These
senators were accused of pressuring the Federal Home Loan Banking
Board to overlook suspicious activities in which Keating had
participated. The Keating Five included John McCain (R–Ariz.), Alan
Cranston (D–Calif.), Dennis DeConcini (D–Ariz.), John Glenn
(D–Ohio), and Donald W. Riegle, Jr. (D–Mich.).
In 1992, the Senate committee determined that Cranston, Riegle, and
DeConcini had improperly interfered with the FHLBB's investigation
of Lincoln Savings. Cranston received a formal reprimand. When
Lincoln failed in 1989, its bailout cost the government $3 billion
and left more than 20,000 customers with junk bonds that were
worthless. Keating was convicted of conspiracy, racketeering, and
fraud, and served time in prison before his conviction was
overturned in 1996. In 1999 he pleaded guilty to lesser charges and
was sentenced to time served