Is the U.S. no longer the center of the economic universe? Credit expert Ann Rutledge discusses the recent credit rating downgrade of the U.S. economy and tackles the deeper underlying economic and moral issues, such as attitudes towards risk.
JULIA KENNEDY: Welcome to Just Business, a series of interviews on global
business ethics. Today I am talking about financial crises past and future with
Ann Rutledge, founding principal of R&R Consulting.
From Rutledge's career at J.P. Morgan Securities in Asia, Moody's Investor Service,
and as an adjunct professor and media expert on credit ratings, not only does
Rutledge understand the technical side of the global economy, but as a consultant,
she examines reforms to inject more accountability into the global financial
system.
Ann Rutledge, welcome to Just Business.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Thank you, Julia.
JULIA KENNEDY: Let's start with the basics. A couple of years ago, informed
Americans had to learn about credit default swaps and all kinds of other technical
terms. Now we all have to learn about international credit ratings.
Why don't you first boil it down for our audience, and then we'll get into some
of the analysis.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Credit rating is an arm's length, supposedly an arm's length,
objective valuation of the credit risk of a bond. It is a kind of standardization
of risk measurement.
If we look back to the old days when the banks were the primary source of debt
capital, banks treated each loan as an individual case and made loans and priced
loans and wrote covenants based upon the analysis of the individual borrower.
That market is long gone. First of all, in the 1970s the bank market for lending
gave way to an investment bank model where banks were originating loans but
not necessarily carrying them on their balance sheets. It was a much bigger,
much deeper, much more superficial approach to credit analysis. Necessarily,
it had the need for wholesale treatment. So a credit rating is really the wholesale
grading of bond exposures and loan exposures.
JULIA KENNEDY: So then how do you talk about that for a nation?
ANN RUTLEDGE: Right. Nations borrow money, too, and so the U.S. Government,
as a user of capital, as a borrower, has its own credit rating. The significant
of the U.S. credit rating downgrade from AAA, which is the highest possible
rating, to AA+ means, on the one hand, that the United States is not a pristine
borrower in the eyes of S&P [Standard
& Poor's].
It also means, perhaps in a more abstract sense, that the United States is no
longer the center of the economic universe. That I think is the basis for a
lot of the controversy, more than the question of the United States' borrowing
ability.
JULIA KENNEDY: So the S&P kept a AAA rating for countries like Austria,
Australia, and the UK. Do you think that suddenly investors are going to jump
ship from the United States and invest in these other countries?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I doubt it very much. First of all, I think that this is a
very special market. The investors in sovereign debt are either other countries
that are managing pension money, et cetera, or they are speculative traders
who play on arbitrages, differences between what they think the sovereign debt
quality is really like and what the rating says, no different from any other
market. But the U.S. Treasury was considered to be money good or as good as
gold by many investors.
So if any of the investors were to begin to suddenly shed their investments,
that would actually roil the markets because it would catalyze changes in prices;
it would destabilize the markets in a very profound way.
JULIA KENNEDY: So even if this is just sort of a symbolic signifier, let's
go back to your earlier comment that this may mark the United States moving
from the center of the global economy. Is this a step in that continuum or is
there any remedying of that at this point?
ANN RUTLEDGE: It's a step in that continuum. Now I am going to get a little
bit professorial if that is all right.
JULIA KENNEDY: Okay, sounds great.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Because there is the social and the economic myth. It's
a reality but it's also a myth, right? The U.S. economy is iconic. It dominates
other economies.
The United States is a leader in ideas. The United States is a leader in financial
concepts. Finance itself developed around the idea of a risk-free benchmark,
which the U.S. Treasury was.
A lot of the conceptual bugs, shall we say, with financial theory and the way
the financial markets have worked in the last ten years are a reflection of
this overstated emphasis on risk-free pricing. Everything in the financial markets
is based upon the concept of a risk-free obligation. But that's a myth.
So, in a very interesting way, the U.S. Treasury being downgraded by one notch
by S&P shifts everything. Like the transition from an earth-centric to a
sun-centric approach to astronomy, we are now moving towards a more balanced—but
very different kind of balance—more balanced approach to looking at risk.
The lesson here—and it's very important economically—the lesson is
that credit-risk measurement is a necessity. Credit risk exists everyplace,
and it has to be measured. The reason why that is so powerful in the context
of the U.S. downgrade—mythical, if you like—is because the U.S. bailout
of its financial system was really created by this wrong idea of finance in
the first place.
JULIA KENNEDY: Explain that a little further. So now you're connecting us
back to the last financial crisis, right? How is this almost an outgrowth of
that?
ANN RUTLEDGE: In my view it is an express outgrowth. The last financial
crisis was based upon a manipulation of the capital markets by the largest players,
who followed the so-called market-value theory, which says a price equals a
value. How do you know the value of something? You look at its price.
Well, that works for things like the price of corn, the price of coffee, the
Starbucks that you drink in the morning, the suit that you put on, but it doesn't
work for debt, because a debt obligation is contractual. You have certain payments
that you must make, and they are very clear, and if you don't make them, you
can be taken to court.
So the best way to value a debt is not based upon what investor A or dealer
B says it's worth but an actual financial calculation based upon statistical
analysis of the probability of default.
Now, it's not perfect, it's not certain, but it is the closest approximation
to value. So when you have the big dealers making prices on debt, they can sort
of make it up as they go along.
JULIA KENNEDY: I'm trying to think of an analogy that a lot of consumers
might be able to draw, and it sounds like it might fit with residential investment
on a home. You buy a home at a certain price, and then if you want to sell it,
you have to have it assessed.
ANN RUTLEDGE: That's correct.
JULIA KENNEDY: So the value of that home, regardless of the price you bought
it at, changes. So you're suggesting you need to do that for these other debts?
ANN RUTLEDGE: It's very similar. But that's a good example, because many
people actually have blamed the housing market on the subprime crisis, when
in fact what really happened was the inverse of that. Banks decided how much
money they wanted to make from a trade, and based upon that, you could work
back to how much the house should cost in order for those transactions to take
place.
You must realize that if the price of a house goes up, you can make maybe two
trades instead of one trade, and the trade looks much more favorable than it
actually is.
So this is a market-risk issue. But, ultimately, the borrower has a limit to
how much they can pay. If the price of the house is beyond their means and the
cost of the loan is beyond their means, it doesn't matter what the investment
bank needed. What matters is whether the borrower can pay or not. That is something
that can be measured incrementally.
JULIA KENNEDY: So we have this issue with credit pricing being off. Then
what happened? How did that escalate into what we're seeing today?
ANN RUTLEDGE: Right. Well, when credit pricing is off, then the system is
off. I would like to again start at the other end, which is if the financial
mechanisms are slanted towards the profit making of one party, particularly
the party that controls capital, the biggest problem is that that capital cannot
find its way back into the economy.
So if a borrower who is working for his own company or working for a small/medium-size
enterprise who has limited capital to pay the mortgage cannot pay the mortgage,
then the business is in trouble, the employer is in trouble, everybody is in
trouble. But not only that. If the bank finds it easier to make a loan to the
borrower as a borrower for a home than as a borrower for a business or to make
a loan to a small/medium-size enterprise, then these economically productive
and positive activities are highly constrained.
So now you see the problem. The bigger problem that underlies the subprime crisis
was that capital was being retained in the financial economy, but it wasn't
going back to the real economy. And because it couldn't go back to the real
economy, the United States had terrible structural economic problems.
JULIA KENNEDY: Now, we had these structural economic problems. After the
crisis, what happened? Why didn't we fix them?
ANN RUTLEDGE: We didn't fix them because we haven't acknowledged them yet.
President Obama
explained the S&P downgrade as a reflection on the political process but
not a reflection on the credit of America. Well, politics and finance are intertwined,
and if the decision makers, the policy makers of America cannot decide how to
resolve the issues, then the money is not going to flow, because the policy
isn't clear.
Should we tax in order to make the money flow? Should we cut taxes in order
to make the money flow? Or should we address the deeper structural problems?
Why should we do that? They haven't been addressed yet.
JULIA KENNEDY: So how would you suggest we restructure the economy to take out
these imbalances?
ANN RUTLEDGE: We still remain in a pretty profound state of denial about
what happened. I think that the first measure would be measurement itself, to
go back and see just how bad the problem was. Where did it originate? In order
to understand what our future liabilities are from the financial system standpoint,
we need to go back and actually measure how bad the losses were. We haven't
done that yet.
JULIA KENNEDY: Do you worry that with focus now on the rating downgrade we
are going to lose sight and lose perspective on the second-to-last crisis?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I actually think that if we hadn't had the downgrade, we would
have not focused on the crisis. There was a lot of concerted denial, a lot of
concerted revisionist history that prevented the people who really wanted to
know what happened from finding out what happened, because the people who knew
what happened never wanted it to get out.
The idea was that if we just wait long enough, then eventually we'll grow out
of the problem. That's the theory. But that's only true if we have an economy
that's producing. If we don't have a productive economy, the limbo state could
go on forever, but we would still have the myth that the U.S. economy is fine
because we have a triple A rating. Everything is just the way it was. It's the
same U.S.A. that we've known and loved since the end of the war—I mean
World War II.
But that is not true. So I think, in some very interesting sense, the buck stopped
at the rating downgrade.
JULIA KENNEDY: So you see an opportunity here?
ANN RUTLEDGE: Absolutely. I see a very big opportunity.
JULIA KENNEDY: And how optimistic are you that we're going to take it?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I am actually very optimistic about it. The reason I am optimistic
is because, fundamentally, I do believe in markets, but I believe that the most
important role of a market is to communicate information. I care less about
pricing. Pricing should follow information. Pricing should not suppress information.
We've had a tremendous amount of information being suppressed. What I see now
is an opening up and an opportunity for the markets to really assess value in
a more authentic way.
JULIA KENNEDY: How can the markets be more transparent? And what can be done
to improve even communication? I think a lot of borrowers and consumers sort
of claimed ignorance in the last financial crisis. So how can that communication
be improved?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I think there are a couple of things. One thing is probably
the biggest factor is the fear factor. I know a lot of really smart people who
are good thinkers who just turn a blind eye to finance, because they say, I
don't understand it, it's dirty; I can't fathom my way through it; just don't
get me involved in it.
JULIA KENNEDY: Give me a trustworthy person and I'm going to hand it over
to them.
ANN RUTLEDGE: That is exactly right.
JULIA KENNEDY: Be it Bernie
Madoff or whoever.
ANN RUTLEDGE: That is the problem, is that the people who understand how
finance works live in a very different culture. They may be nice people when
they go home, but what they do at work is mercenary because that is the culture
of finance. It is specifically the culture of finance in a world where you believe
that there is something called risk-free arbitrage. If you believe that there
is a risk-free trade to be made, then you must take it, because it's the best
trade for your institution and you work for your institution.
The damage comes from trying to create an illusion of risk-free trades when
in fact every trade is risky.
JULIA KENNEDY: And you're just pushing the risk on to the next level.
ANN RUTLEDGE: You're pushing the risk onto the person who trusts you.
JULIA KENNEDY: We just covered the consumers which have to take a stronger
role in watching what their representatives do for them.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Yes.
JULIA KENNEDY: How can you improve accountability at the banker level?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I think the banker is the last level because banks have their
own mandates. The banks do not exist anymore to circulate capital. That is an
idea that stopped when banks stopped lending. I am not saying that all banks
have stopped lending, but what I am saying is that the big banks that represent
the lion's share of the economy, they don't really lend for a business. What
they do is they manage their capital inventories. When you manage your capital
inventories as an asset manager, your goal is to maximize profitability. They
have no incentive to do it until the incentives are placed upon them.
So what really has to happen at the level of accountability of the financial
institution is to separate the function of the financial institution from the
administration and the execution—the administrative, the executive and
the judicial branches of the government. That will take time because Congress
is the person we just talked about, the person who is looking for a trustworthy
party.
JULIA KENNEDY: Right. So we have the bankers that are very intertwined with
the political system.
Let's talk now about government, which is also a borrower and lender. This gets
so complex because government is a borrower and lender itself but is also regulating
the economy. So in terms of accountability, it seems like government is the
place to go. What reforms need to take place to ensure that it's watching the
bankers and keeping its own house in order?
ANN RUTLEDGE: You said a very important thing. It is very complex, because
we are a Tower of Babel. I'm not ignoring your government question.
JULIA KENNEDY: We'll get back there.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Okay, good.
There are so many different institutions that oversee the financial system.
There are the accountants. There is the SEC
[U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission] that looks at securities. There are
the bank regulators, and they have their ramifications in insurance and at the
state level and so on, and they don't all use the same system, and they don't
all have the same degree of sophistication. Even if they did, their agency bias
will make them interpret a problem in a particular way. So it is very complex.
JULIA KENNEDY: And their funding may be changing.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Their funding may be changing.
But I think, in fact, one of the most difficult challenges is that nobody really
has a common denominator in how they perceive the problems.
I personally am an expert in structured finance. What I have learned from testifying
in Congress is that the authors of Dodd-Frank
[Dodd–Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act] did not understand
securitization, and yet the rules that they put in place now must be embraced
by the securities regulator who, by the way, does understand securizations perhaps
uniquely.
I am not sure if the bank regulators understand it or not because they are closely
aligned with the interests of the banks, who do understand it but had a different
interpretation.
JULIA KENNEDY: It's so funny listening to you because what you're saying
echoes to me a lot of what we heard after 9/11, frankly, in terms of bureaucratic
communication and miscommunication.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Yes.
JULIA KENNEDY: So perhaps a possible answer would be to throw the kind of
funding that was thrown in the Patriot
Act to try to open up lines of communication between these agencies.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Potentially.
JULIA KENNEDY: I know this is kind of out of left field. I am just brainstorming
here.
ANN RUTLEDGE: No, no. It's an interesting question. But it reminds me of
an asset manager who said, "I get paid $2 million to manage the portfolio,
but if you want me to be honest, you'd have to pay me a lot more."
So I actually think that what needs to happen is the impossible. Call me a Pollyanna,
but I think that people have to make a decision of whether they represent themselves
or they represent the good of the country, because everybody now knows how to
feather their own nest. Everybody who is a decision maker knows how to maximize
the profit opportunities that come from their role. The real question is, is
that what they want to do with their lives?
So if government wants to think, maybe for the first time in 30 years, about
good government in a utilitarian sense where everybody benefits, there are some
fairly simple solutions. But I don't think that they'll happen overnight.
JULIA KENNEDY: What would be the sort of good-government solutions that would
come from an ethical, if I may use the word, place?
ANN RUTLEDGE: I think the word "ethics" implies a transparent
and fair, level playing field. The way to achieve that, quite honestly, is technical.
So if you have the stomach to hear a technical explanation, the technical explanation
is to not start at the big-picture level, because the devil is in the details.
The technical answer is that you need to agree as a country what AAA really
means, because it doesn't mean us. We're human, we're greedy, we're fallible.
Nobody is AAA in the true sense, the permanent sense.
So in my field, in structured finance, there is a numerical definition for AAA,
and that should be publicly known. Everybody should know what AAA looks like
as a debt. Then everybody should know what AA looks like, A, BBB. This is particularly
true in structured finance. It is more true than in corporate finance, because
in structured finance you are allowing corporations to go to the markets the
way a bank goes to the Federal Reserve to get money. It actually changes the
velocity of money. It changes our macroeconomics profoundly. So we need to understand,
we need to all agree what AAA means.
JULIA KENNEDY: It sounds like part of what you're saying is we need to be
more responsible, we need to think about good government and governance, but
also we need to be less lazy.
ANN RUTLEDGE: We need to be less lazy. That is true.
Since the subprime crisis originated in the structured finance market, I think
we need to understand what structured finance is. Before we decide that it should
go away, we should really think twice, because if structured finance is done
properly, it actually is a solution to our economic problems, and it is one
that the Democrats and the Republicans could agree on.
JULIA KENNEDY: How so? Explain it to me in simple terms.
ANN RUTLEDGE: In simple terms, if we measure our risks, if we measure the
risk of the capital that we put at work for the economy, and we have a good
risk measure, and we continue to measure it, we can actually borrow more money
against the cash flows that come out of the things we invest in.
If we know what the investment in education means in real economic terms, if
we know what the investment in a road means in real economic terms, if we know
what the investment in housing is, we can actually put that knowledge to work
for us by creating a balance sheet where the certain repayments can be funded
in debt and the rest of it can be funded by the government or by Bill
Gates or somebody who believes in the importance of that investment.
But many of our investments are self-sustaining. We should know what those assets
are. That does mean we have to be less lazy. It also means that we need to be
a little bit more numerically attuned than we are.
But it honestly does not require a great deal more effort. What it requires
is a paradigm shift and an optimism. There really are very good, clear answers
out there, but we cannot get so caught up in our fears and so obsessive about
what has happened in the past that we think there is no future. There is a future.
JULIA KENNEDY: Are there other countries that do better on these kinds of
assessments?
ANN RUTLEDGE: No, there aren't. Securitization and structured finance were
invented in the United States, and the United States is still the leader in
ideas. It has to come from us.
JULIA KENNEDY: Fareed
Zakaria and others have been predicting a "post-American world."
That's the title of Fareed Zakaria's big best-seller, and he just came out with
Post-American World: Release 2.0. We've been hearing about declinism
since Paul
Kennedy in the 1980s. So this is a picture in which the United States ceases
to occupy the center of the global economy.
We touched on this earlier, but I'm curious if you think that is going to happen.
Is that an inevitability, or is there an opportunity for the United States to
continue? Should it try to continue?
ANN RUTLEDGE: Well, Julia, I think that I agree that the United States doesn't
occupy the center of the world in many respects, nor do I think it should. But
the real question is a question of leadership and progress and the future.
I spent 11 or 12 years living in Chinese-speaking Asia, and I have some amount
of cultural perspective on where we're strong and where we're weak. But what
I see is still a tremendous dependency upon the United States—financially,
economically, even if only because we're greater consumers, and intellectually.
The ideas still come from the United States. I say that not because I'm partisan
but because that's a fact.
So one of the things that I've weighed in my mind about the significance of
the downgrade is whether this is China's opportunity to fill the vacuum. My
conclusion is that China does have some fiscal discipline that we don't have.
But our economy still has more innovation. It's more resilient. It still produces
more value, even thought it is constrained, than the Chinese economy does. The
world still looks to the United States for its new ideas, the new new thing.
In that sense, in an intellectual sense, we are still kind of the center of
the universe, and I think that we ought to think seriously about using our resourcefulness
and what we've created, our knowledge of what we've created, to clean up our
own house.
JULIA KENNEDY: Tell me a little bit about how you got into thinking in these
big-picture ideas, how you moved from the banking world to this consulting analytical
role.
ANN RUTLEDGE: I started out in finance as a mistake. My whole generation
went into finance, and so did I. It's easy money. You go into an MBA program
and you come out and you can make $100,000 more than you could when you went
in. You pay off your education in one year and you move on.
Well, it didn't happen that way for me. It did for some of my friends who went
to—I went to Chicago. But for me, it took me about eight years to figure
out what finance meant.
So maybe I am a big-picture thinker to begin with, but when I started doing
structured finance, then—structured finance is really the synthesis of
all financial ideas. It's not really a particular method. It's thinking numerically
and thinking from the ground up. It's a bit like philosophy, which I minored
in in college.
JULIA KENNEDY: Finance is just like philosophy. I love it, yes.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Absolutely, it is. It's the enablement of ideas. It's the
organization and enablement of ideas.
So that was the situation when I joined Moody's Investor Service and did structured
finance for Moody's, and I did it for four-and-a-half years. Those were great
years for learning the craft and also learning about rating agencies. But I
left Moody's at the end of the 1990s because I saw that there were issues that
they weren't addressing that really needed to be addressed for the securitization
rating system to work properly. So that's how I got into it.
JULIA KENNEDY: What do you want to see happen with the financial system and
with the federal government to address these issues?
ANN RUTLEDGE: You know, I am not partisan. I mean I have my political views,
but I believe in ideas fundamentally.
What I would like to see, first of all, is I would like to see the restoration
of the veneration of ideas and practical implementation of ideas that represented
American culture at the time that I was born. I would like to see that. I would
like to see the restoration of America as a place of much more equal opportunity,
where people are rewarded for hard work and good ideas and risk taking.
My belief is—perhaps it's only in my head, but my belief is that what we
are facing right now is the end of a 500-year cycle, a cycle of looking at finance
through the eyes of corporations. I think what has happened to finance is similar
to what has happened to the sciences, that we've drilled down from megastructures
to macrostructures to microstructures. Securitization and structured finance
is a microstructural approach to finance that conserves capital and rewards
effort in a much fairer way.
So I think this is the overall general trend of where finance will go. What
I would like to see is I would like to see America embrace that and carry it
out and restore itself in the process.
I believe that when the clock was introduced, it revolutionized the concept
of time. For the first time, we could measure quality of time in economic terms.
What the rating system that we have right now attempts to do is to quantify
the quality of capital that we produce.
I think it is inevitable, if we want to continue to flourish as a society or
as a globe, that we look more seriously at the quality of capital that we're
producing.
JULIA KENNEDY: So it's a matter of learning to use the tool?
ANN RUTLEDGE: Absolutely.
JULIA KENNEDY: Well, it's wonderful to have a philosopher/financier on this
show. Ann Rutledge, thanks so much for joining me.
ANN RUTLEDGE: Thank you, Julia.