3.2 Types and Roles of Financial Institutions
47
the value of houses declined to levels below the amounts of the underlying mortgages, wiping
out all equity the homeowners had in the houses. When mortgage loans exceed the value of
the underlying houses, the mortgage loans are said to be “underwater.”
Many banks and other fi nancial institutions that held mortgage loans and mortgage-backed
securities as assets suff ered liquidity and solvency problems when the values of these loans
and securities fell to such low levels that there was concern whether the fi nancial institutions
could meet their liability obligations when they came due. This situation was made worse by
increasing unemployment throughout the United States, resulting in a contraction in economic
activity that culminated in the Great Recession of 2008–2009.
In March 2008, Bear Sterns, a major fi nancial institution, was on the verge of failing
due to the collapse of the values of mortgage-backed securities and had to be acquired by
the JPMorgan Chase & Co. with the help of the Federal Reserve and the U.S. Treasury. By
September 2008, the fi nancial crisis was at its peak. Lehman Brothers, a major investment
bank, was allowed to fail, and Merrill Lynch was sold to Bank of America.
Shortly after the Lehman bankruptcy and the Merrill sale, American International Group
(AIG), the largest insurance fi rm in the United States, was “bailed out” by the Federal Reserve
with the U.S. government receiving an ownership interest in AIG. Like Merrill, the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae), and the Federal Home Mortgage Association
(Freddie Mac), AIG was considered “too large to fail” due to its potential impact on the global
fi nancial markets.
In late September 2008, Washington Mutual, the largest S&L in the United States,
failed with most of its assets being purchased by JPMorgan Chase. Wachovia Bank, then
the fourth largest commercial bank in the United States, was also on the brink of bank-
ruptcy before fi nally agreeing to be purchased by Wells Fargo Bank. Citigroup and Bank of
America, the fi rst and second largest U.S. banks, respectively, also were suff ering fi nancial
diffi
culties.
The U.S. government responded with the passage of the Economic Stabilization Act of
2008 in early October 2008. A primary focus of the legislation was to allow the U.S. Treasury
to purchase up to $700 billion of “troubled” or “toxic” assets held by fi nancial institutions.
This became known as the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP). However, much of the
TARP funds were actually used to invest capital in banks with little equity on their balance
sheets, as well as to rescue large nonfi nancial business fi rms, specifi cally General Motors and
Chrysler, who were on the verge of failing. In an eff ort to stimulate economic activity, the U.S.
government also passed the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 in
February 2009. Funds were to be used to provide tax relief, appropriations, and direct spend-
ing. In Chapter 5, we will discuss the legislative and other actions by the U.S. government and
the Federal Reserve to counter the perfect fi nancial storm.
3.2
Types and Roles of Financial Institutions
The current system of fi nancial institutions or intermediaries in the United States, like the
monetary system, evolved to meet the needs of the country’s citizens and to facilitate the
savings-investment process. Individuals may save and grow their savings with the assist-
ance of fi nancial institutions. While individuals can invest directly in the securities of
business fi rms and government units, most individuals invest indirectly through fi nancial
institutions that do the lending and investing for them.
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