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Savings and loan crisis

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The Savings and loan crisis of the 1980s and 1990s (commonly dubbed the S&L crisis) was the failure of approximately a third of the savings and loan associations (S&Ls or thrifts) in the United States between 1986 and 1995. These thrifts were banks that historically specialised in fixed-rate mortgage lending.[1] The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) closed or otherwise resolved 296 thrifts from 1986 to 1989, whereupon the newly established Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) took up these responsibilities. The two agencies closed 1,043 banks that held $519 billion in assets. The total cost of taxpayers by the end of 1999 was $123.8 billion with $29.1 billion (approximately 19 percent) of losses imposed onto the thrift industry.[2]

Starting in 1979 and through the early 1980s, the Federal Reserve sharply increased interest rates in an effort to reduce inflation. At that time, S&Ls had issued long-term loans at fixed interest rates that were lower than prevailing deposit rates. When interest rates at which they could borrow increased, the S&Ls could not attract adequate capital from deposits and savings accounts of members for instance. Attempts to attract more deposits by offering higher interest rates led to liabilities that could not be paid-for by the lower interest rates at which they had loaned money. The end result was that about one third of S&Ls became insolvent, causing a first wave of failures in 1981–83.

When the problem became apparent, Congress acted to permit thrifts to engage in new lending activities with the hope that they would be more profitable. This included issuance of adjustable-rate mortgages and permission to enter into commercial real estate lending. Lower capital requirements and permissive accounting standards also allowed weaker thrifts to continue operating even though under the old rules they would have been insolvent. These changes allowed for substantial risk-taking and thrifts to grow substantially. However, the regional concentration of thrift investments in the American south and southwest proved highly fragile. When property prices in those regions dropped in 1986, a second and larger wave of failures started.

The thrift deposit insurer, FSLIC, became quickly insolvent. FSLIC's financial weakness also forced regulators to engage in forbearance, allowing insolvent thrifts to remain open and supporting them with capital injections. By February 1989, Congressional legislation was enacted to enable the Resolution Trust Corporation wind down all remaining insolvent thrifts before itself closing in 1995. responsibility for deposit insurance of thrifts was, at the same time, transferred to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Causes

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Thrift institutions originated in the 19th century with the goal of pooling resources among members to make loans with which to purchase residential properties.[1] The industry grew rapidly at over 10% annually in the postwar period amid government support for home financing.[3] At the time, thrifts were regulated by two – or three, if state regulators are included, – institutions. Examinations were conducted by the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB); but supervisory authority was separate and resided in regional Federal Home Loan Banks.[4] Conflict of interest concerns also existed in the privately-owned home loan banks, leading to poor working relationships between federal employee examiners and the private supervisors. Delays between examinations and their reports arriving to supervisors also meant that supervisory action, if it were to be taken, would be months late.[5] Weak enforcement powers, along with thrifts' rights to contest unfavourable reports, meant the Federal Home Loan Bank Board was highly deferential to bank management.[6]

Interest rate increases

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The early 1980s saw a recession along with high interest rates, which stressed both thrift and other banking institutions considerably.[7] Negative net interest margins, due to the low interest earnt on assets with high deposit interest expenses needed to retain deposits, caused a wave of thrift failures between 1981 and 1983.[1] Federal regulations, especially Regulation Q, placed caps on deposit interest rates. Depositors responded by withdrawing their cash and depositing them in money market mutual funds. In response to these outflows, Congress passed the Depository Institutions Deregulation and Monetary Control Act of 1980 which phased out Regulation Q interest rate caps and expanded thrift lending powers to include construction loans. The deposit insurance limit was also raised from 40,000 to 100,000 dollars per account.[8] The phase-out of deposit interest rate caps, however, caused thrifts' deposit interest expenses to increase substantially as they scrambled to retain depositors. The resulting decline in profitability led to a wave of thrift failures in 1981–83.[9]

Deregulation and commercial lending

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The 1981 Garn–St. Germain Depository Institutions Act completed a process of deregulation that provided relief to weak thrifts by allowing their deposit insurer, the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC), to provide direct capital injections through "net worth certificates".[10] The Garn–St. Germain Act also hugely expanded thrift lending powers, allowing them to engage in commercial real estate and line-of-credit lending, which many thrifts eagerly exploited.[11] Between 1980 and 1986, thrifts' residential mortgage holdings as a proportion of assets fell from over 80 percent to less than 60.[12]

These new lending powers were not accompanied by any increase in supervisory resources or powers.[13][14] The view at the time was that the interest rate environment would quickly ease, allowing for thrifts to restructure their asset portfolios,[15] and that expanded lending powers would allow for thrifts to diversify their portfolios and engage in more profitable lending activities.[10]

Many of the loans made under expanded lending powers were concentrated in rapidly-growing states such as California, Florida, and Texas.[16] Lax state supervision and highly permissive leverage restraints allowed thrifts in these states to expand rapidly, taking on considerable risk concentrated in these business lines and geographic regions.[17] The deregulatory policy of the Reagan administration, enforced by its appointment of thrift executive Edwin J. Gray, reduced thrift examinations between 1981 and 1984 by 26 percent.[18] However, Gray's position reversed after the fraud-induced failure of Texas-based Empire Savings and Loan: he spent the next two years increasing examination resources and tightening financial regulations. Such efforts were, however, not supported by industry groups or the Reagan administration.[19] The highly-sensitive nature of commercial real estate values to local economic conditions made these thrifts highly sensitive to those local economic conditions.[20]

Forbearance

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Attempts to smooth over rough market environments included considerable regulatory forbearance: when a regulator decides not to apply regulations that normally would disrupt the operation of a bank. The FHLBB therefore progressively lowered net worth requirements from five percent in 1980 to three percent in 1982.[15] Lax phase-in rules also meant that many newer savings and loan institutions could be required to have net worth requirements lower than three percent; in fact, new institutions could be levered from two million dollars in capital to $1.3 billion in assets (a multiple of 650).[15]

The FHLBB also chose to adopt regulatory accounting principles which allowed institutions to defer reporting of losses and treat more instruments as capital. Accounting rules over supervisory goodwill (a type of intangible asset) were also liberalised, allowing thrifts to purchase other thrifts without FSLIC financial support. This had the collateral effect, however, of preventing the FHLBB from intervening against thinly-capitalised institutions whose balance sheets supported by large amounts of supervisory goodwill.[21] Policy responses chosen by the Reagan administration and adopted by the FHLBB under pressure also refrained from the use of government money; political demands not to alarm the public by closing institutions also supported forbearance. Such choices exposed taxpayers to losses through the deposit insurance scheme while allowing troubled institutions to continue deposit-taking and lending operations.[22]

By 1983, even though the interest rate environment had substantially eased, a tenth of thrifts were insolvent on a GAAP basis, with those institutions controlling 35 percent of thrift industry assets. Even so, such institutions were allowed to continue operating.[23]

Fraud

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While considerable attention has been placed on fraudulent practices at thrift institutions, they were likely not a major contributor to the savings and loan crisis. Expert estimates as of a Congressional Budget Office report in 1992 as to the proportion of losses due to fraud eventually borne by the government range from three to 25 percent.[24] Estimates of the number of failures that involve fraud or insider abuse ranges considerably. An Office of the Comptroller of the Currency study in 1988 indicated fraud in 11 percent of failures between 1979–87; a Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation study in 25 percent of failures in 1989; a Resolution Trust Corporation study in 1992 found fraud in 33 percent of its cases; and a 1994 General Accounting Office study reported 26 percent of banks that failed in 1990–91 had issues with fraud.[25]

Regardless, there was fraud and insider looting of thrift institutions in some cases. The Crime Control Act of 1990, after the crisis, established a special counsel to investigate and prosecute fraud in financial institutions. Between 1988 and 1992, the Department of Justice sent 1,706 bankers to prison and found guilty verdicts in 2,603 cases.[26]

Failures

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Realisation of interest-rate risk in the early 1980s led to a short series of failures that impelled a deregulatory episode from 1980–81. The failure of Empire Savings and Loan in 1984 also drove the FHLBB to reverse course and tighten regulations on thrifts.[19]

Intensification

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The first major thrifts to go were in Ohio and Maryland in 1985. That March, Home State Savings Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio collapsed after a depositor run triggered by news that it had lost $540 million in a securities scam. Not insured by the federal government via FSLIC, it was instead insured by a private state insurance program. This program became promptly insolvent and the governor, Richard F. Celeste, ordered the first bank holiday since the Great Depression.[27] In Maryland, that May, Old Court Savings and Loans similarly failed. The panic also spread across Maryland thrifts, which also insured by their state and not the federal government. The governor, Harry R. Hughes, capped deposit withdrawals; by June, the Maryland legislature ordered all state-insured thrifts either to become FSLIC members or liquidate in six months. The thrift failures in Ohio and Maryland cost those states' taxpayers some 250 million dollars.[28]

A sharp regional recession in the southwestern United States and Texas, caused by a drop in oil prices, caused a fall in the value of commercial real estate in those areas. Thrifts in those states, highly exposed to local commercial real estate prices through their heavy aggressive lending activities, quickly became insolvent.[29] Pressure compounded on banks due to follow-on real estate effects and an agricultural recession in Great Plains states.[30] The elimination of favourable tax treatment for real estate construction in the Tax Reform Act of 1986 also contributed to a slowdown in constructing lending.[31]

FSLIC recapitalisation

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The failures in 1985–86 were extremely expensive for FSLIC. Resolving those failures cost $7.4 billion in 1985 and $9.1 billion in 1986. This brought the FSLIC reserve fund to less than $2 billion on the eve of 1987. Compounding this, the size of the thrift industry had expanded considerably, meaning that the money in that reserve fund was spread thin.[32][33] FSLIC's immediate response was to cut the costs of resolution by deferring asset sales for more favourable market conditions. The Reagan administration recognised by April 1986 that FSLIC was itself approaching insolvency; it asked Congress for $15 billion to pay for FSLIC costs. Little was done on the matter. By January 1987, the problems were of such magnitude that it was the first piece of business in the new session. However, specifics of the funding bill were harshly debated. The thrift industry group, supported by House Speaker Jim Wright, insisted on less than $7.5 billion and compulsory regulatory forbearance. While the administration resented the inclusion of regulatory forbearance, public news of FSLIC's impending (or already actual) insolvency in a GAO report led the administration to accept regulatory forbearance for more money. The resulting Competitive Equality Banking Act was signed on August 11, 1987, giving FSLIC $10.8 billion dollars through sale of bonds via an off-balance sheet government entity.[34] It also required thrift supervisors not to close savings and loan institutions that had equity capital of more than 0.5 percent.[35]

The effect of the 1987 act was that risky institutions were unrestrained in their risk-taking behaviours. They then attempted to "gamble for resurrection",[36] hoping that even riskier lending would allow them to get sufficient profits to stave off bankruptcy. At the end of 1988, 2,969 thrifts remained. This was over three hundred less than in 1985 and over a thousand less than in 1980. A third of the failures from 1985 forward occurred in just three states: California, Texas, and Florida.[37] The FHLBB, under its new chairman, M. Danny Wall, attempted to sell off hundreds of insolvent thrifts in receivership. These sales could only be accomplished with substantial government support and although it allowed FSLIC to dispose of almost 200 thrifts by the end of 1988, some 250 insolvent institutions with $81 billion in assets remained.[38]

FIRREA

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Specific failures

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Home State Savings Bank

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In March 1985, it came to public knowledge that the large Cincinnati, Ohio-based Home State Savings Bank was about to collapse. Ohio Governor Dick Celeste declared a bank holiday in the state as Home State depositors lined up in a "run" on the bank's branches to withdraw their deposits. Celeste ordered the closure of all the state's S&Ls. Only those that were able to qualify for membership in the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation were allowed to reopen.[39] Claims by Ohio S&L depositors drained the state's deposit insurance funds. A similar event involving Old Court Savings and Loans took place in Maryland.

Midwest Federal Savings & Loan

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Midwest Federal Savings & Loan was a federally chartered savings and loan based in Minneapolis, Minnesota, until its failure in 1990.[40] The St. Paul Pioneer Press called the bank's failure the "largest financial disaster in Minnesota history".[citation needed]

The chairman, Hal Greenwood Jr., his daughter, Susan Greenwood Olson, and two former executives, Robert A. Mampel, and Charlotte E. Masica, were convicted of racketeering that led to the institution's collapse. The failure cost taxpayers $1.2 billion.[41]

The Megadeth song "Foreclosure of a Dream" is presumed to have been written about this particular failure. Megadeth's then bassist Dave Ellefson contributed lyrics to the song after his family's Minnesota farm was in jeopardy as a result of the S&L financial crisis.

Lincoln Savings and Loan

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The Lincoln Savings collapse led to the Keating Five political scandal, in which five U.S. senators were implicated in an influence-peddling scheme. It was named for Charles Keating, who headed Lincoln Savings and made $300,000 as political contributions to them in the 1980s. Three of those senators, Alan Cranston (D–CA), Don Riegle (D–MI), and Dennis DeConcini (D–AZ), found their political careers cut short as a result. Two others, John Glenn (D–OH) and John McCain (R–AZ), were rebuked by the Senate Ethics Committee for exercising "poor judgment" for intervening with the federal regulators on behalf of Keating.

Lincoln Savings and Loan collapsed in 1989, at a cost of $3.4 billion to the federal government (and thus taxpayers). Some 23,000 Lincoln bondholders were defrauded and many investors lost their life savings.[42]

Silverado Savings and Loan

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Neil Bush

Silverado Savings and Loan collapsed in 1988, costing taxpayers $1.3 billion. Neil Bush, the son of then Vice President of the United States George H. W. Bush, was on the Board of Directors of Silverado at the time. Neil Bush was accused of granting loans that benefitted himself, but he denied all wrongdoing.[43] With the collapse in world oil prices beginning on 13 September 1985 when Saudi Arabia's Minister of Petroleum Sheikh Yamani announced a new oil policy and that Saudi Arabia would increase its production and which, over the next six months, oil production in Saudi Arabia rose tremendously, Neil Bush's Denver based J.N.B. Exploration Company and George W. Bush's Midland based Spectrum 7 Energy Corporation encountered enormous financial difficulties.[44][45][46][better source needed]

The U.S. Office of Thrift Supervision investigated Silverado's failure and determined that Neil Bush had engaged in numerous "breaches of his fiduciary duties involving multiple conflicts of interest". Although Bush was not indicted on criminal charges, a civil action was brought against him and the other Silverado directors by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation; it was eventually settled out of court, with Bush paying $50,000 as part of the settlement, The Washington Post reported.[47] According to journalist Pete Brewton, the Federal Government knew Silverado was ready to collapse in September 1988 but was ordered not to take action until two weeks after the November 1988 Presidential election.[48]

As a director of a failing thrift, Neil Bush voted to approve $100 million in what were ultimately bad loans to two of his business partners. And in voting for the loans, he failed to inform fellow board members at Silverado Savings & Loan that the loan applicants were his business partners.[49]

Neil Bush paid a $50,000 fine, paid for him by Republican supporters,[50] and was banned from banking activities for his role in taking down Silverado, which cost taxpayers $1.3 billion. An RTC suit against Bush and other Silverado officers was settled in 1991 for $26.5 million.

Scandals

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Jim Wright

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Jim Wright

On June 9, 1988, the House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct adopted a six-count preliminary inquiry resolution representing a determination by the committee that in 69 instances there was reason to believe that Rep. Jim Wright (D–TX), the Speaker of the House at the time, violated House rules on conduct unbecoming a Representative.[51] A report by special counsel implicated him in a number of influence peddling charges, such as Vernon Savings and Loan, and attempting to get William K. Black fired as deputy director of the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) under Gray. Wright resigned on May 31, 1989, to avoid a full hearing after the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct unanimously approved a statement of alleged violation April 17.[51][52]

Keating Five

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On November 17, 1989, the Senate Ethics Committee investigation began of the Keating Five, Alan Cranston (DCA), Dennis DeConcini (D–AZ), John Glenn (D–OH), John McCain (RAZ), and Donald W. Riegle Jr. (D–MI), who were accused of improperly intervening in 1987 on behalf of Charles H. Keating Jr., chairman of the Lincoln Savings and Loan Association.

Keating's Lincoln Savings failed in 1989, costing the federal government over $3 billion and leaving 23,000 customers with worthless bonds. In the early 1990s, Keating was convicted in both federal and state courts of many counts of fraud, racketeering and conspiracy. He served four and a half years in prison before those convictions were overturned in 1996. In 1999, he pleaded guilty to a more limited set of wire fraud and bankruptcy fraud counts, and sentenced to the time he had already served.

Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989

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As a result of the savings and loan crisis, Congress passed the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), which dramatically changed the savings and loan industry and its federal regulation.[53] The highlights of the legislation, which was signed into law on August 9, 1989, were:[54]

  1. The Federal Home Loan Bank Board (FHLBB) and the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (FSLIC) were abolished.
  2. The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS), a bureau of the United States Treasury Department, was created to charter, regulate, examine, and supervise savings institutions.
  3. The Federal Housing Finance Board (FHFB) was created as an independent agency to replace the FHLBB, i.e. to oversee the 12 Federal Home Loan Banks (also called district banks) that represent the largest collective source of home mortgage and community credit in the United States.
  4. The Savings Association Insurance Fund (SAIF) replaced the FSLIC as an ongoing insurance fund for thrift institutions (like the FDIC, the FSLIC was a permanent corporation that insured savings and loan accounts up to $100,000). SAIF is administered by the FDIC.
  5. The Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) was established to dispose of failed thrift institutions taken over by regulators after January 1, 1989. The RTC will make insured deposits at those institutions available to their customers.
  6. FIRREA gives both Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae additional responsibility to support mortgages for low- and moderate-income families.

The legislation also required S&Ls to meet minimum capital standards (some of which were risk-based) and raised deposit-insurance premiums. It limited to 30% of their portfolios loans not in residential mortgages or mortgage-related securities and set down standards preventing concentrations of loans to single borrowers. It required them to completely divest themselves of junk bonds by July 1, 1994, meanwhile segregating junk bond holdings and direct investments in separately capitalized subsidiaries.

Consequences

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Savings and Loan were not the only financial institutions that were adversely affected by the crisis. Many banks failed as well. Between 1980 and 1994 more than 1,600 banks insured by the FDIC were closed or received FDIC financial assistance.[55]

From the start of 1986 to the end of 1995, the federally insured thrifts fell by approximately half from 3,234 to 1,645.[56] The market share of S&Ls for single family mortgage loans went from 53% in 1975 to 30% in 1990.[57]

The federal government ultimately appropriated $105 billion to resolve the crisis. After banks repaid loans through various procedures, by the end of 1999, taxpayers suffered losses of $123.8 billion with an additional $29.1 billion (approximately 19 percent) of losses imposed onto the thrift industry.[58]

The concomitant slowdown in the finance industry and the real estate market may have been a contributing cause of the 1990–1991 economic recession. Between 1986 and 1991, the number of new homes constructed dropped from 1.8 million to 1 million, the lowest rate since World War II.[57]

Some commentators believe that a taxpayer-funded government bailout related to mortgages during the savings and loan crisis may have created a moral hazard and acted as encouragement to lenders to make similar higher risk loans during the 2007 subprime mortgage financial crisis.[59]

See also

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Citations

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  1. ^ a b c Sharma 2022, p. 39.
  2. ^ Curry & Shibut 2000, p. 26 (total assets of closed institutions), 33 (cost to the public, broken down by taxpayers and industry also noting that liquidation of RTC assets would not materially affect losses); see also p. 29 noting confusion among previous estimates.
  3. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 129, 139 (Table 5.1).
  4. ^ Moysich 1997, p. 171.
  5. ^ Moysich 1997, pp. 171–72.
  6. ^ Moysich 1997, p. 172.
  7. ^ Sharma 2022, p. 39; Mason 2004, p. 213.
  8. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 215–16.
  9. ^ Sharma 2022, p. 39; Mason 2004, p. 218.
  10. ^ a b Mason 2004, p. 219.
  11. ^ Mason 2004, p. 219; Hanc 1997, p. 10.
  12. ^ Moysich 1997, p. 179 (Figure 4.1).
  13. ^ Hanc 1997, p. 26, noting that underwriting standards fell without controls by property.
  14. ^ Curry & Shibut 2000, p. 27, noting "the deregulation of the thrift industry without an accompanying increase in examination resources".
  15. ^ a b c Moysich 1997, p. 173.
  16. ^ Mason 2004, p. 224.
  17. ^ Sharma 2022, p. 40; Mason 2004, p. 224.
  18. ^ Mason 2004, p. 226.
  19. ^ a b Mason 2004, pp. 226–27.
  20. ^ Freund et al. 1997, p. 158.
  21. ^ Moysich 1997, pp. 173–77.
  22. ^ Moysich 1997, pp. 177, 187.
  23. ^ Moysich 1997, p. 180, noting that this forbearance policy allowed thrifts "to substitute credit risk for interest-rate risk".
  24. ^ Iden & Manchester 1992, pp. 11–12.
  25. ^ Hanc 1997, p. 34, citing:
    • Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (1988). Bank failure: an evaluation of the factors contributing to the failure of national banks (Report).
    • General Accounting Office (March 1994). Bank insider activities: insider problems and violations indicate broder management deficiencies (Report). GAO/GGD-94-88.{{cite report}}: CS1 maint: year (link)
  26. ^ General Accounting Office (January 8, 1993). Bank and thrift criminal fraud: the federal commitment could be broadened (PDF) (Report). pp. 4, 6, 77 (exact statistics). GAO/GGD-93-48.
  27. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 227–28.
  28. ^ Mason 2004, p. 228.
  29. ^ Sharma 2022, p. 40; Mason 2004, pp. 228–29.
  30. ^ Hanc 1997, p. 16.
  31. ^ Mason 2004, p. 229.
  32. ^ Mason 2004, p. 230.
  33. ^ Moysich 1997, p. 168 (Table 4.1), instead reporting that on the eve of 1987, FSLIC had reserves of –6.3 billion dollars.
  34. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 232–33.
  35. ^ Mason 2004, p. 233.
  36. ^ E.g. Bernanke, Ben (April 11, 2007). Financial Regulation and the Invisible Hand (Speech). New York University Law School. Equity holders may 'gamble for resurrection' by encouraging rather than discouraging excessive risk-taking. Thus, as was evident in the savings and loan crisis of the 1980s, market discipline by equity holders may break down when it is most needed.
  37. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 239–40.
  38. ^ Mason 2004, pp. 235–36.
  39. ^ Home State Savings Bank's Failure, Ohio History Central website
  40. ^ Anderson v. Resolution Trust Corp. Archived 2011-12-26 at the Wayback Machine, 66 F.3d 956 (8th Cir. 1995).
  41. ^ "S.& L. Case Convictions". The New York Times. August 31, 1991.
  42. ^ Dan Nowicki, Bill Muller (2007-03-01). "John McCain Report: The Keating Five". The Arizona Republic. Archived from the original on 2014-10-11. Retrieved 2007-11-23.
  43. ^ Tolchin, Martin (September 27, 1990). "Legal Scholars Clash Over Neil Bush Actions". The New York Times.
  44. ^ Reinhold, Robert (30 April 1986). "IN TROUBLED OIL BUSINESS, IT MATTERS LITTLE IF YOUR NAME IS BUSH, SONS FIND". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  45. ^ Илларионов, Андрей (12 February 2012). "Падение нефтяных цен и академических репутаций: Краткая биография одной дезинформации (page 1)" [Falling oil prices and academic reputations: Brief biography of one disinformation (page 1)] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2022-03-26. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  46. ^ Илларионов, Андрей (12 February 2012). "Падение нефтяных цен и академических репутаций: Краткая биография одной дезинформации (page 2)" [Falling oil prices and academic reputations: Brief biography of one disinformation (page 2)] (in Russian). Archived from the original on 2022-03-26. Retrieved 1 April 2022.
  47. ^ Carlson, Peter (December 28, 2003). "The Relatively Charmed Life Of Neil Bush: Despite Silverado and Voodoo, Fortune Still Smiles on the President's Brother". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on June 4, 2011.
  48. ^ Brewton, Pete (January 1, 1992). The Mafia, the CIA, and George Bush: the untold story of America's greatest Financial Debacle. SPI Books. ISBN 978-1561712038.
  49. ^ Douglas Frantz (December 19, 1990). "Neil Bush Broke Conflict Rules, Official Decides : Thrifts: An administrative law judge says the President's son failed to disclose his business ties to two big borrowers of a failed Denver thrift". Los Angeles Times.
  50. ^ "O, Brother! Where Art Thou?: Like Hugh Rodham, the Bush Bros. Have Capitalized on Family Ties" The Austin Chronicle.
  51. ^ a b "Excerpts From Charges Against Wright by the House Panel". New York Times. April 18, 1989.
  52. ^ Riccucci, Norma (1995). Unsung Heroes. Georgetown University Press. pp. 44–45. ISBN 978-0-87840-595-4.
  53. ^ Fabozzi, Frank J.; Modigliani, Franco (1992). Mortgage and Mortgage-Backed Securities Markets. Harvard Business School Press. p. 26. ISBN 0-87584-322-0.
  54. ^ "FIRREA – It's Not a New Sports Car". Credit World. International Credit Association (ICA): 20. September–October 1989. ISSN 0011-1074.
  55. ^ "The Banking Crises of the 1980s and Early 1990s: Summary and Implications," FDIC.
  56. ^ Curry & Shibut 2000, p. 26.
  57. ^ a b "Housing Finance in Developed Countries An International Comparison of Efficiency, United States" (PDF). Fannie Mae. 1992. pp. 4, 8.
  58. ^ Curry & Shibut 2000, p. 33.
  59. ^ Weiner, Eric (November 29, 2007). "Subprime Bailout: Good Idea or 'Moral Hazard". NPR.org.

References

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Books

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Articles and chapters

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External videos
video icon Booknotes interview with Martin Mayer on The Greatest-Ever Bank Robbery: The Collapse of the Savings and Loan Industry, November 25, 1990, C-SPAN