A Nice Melodrama

The stress tests have definitely achieved their principal purpose, which was, as I see it, to show that the Administration had a plan and was doing something: "Our plan is to have stress tests, and we are carrying them out." A nice drama, or melodrama, ensued, with a problem, the build up of suspense, and a happy ending, as shown by the big rally in relevant bank stock prices as the results were leaked.

Stress tests in general are a perfectly sensible, traditional financial idea: see how some entity fares in a given set of scenarios. Of course, much depends on all the estimates that go into such a test. It is ironic that the tranched subprime mortgage-backed securities that have caused so much trouble for everybody were all given credit ratings by stress tests.

Booms are full of overoptimism, busts of overpessimism. It may be that the stress tests are part of a transition to a helpful, less pessimistic stage.

Alex J. Pollock is a resident fellow at AEI.

About the Author

 

Alex J.
Pollock
  • Alex Pollock joined AEI in 2004 after thirty-five years in banking. He was president and chief executive officer of the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago from 1991 to 2004. He is the author of numerous articles on financial systems and the organizer of the “Deflating Bubble” series of AEI conferences. In 2007, he developed a one-page mortgage form to help borrowers understand their mortgage obligations. At AEI, he focuses on financial policy issues, including housing finance, government-sponsored enterprises, retirement finance, corporate governance, accounting standards, and the banking system. He is a director of the CME Group, the Great Lakes Higher Education Corporation, the International Union for Housing Finance, and the chairman of the board of the Great Books Foundation.

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