WIFPR commissions white papers from leading and emerging scholars from a variety of disciplines to create new work accessible to interdisciplinary audiences with relevance to financial policy and regulation.
2024
Michael Franczak and Koko Warner – Innovative Finance to Ensure Stability in the Face of Adverse Climate Change Impacts
Addressing climate change requires not just more finance but also well-structured financial systems that promote stability in a volatile world. Climate finance systems will need to connect public resources to jobs and production, while adapting to political, technological, and demographic shifts. With leveraged investments, strategic borrowing, public income through shifts in taxation, and regional and global cooperation, governments can build resilient financial frameworks to address the challenges of adverse climate impacts.
Anthony J. Casey – Good-Faith Filing in Chapter 11
The question of when a corporate debtor can initiate chapter 11 proceedings has taken on renewed importance in the wake of high-profile judicial rulings and a congressional proposal. This paper addresses that question, proposing a rule that dismissal for improper filing requires a showing that the proceedings are objectively futile. This proposal is supported by both policy and statute. Ideally, the bankruptcy and appellate courts (and ultimately the Supreme Court of the United States) would announce the rule. It could alternatively be implemented by statutory amendment to the United States Bankruptcy Code. At the very least, Congress should not enact any legislation that moves the law in the opposite direction.
Campbell R. Harvey, Joel Hasbrouck, and Fahad Saleh – The Evolution of Decentralized Exchange: Risks, Benefits, and Oversight
A decentralized exchange or DEX is an application deployed on a blockchain that allows investors to exchange digital assets at pricing terms determined by a preset exchange rate formula. This technology has several unique features, including accessibility to all investors, transparency of pricing, and simultaneity of execution and settlement. Notably, trading via a DEX is feasible for any asset tokenized on a blockchain. In turn, given that assets such as stocks and bonds could be tokenized easily, it is particularly important to understand the risks posed by DEXs. This paper examines both the benefits and risks to investors from DEXs, explores the role of private and public liquidity pools and analyzes possible regulatory approaches.
Kathryn Judge and Anil K Kashyap – Anti-Money Laundering: Opportunities for Improvement
The current anti-money laundering regime is complicated, expensive and seems far from effective. This paper examines the path-dependent processes through which this regime evolved and expanded over time. It then uses multiple different approaches to assess just how well the system is performing, and at what cost. Although efficacy is hard to measure, the analysis suggests meaningful room for improvement. Against this backdrop, the paper proposes eight principles for enhancing the efficacy and efficiency of the current regime and enabling it to better respond to evolving policy priorities. An important theme is that there is a trilemma between effective AML, protecting civil liberties, and promoting financial inclusion, although there is significant room for improvement before reaching those fundamental tradeoffs. A good first step toward reform would be a blue-sky, holistic review of the current system.
2023
Aaron Klein – Structural Conflicts in Central Banking: Regulator or Operator of a Payment System?
Central banks can operate national payment systems, either as monopolies or in competition with private systems. Central banks can be the payment system regulator. This paper analyzes the multiple and sometimes conflicting roles facing central banks and payment systems. The paper explores different objectives central banks are tasked with (or task themselves with), looking at whether these objectives are in agreement or in conflict with each other and with other mandates the central bank faces. A primary focus of the paper is to examine the impact of different roles of the central bank in the payment system with corresponding innovation, or lack thereof, in that nation’s payment system. The paper examines why America’s payment system became a global laggard in adopting better payment technology. Structural conflicts between the Federal Reserve’s role as regulator of America’s payment systems and operator of its own system, regulator of bank’s safety and soundness, and prioritization of objectives played various roles in America’s failure to modernize its payment system.
Thomas Ernst and Chester Spatt – Payment for Order Flow and the Retail Trading Experience
U.S. retail brokers have shifted to a business model with zero-commission trades, earning much of their revenue through payment for order flow (PFOF), under which wholesalers pay brokers to route the orders of their retail clients. The presence of PFOF has led to potential concerns about whether it leads to distortions in routing decisions by brokers, a reduction in market quality due to its effect in segmenting retail orders, or changes in the brokers’ incentives to encourage excess trading. While the recent SEC regulatory focus has been on equity markets, two-thirds of all PFOF comes from option markets. PFOF rates in option markets are much larger, creating a system where broker revenue is much higher when retail clients trade options compared to equities, leading to potential incentives to encourage option trading. We consider the current SEC proposal for order-by-order auctions in retail equity trading and its implications for retail investor welfare. We address three alternatives. First, we propose an expansion of equity Retail Liquidity Programs rather than mandated retail auctions. Second, we consider changes to option markets to reduce frictions, which could include fee caps, competitive designated-market-maker assignments, and a more competitive auction process. Finally, we suggest a PFOF-fee cap, which would preserve PFOF, while addressing the large cross-asset PFOF fee differences.
2022
Joshua C. Macey – Market Power and Financial Risk in U.S. Payments Systems
This White Paper argues that there is an unavoidable trade-off between regulations that would reduce risk to the financial system and those that would reduce the market power of the firms that control the interbank payments infrastructure in the United States. Regulatory and economic features of payments systems mean that regulators can (1) entrench bank market power, (2) accept a new source of systemic risk, or (3) expand the financial safety net beyond the bank regulatory perimeter. Recognizing that a private payments system involves a policy trade-off between bank market power and the safety and soundness of the financial system provides support for considering public payments options like the Federal Reserve’s “FedNow” or a well-designed central bank digital currency.
Robert Jackson and John Morley – SPACs as Investment Funds
This essay argues that SPACs bear a striking resemblance to investment funds. SPACs invest in the same assets as investment funds, putting all of their money into securities as they search for deals. And they adopt the same pattern of organization as investment funds, relying entirely on management by external sponsors and advisers, many of whom also manage investment funds. This resemblance creates in SPACs many of the same unique agency conflicts that the regulation of investment funds was designed to address. In fact, we argue that many SPACs have been violating the Investment Company Act of 1940, the main law that governs investment funds. We show that soon after we filed a series of lawsuits alleging that some SPACs were violating the ICA in August 2021, new SPACs significantly changed their practices in ways that reduced their risk under the statute. We offer some suggestions to improve the SEC’s recent proposal to address the status of SPACs under the ICA and show how the proposal can help to protect investors.
Christina Parajon Skinner – Confronting the Challenge of Cross-Border Payments: A US Strategy for Central Clearing KYC
For the past two years, the international community of financial regulators has been intently focused on improving the efficiency of cross-border payments. To date, this work has taken a wide lens in scoping the problem. This white paper focuses on what the U.S. could contribute to the cross-border payments initiative. It argues that the bulk of inefficiency in the current legacy system—corresponding banking—derives from frictions associated with anti-money laundering law and regulation. To streamline the process of conducting customer due diligence, specifically, the paper proposes moving toward a system of centralized verification. In particular, the paper sketches an idea for a new kind of payments market infrastructure—a centralized verifying party—that would act as a trusted, third-party intermediary verifying transacting parties within correspondent networks.