Some definitions. A bank is a thing that takes in money from depositors and lends it out to good people who want to buy homes and build small businesses. Everything is very wholesome. There are toasters. But banks tend to be owned by bank holding companies. A bank holding company is a thing that takes in money from flighty speculative investors and lends it out to bad people to do risky things.
I mean, I don't know, those definitions are totally wrong and fake, but they are useful, aren't they? Certainly there is a widespread belief that banks, which have access to the insured deposits of hard-working Americans, shouldn't be using those deposits to fund all the creepy activities that their bond-trader and investment-banker colleagues get up to. But the boundary between those categories turns out to be incredibly porous.
Here's a great story from the Wall Street Journal about how Bank of America used its insured bank to finance tax avoidance trades for hedge funds. There is a lot to unpack there. There are the tax trades, for one thing, and the insured bank thing, for another, and then there is the eternal question: Why Is This Bad?
First the tax trades. These are dividend-arbitrage trades, which schematically go like this:
— A hedge fund could own some stock, perhaps financed with a margin loan from its prime broker. But then it would have to pay taxes on the dividends that it receives on that stock.1
— Or it could let its prime broker own the stock and get economic exposure to the value of the stock (and the dividends) through a total return swap. For reasons,2 the prime broker may not have to pay taxes on the dividends that it receives on the stock, and the hedge fund may not have to pay taxes on the payments it receives on the swap. So it's replaced taxable dividend payments with non-taxable swap payments.
Those two transactions are economic equivalents,3 but are taxed differently, and "economic equivalence" and "differential taxation" are two of the most combustible sticks that investment banks rub together to make products. So dividend arbitrage is a product. It's a controversial product, though.4 In fact, it's not a product anymore in the U.S., because the tax rules were changed a few years ago to put a stop to it. It lives on in Europe, though, which is where Bank of America was doing these trades.
So, that's controversial, I don't know, think your thoughts about whether hedge funds should be allowed to avoid withholding taxes on dividends.5 The point is: In some places, they are. So we'll move right along to the bank stuff.
Bank of America didn't just do these trades. Lots of people do these trades!6 Bank of America's sin was that it did the trades out of its bank, Bank of America, N.A., rather than out of Merrill Lynch International, a non-bank subsidiary of the bank holding company:
One afternoon in February 2011, bankers, traders and others crowded into a Bank of America auditorium in London for a "town hall" meeting. Executives announced that they were changing the way they loaned money to certain clients, according to people who attended. The money for the loans now would come through BANA rather than Merrill Lynch International.
I love "town halls," by the way. Everyone gathers in the auditorium to hear the big news. An executive walks up to the podium. An expectant hush settles on the crowd. The executive clears his throat and says, "From now on, we'll be financing our London dividend arbitrage business out of our insured U.S. bank instead of our international broker-dealer!" The crowd erupts in a frenzy of applause. The traders carry the triumphant executive out of the room on their shoulders, acclaiming him as a conquering hero of derivatives funding.
Where was I. Obviously Merrill Lynch International sounds like it should be up to no good. "Merrill Lynch" is an investment-bank name, and the "International" also carries an air of intrigue and mystery. But "Bank of America, N.A.," is the opposite. It's a bank. Of America. It shouldn't be funding dodgy swaps in London.
One simple question is, well, why not? Surely there is a rule that says, "Bank of America, N.A., which is funded by the checking accounts of moms and pops across the land, and those deposits are federally insured by taxpayers by the way, shouldn't be doing creepy overseas equity swaps," no?
Ha, no, of course not. Here's the Wall Street Journal again:
Experts said it is inappropriate for Bank of America to tap the entity holding federally insured deposits to finance risky investment-banking trades.
"I don't think it's an appropriate use," said Sheila Bair, the former chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. "Activities with a substantial reputational risk… should not be done inside a bank. You have explicit government backing inside a bank. There is taxpayer risk there."
Notice that the quote starts with, "I don't think it's an appropriate use." If it were illegal, Sheila Bair would have said something like, "Ha, what, that's illegal under Rule XYZ." She didn't. She expressed her personal opinion as to its appropriateness. Bank activities are obviously not regulated based on the personal opinions of former regulators, but are they regulated based on the personal opinions of current regulators?
Kind of? Here, as I understand it (dimly!), is how the rules work. First, banks are allowed to do lots and lots and lots of things. There's a list. It's called "Activities Permissible for a National Bank." Here it is. Here is one thing on the list:
Derivatives Activities. National banks may offer investment advice and engage in a variety of derivative activities (including swaps, futures, forwards, and options) as a financial intermediary or to manage or reduce risks.
That seems to cover dividend arbitrage, no? Engaging in swaps as a financial intermediary? In fact, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency — the federal regulator responsible for Bank of America, N.A. — has allowed banks to trade equity total return swaps since 1994.7 And the OCC and the Federal Reserve specifically gave Bank of America permission to trade equity swaps, and to hedge those swaps by buying or selling the underlying stock, in 2000 and 2005.8 When I say "specifically gave Bank of America permission," I mean it: That OCC ruling applied to "three national banks," including Bank of America, which are allowed to do these trades even if other banks aren't. The Fed ruling is addressed directly to Bank of America.9
Fun fact: Remember swaps push-out? That was a rule that was going to forbid bank holding companies from doing certain swaps in their insured bank subsidiaries. Equity swaps were on the list. When swaps push-out died late last year, this trade remained legal.
So: