Should bank stress test results be public?

Today the 19 largest banks are getting the results of their stress tests from their regulators.  Should these results be made public?

This is not a simple question.

The big upside is that markets will have more information, and that all market participants will have access to the same information.  This can allow investors, counterparties, and customers to evaluate the health and stability of the banks with which they are doing business.  I have a default presumption that more information more widely disseminated is a good thing.

Downside 1:  Some banks might be just above the bubble but rank low.  They may still be healthy enough to survive and eventually succeed, but if they are disclosed to be among the weakest, that disclosure may cause a run of depositors, counterparties, or investors.  This could push some marginal banks over the edge and cause them to fail.

This is not a trivial concern.  Last September there were reports that investors were “testing” even the clearly healthiest investment banks (JPM Chase, Goldman Sachs) shortly after Lehman’s fall.  Senior policymakers remember that vividly, when panic might have destroyed banks that on paper were solid.  From the perspective of the policymakers who have the information, it is easy to understand why they may be highly risk averse.  From their perspective, not disclosing the information may appear to be the safer course.

There is a response to this downside.  Banks that do well in the stress tests have an incentive to let the world know that.  It may be hopeless for policymakers to think they can protect the weaker banks by not having the government release the information, because the strong banks will do it implicitly by shouting their good news.

Downside 2:  The stress tests might not be well-designed.  If they are poorly designed, overly optimistic, or just misinterpreted by the market, then the government could be injecting bad information into the market.  Government may not be smart enough to design the tests to provide enough useful information to the markets.

More importantly, any stress test is highly imperfect, and there is a risk that the results would create a sense of false certainty.  I read a lot of market commentary while working in the White House, and was amazed at how frequently high-level market commentaries completely misinterpreted or misread data that we released (much less policy statements).

This is a close call, and people whom I respect advise in different directions.  […]