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The Growth of Finance, Financial Innovation, and Systemic Risk Lecture 5

The Growth of Finance, Financial Innovation, and Systemic Risk Lecture 5. BGSE Summer School in Macroeconomics, July 2013 Nicola Gennaioli , Universita ’ Bocconi , IGIER and CREI. Banks and Sovereign Default Risk. Link between government default and private sector turmoil

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The Growth of Finance, Financial Innovation, and Systemic Risk Lecture 5

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  1. The Growth of Finance, Financial Innovation, and Systemic RiskLecture 5 BGSE Summer School in Macroeconomics, July 2013 Nicola Gennaioli, Universita’ Bocconi, IGIER and CREI

  2. Banks and Sovereign Default Risk • Link between government default and private sector turmoil • Russia 1998, but also Pakistan, Ecuador and Argentina (IMF 2002) • European debt crisis: joint fragility of governments and private banks

  3. Government Default and Private Credit • After sovereign default, the flow of private credit comes to a halt

  4. Private credit flow systematically drops after a default episode

  5. The Default-Private Credit Link • Two potential stories for the above correlations: • Greek-style default: financial distress in the government → banks are hurt because they hold government bonds → credit crunch • Irish-style default: private banking crisis → government nationalizes (or bails out) banks → government is over-indebted, twin crisis follows • Can we distinguish between these two views? Do they have different implications?

  6. Upon arrival of bad news, banks holding government bonds suffer…

  7. A First Pass Assessment • Some preliminary support for Greek style default: • financial distress in the government → banks are hurt because they hold government bonds → credit crunch • Irish-style is also important, but let’s start with Greece • A theory of Irish style default should still explain why the government default triggers a sharp credit contraction • Two crucial questions: • If government bonds are deadly, why do banks hold them? • What about the government default decision?

  8. Literature Background (I) • Government default decision: • Traditional literature on sovereign debt (see Eaton and Fernandez 1995)assumes that government defaults can selectively discriminate between foreign and domestic bondholders. • In this theory, the cost of default is external punishment (e.g. exclusion from international financial markets). • In this theory, the government trades off the benefit from defaulting in terms of increasing current consumption, with the cost of being excluded from future borrowing (or trade).

  9. Literature Background (II) • Difficulties with the traditional theory: • Observed exclusion is short lived. To rationalize why countries default so infrequently need output cost (Arellano 2008). • Theoretical problems with the sustainability of penalties • Most important: • In the traditional theory, perfect discrimination implies that banks will be spared from default. That is, when the government defaults, domestic banks will be spared…

  10. Some Observation • Banks exposed to the domestic government are perceived to be in trouble when sovereign debt markets are in strain. • Markets do not expect (perfect) bailouts: • Hard for the government to selectively default, • Hard for the government to finance a bailout during a default episode • We need a theory of Greek-style default

  11. A Model of Greek-Style Default

  12. Setup

  13. Timing and Uncertainty

  14. Financial Markets

  15. Investment and Default at t = 1 (I)

  16. Investment and Default at t = 1 (II)

  17. Investment and Default at t = 1 (III) • Let’s step back, for a moment: • - In this theory, the government repays because banks hold public • bonds • - If banks did not hold government bonds, the government would • always default! • - Not necessarily sound to clean up the banking sector from bonds • - Yet, bonds create fragility if a crisis is to occur • What determines banks’ bond-holdings in the first place?

  18. Banks’ Demand for Bonds (I)

  19. Banks’ Demand for Bonds (II) • Two comments: • - In our model, banks hold government bonds voluntarily, because these bonds allow them to make a carry trade • - In reality, other reasons as well: reserve requirements, central bank lending, financial repression (mostly in developing countries) • Whatever the reason, the story goes through

  20. Debt Sustainability (I) 25

  21. Debt Sustainability (II) 26 • Debt sustainability requires: • Strong financial institutions: developed private financial markets help the government commit to repay. • This increases the cost for the government of interfering with intermediation • Important role of financial intermediaries (intermediate β): if banks are too small, or if firms can obtain funds at arm’s length, the government has no incentive to save the banking sector

  22. Empirical Predictions • Government default is followed by a drop in private credit. This drop is stronger if: • Banks hold more government bonds • Financial institutions are stronger • Ex-ante probability of default decreases as: • Banks hold more government bonds • Financial institutions are stronger

  23. Data 28

  24. Probability of default at t…

  25. Data (New Paper) • Bank‐level data from BANKSCOPE dataset (Bureau van Dijk): • Provides information on a broad range of bank characteristics • BANKSCOPE suitable for international comparisons because data is harmonized • Crucial: BANKSCOPE reports banks’ holdings of public bonds • However, does not say the nationality of the bonds • We use IMF and EU stress test data to validate this information • Main sample: 4,723 banks in 151 countries; 25,132 bank‐year obs. • Commercial, cooperative and savings banks account for 92% of our sample; investment banks for 1.6%; rest are holdings, real estate, and other credit institutions • Sample construction: start with full data; filter out duplicate records, banks with negative value of assets, banks with total assets < $100,000, years < 1997 when coverage is less systematic. Get: 10,281 banks in 174 countries over 1998‐2010 (58,830 bank‐year observations) • Further impose: two consecutive years of data; data is available on size, leverage, risk taking, profitability, loans, Central Bank balances and other interbank ratios Intro Data Hypotheses and Empirical Strategy Results

  26. Our Tests • Estimate banks’ demand for bondholdings (and of its various components) • Time-invariant (“normal times”) Bondholdings, both at bank and country level • Time-varying (“crisis times”) Bondholdings, both at bank and country level • Estimate effect of bondholdings(and of its various components) on banks’ changes in loans during default • Do banks more exposed to government bonds cut their loans more during default? • Which of the various components of bondholdings demand explain more of this variation? Intro Data Hypotheses and Empirical Strategy Results

  27. Summary of Bondholdings Demand • Normal-time bondholdings account for 80% of total variation of bondholdings in our sample • Largely explained by liquidity/insurance [risk taking (-), leverage (+), fin dev (-)] • Default episodes alone explain 14% of time variation of bonds • Banks take 16% more bonds during default • Huge heterogeneity: esp. larger/more profitable banks load up on government bonds during default • Consistent with risk taking and/or government intervention through moral suasion during crises • Next: do bondholdings affect changes in loans during default? Intro Data Hypotheses and Empirical Strategy Results

  28. Bondholdings and Changes in Loans Intro Data Hypotheses and Empirical Strategy Results

  29. Bottom Line • Powerful feedback effects between banks and sovereign default risk: • A government facing a weak domestic banking sector faces a hard time borrowing, but.. • Financial development will enhance fragility in case of default • Similar to the banking crises studied earlier • Additional implication: a banking crisis can lead to sovereign default risk. Links with Irish-style crises • Banking crisis reduces incentive to repay and tax revenues • Government can try to bail out failed banks

  30. International Contagion • Bolton and Jeanne (2012) use the previous mechanism to generate contagion effects across countries. • International banks hold diversified sovereign bonds portfolios • Default in one country hurts banks in many country • This triggers a recession across countries, in turn increasing the likelihoods of additional government defaults • Ex-ante, countries issue too much debt because they do not internalize the contagion effect on other countries

  31. Irish-style Bailouts • From Acharya, Drechsler and Schanbl (2011) • Imagine that a highly levered banking sector enters a financial crisis. Why would it makes sense for the government to bail it out? • Answer is related to micro-frictions/externalities • This paper: the government might default to relieve the private sector from debt overhang problems • For given taxes, the government dilutes existing government bondholders, reducing the government’s creditowrthiness • This increases the probability of twin defaults when future shocks hit

  32. Correlation between sovereign cds and public debt before and after bailouts

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