1 / 42

Reducing Transaction and Information Costs

Reducing Transaction and Information Costs. Hubbard Chapters 11 & 12. Puzzles of Financial Structure. Stocks are not the most important source of finance for business Issuing marketable securities is not the primary funding source for business

tamra
Download Presentation

Reducing Transaction and Information Costs

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reducing Transaction and Information Costs Hubbard Chapters 11 & 12

  2. Puzzles of Financial Structure • Stocks are not the most important source of finance for business • Issuing marketable securities is not the primary funding source for business • Indirect finance (financial intermediation) is far more important than direct finance • Banks are the most important source of external finance

  3. Puzzles of Financial Structure(cont.) • The financial system is among the most heavily regulated sectors of the economy • Only large, well established firms have access to securities markets • Collateral is a prevalent feature of debt contracts • Debt contracts are typically extremely complicated documents

  4. An understanding of the eight puzzles of financial structure requires an understanding of the role of asymmetric information.

  5. Asymmetric Information • Definition Occurs when one party has • insufficient information • inaccurate information necessary to make an optimal decision

  6. Adverse Selection • Definition: • problem created by asymmetric information before a transaction occurs • leads to the “lemons problem”

  7. Lemons Problem(as applied to financial markets) • those parties who are the least desirable from the opposing party’s point of view are the ones that are most likely to want to engage in the financial transaction • because the investor has insufficient knowledge of the quality of potential borrowers, they will be willing to pay a price for the financial claim that reflects the average quality of borrowers • consequently, high quality issuers will choose not to issue (price they expect to receive will be to low) • purchasers will learn this and choose not to buy (only average to low quality issues available)

  8. Adverse Selection(continued) • Importance of Adverse Selection • explains why the best SSUs may choose not to issue DFCs • explains why most SSUs choose not to purchase DFCs • explains why stocks and bonds are not the primary source of external finance • keeps direct finance from being a more effective channel of funds from SSUs to DSUs • explains why direct finance is used primarily by large, well know corporations & gov’t.

  9. Solutions to Adverse Selection • Information Production • free-rider problem • Government Regulation • Collateral and Net Worth • Financial Intermediation

  10. Solutions to Adverse Selection(continued) • Private Information Production- • private firms produce information and sell it • information is designed to help investors distinguish between high and low quality investment • Leads to “free-rider problem” • people who do not pay for the information can observe those who do and act accordingly • result is that value of private information production is reduced or eliminated • thus private information production cannot eliminate the lemons problem unless the free-rider problem can also be eliminated

  11. Solutions to Adverse Selection(continued) • Government Regulation • government could regulate the securities markets to encourage firms to reveal honest information that investors can use to distinguish between high and low quality firms • Securities and Exchange Commission performs this function in the US • requires firms to • adhere to standard accounting procedures • disclose information • government could produce information themselves and provide it free or at low cost • however this would mean using tax money to publish negative information about US companies- politically unfeasible?

  12. Solutions to Adverse Selection(continued) • Collateral and networth • adverse selection interfers with the functioning of financial markets only if investors/lenders suffer losses • collateral and net worth reduce investor/lender losses associated with default

  13. Moral Hazard Defined: An asymmetric information problem occuring after the financial transaction takes place. The seller of a financial claim may have an incentive to hide information and engage in activities contrary to the interests of the investor/lender.

  14. Solutions to Moral Hazard • Agency costs (Cost of monitoring for compliance) • Incentive Compatible Contracts • executive and employee compensation • restrictive covenants • collateral and net worth • Government Regulation • Financial Intermediation

  15. Solutions to Moral Hazard • principal-agent problem • principals (owners) and agents (managers and employees hired by the owners) have and pursue different objectives • moral hazard would not occur if owners had complete information about what managers and employees were doing and could prevent adverse decisions • agency costs could be incurred to monitor behavior • these costs and the ability of some shareholders to free ride on the monitoring of others, make equity contracts less desirable • using debt instead of equity increases expenses, thereby reducing net income (i.e. free cash flow) available for managers to use at their discretion

  16. Solutions to moral hazard • government regulations require firms to adhere to standard accounting principles, laws against fraud • non compliance and fraud are hard to identify and prove • high net worth and the use of collateral make debt contracts more incentive compatible • performance based compensation makes equity contracts more incentive compatible • monitoring and restrictive covenants reduce the opportunity to expropriate wealth - moral hazard

  17. Moral Hazardequities vs. debt • more severe for equities • the incentive-compatibility, principal-agent or agency problem • equity - seek profit maximization • debt - maintain ability to service debt

  18. Moral Hazard(continued) • Importance of Moral Hazard • helps explain why stocks and bonds are not the primary sources of external finance • keeps direct finance from being a more effective channel of funds from SSUs to DSUs

  19. Factors that Increase the Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Problems • Financial Economists have identified 5 economic factors that increase these two asymmetric information problems • increases in interest rates increase the adverse selection problem because the better borrowers will refuse to borrow at the higher rates • Falling prices cause a loss of collateral value and of borrower net worth so the adverse selection and moral hazard problems increase

  20. Factors that Increase the Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Problems • A decline in the stock market also causes a loss of firm value and will increase both the moral hazard and adverse selection problems • An increase in risk will make it harder for intermediaries to screen the bad from the good borrowers and will lead to fewer loans being made • Bank panics may cause banks to go out of buiness and reduce the number of loans available

  21. Conclusion: Why Direct Finance is a Small Part of Total Financing • Can’t solve mismatch • Adverse Selection • costly information • free-rider problem • Moral Hazard • principal-agent problem • costly monitoring • free-rider problem

  22. Indirect Finance as a Solution • Indirect Finance • financial intermediaries • depository (banks, S&Ls, credit unions) • contractural (insurance cos., pension funds) • others (investment cos., finance cos.)

  23. Indirect Finance (continued) • create & sell indirect financial claims • liabilities of these intermediaries • tailored to needs of SSUs • purchase DFCs • make loans to DSUs • purchase stocks & bonds • both an IFC and a DFC is created!

  24. Services Produced by Financial Intermediaries • Asset Transformation • risk transformation • liquidity transformation • maturity transformation • denomination transformation

  25. Services Produced by Intermediaries (continued) • Reduced Transactions Costs • Economies of Scale • Reduce Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard Problems • Search Costs • Information Production • prevent free-rider problem • Monitoring

  26. Asset Transformation Services provided by intermediaries

  27. Solving the Mismatch • Denomination mismatch • 200 depositors with $500 deposits can fund a $100,000 mortgage • Maturity mismatch • a five year auto loan can be funded by rolling over one-year time deposits each year

  28. Solving the Mismatch 200 Depositors with $500 Deposits Pool of $100,000 Fund a single $100,000 Mortgage

  29. Solving the Mismatch(continued) • Liquidity mismatch • if the bank estimates a that two of its 200 depositors will withdraw funds it can: • fund the loan with 202 depositors, each with $500 deposits and hold $1000 in cash or • fund the loan with 202 depositors, each with $500 deposits and invest the extra $1,000 in T-Bills • anticipate that it can replace those two depositors with two new ones

  30. Solving the Mismatch replace lost deposits with new deposits $100,000 Pool of Funds mort. loan

  31. Solving the Mismatch pool of funds deposits loan cash or liquid assets

  32. Solving the Mismatch • Risk mismatch • use their expertise • use their information advantage • use their ability to diversify

  33. Providing Intermediation Services at a Profit Assumptions: • Intermediary pays 5% to purchasers (SSUs) of its indirect financial claims (low risk, high liquidity) • Intermediary earns 10% on its purchases of direct financial claims from DSUs (higher risk, lower liquidity) • Intermediary incurs $3.2 m. in administrative costs

  34. Sources of Intermediary Profits (continued) • Intermediary has $100 m. of total assets • Intermediary has $100 m. of total liabilities • Intermediary has a default rate of 2% of assets Revenues .10x(100 - 2) = $9.8 m. less defaults .02x100 = - 2.0 m. less adm. csts = - 3.2 m. less int. exp. .05x(100) = - 5.0 m. net income = - 0.4 m.

  35. Ability to Reduce Risk • Intermediary is able to reduce defaults to 1% through better credit risk evaluations and diversification Revenues .10x(100 - 1) = $9.9 m. less defaults .01x100 = - 1.0 m. less adm. csts = - 3.2 m. less int. exp. .05x(100) = - 5.0 m. net income = + 0.7 m. ROA=.7/100= 0.70%

  36. Economies of Scale • Economies of Scale occur when costs rise less quickly than output. • Suppose that administrative costs risk by 9% when assets and liabilities increase by 10% • Continue to assume a default rate of 1% on assets

  37. Economies of Scale (continued) Revenues .10x(110 - 1.1) = $10.89 m. less defaults .01x110 = - 1.1 m. less adm. csts 1.09x3.2 = - 3.48 m. less int. exp. .05x(110) = - 5.5 m. net income = + 0.81 m. ROA=.81/100= 0.81%

  38. Solving Asymmetric Information Problems Adverse Selection and Moral Hazard

  39. Intermediaries and Adverse Selection • specialize in private loans (nontraded) • reduces the free-rider problem • collateral and net worth requirements reduces potential losses • experts in information production • lend only to “quality borrowers” • smaller, less well known borrowers • no direct access to capital markets • minimizes free-rider problem

  40. Intermediaries and Moral Hazard • focus on nontraded financial claims • more incentive to monitor • larger financial stake • may take ownership stake • reduction of free-rider problem • imposition of covenants & collateral • incentive-compatible

  41. Regulation of Financial Markets • Three Main Reasons for Regulation • Increase Information to Investors • decrease adverse selection and moral hazard problems • SEC forces corporations to disclose information • Ensuring the Soundness of Financial Intermediaries • prevents financial panics • chartering reporting requirements, restrictions on assets and activities, deposit insurance, and anti-competitive measures

  42. Regulation of Financial Markets(continued) • Improving Monetary Control • reserve requirements • deposit insurance to prevent bank runs • Consumer Protection • prevent or reduce exploitation of market power by more savy, more financially powerful businesses

More Related