Ch1 Fundamentals
Ch1 Fundamentals
Preview
iRobot
Suppose you invented the iRobot and you plan to produce it.
http://resources.irobot.com/index.php/video/US/11305111
you, Walter and the economy would all be better off. An understanding of General Structure and Operation of the Financial System is a good start!
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O Overview i
Overview of the Financial System Direct Finance/Indirect Finance Why are Financial Intermediaries (FIs) Special? They reduce Transaction i costs/Risk/Asymmetric / i k/ i Information f i How Asymmetric Information Influences the Financial Structure? Facts about Financial Structure/Tools to Solve the Problem Why Does the Financial System Receive Special Regulatory Attention? Investor Protection/Ensure the Soundness of FIs
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AND
Without financial markets, they may never get together g
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Nature
Debt Markets
Short-Term (maturity < 1 year) Long-Term (maturity > 10 year) Intermediate term (maturity in-between) In U.S., total value was $52.4 trillion at the end of 2009
Equity Markets
Pay dividends, in theory forever Represents an ownership claim in the firm In U.S., total value was $20.5 trillion at the end of 2009 Disadvantage: residual claim Advantage: share the extra profit of the firm
Secondary Market
Previously-issued securities are resold (traded) Note: N t Issuing I i fi firms DO NOT get t any money from f the th secondary d market Involves both brokers and dealers (do you know the difference?) ) Classification of the secondary market Functions of the secondary market
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Establish a Price
for the securities in the Seasoned-Equity Offerings (SEOs) A note: t I Initial iti l P Public bli Off Offering i (IPO)
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Original Maturity
Money Market Short-Term (maturity < 1 year) Capital Market Long-Term (maturity > 1 year) Best known capital market securities Bonds & Stocks
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FIs Specialness
Information costs
Economies of scale reduce costs for FIs to screen and monitor borrowers
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With FIs
FI
Households
Cash
(Brokers)
Corporations
Equity q y & Debt
FI (Asset Transformers)
Deposits/Insurance D it /I Policies
C h Cash
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Functions of FIs
Brokerage
Asset Transformer
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Brokers
e.g. Merrill Lynch, Charles Schwab Reduce costs through economies of scale Encourages higher rate of savings
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These secondary securities (financial claims sold to households) often more marketable Transformation of financial risk
Examples:
Banks: deposits Insurance Companies: insurance policies Mutual Funds: mutual fund shares Investment banks: Stocks and bonds
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Maturity Intermediation
Banks: deposits vs. loans Mutual funds vs. investments in bonds/stocks / Banks Visa, Banks, Visa Master Master
Denomination intermediation
Payment Services
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Transaction Costs
The loan contract
e.g., e g costs $500 for a $1,000 $1 000 loan High costs freeze out individual lenders
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Asymmetric Information
Definition
The borrower has better info f about the investment projects (potential returns & risks) than the lender does.
Adverse Selection
B f Before transaction t ti occurs Potential borrowers most likely to produce adverse outcome are ones most likely to seek a loan
Loan decisions to Conservative Aunt (Aunt C) vs. GetQ Aunt ( (Aunt G) ) rich-Quick
Similar problems occur with insurance where he e unhealthy h lth people l want t their th i known k
medical problems covered
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Moral Hazard
Aft transaction After t ti occurs The risk ( (hazard) ) that borrower has incentives to engage in undesirable (immoral) activities making it more likely that wont pay loan back. back
Again, with insurance, people may engage in risky i k activities ti iti only l after ft b being i i insured d Also called conflict of interest
e.g., the borrower has incentive to act in his/her own interest rather than the lenders interest
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Expertise in Screening out bad credit risks from good ones (reduce loss from adverse selection) Expertise in monitoring the borrowers (reduce loss from moral hazard)
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5. 6. 7. 8.
The financial system is heavily regulated Only large, well-established firms have access to securities markets Collateral is prevalent in debt contracts Debt contracts have numerous restrictive covenants
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We will now use these ideas of adverse selection and moral hazard to explain how they influence financial structure.
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The Lemons Problem: How Adverse Selection Influences Financial Structure (1/2)
If we can't distinguish g between g good and bad (lemons) used cars, we are willing pay only an average of good and bad car values Result: Good cars wont be sold, and the used car market will function inefficiently.
2.
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The Lemons Problem: How Adverse Selection Influences Financial Structure (2/2)
If we can't distinguish g between good g and bad securities, willing pay only average of good and bad securities value Result: Good securities undervalued and firms won't issue them; bad securities overvalued so too many issued Investors won't buy y bad securities, , so market won't function well
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How Moral Hazard Affects the Choice Between Debt and Equity Contracts (1/3)
Result of separation of ownership by stockholders (principals) from control by managers (agents) Managers g act in own rather than stockholders' interest
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How Moral Hazard Affects the Choice Between Debt and Equity Contracts (2/3)
A example: An l Equity E it Suppose you become a silent partner in an ice cream store, store providing 90% of the equity capital ($9,000). The other owner, Steve, provides the remaining $1,000 and will act as the manager. If Ste e works Steve o k hard, h d the store to e will ill make m ke $50,000 $50 000 after expenses, and you are entitled to $45,000 of it. However, Steve doesnt really value the $5,000 (his part), so he goes to the beach, relaxes, and p some of the profit p on art for his even spends office. How do you, as a 90% owner, give Steve the proper incentives to work hard?
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How Moral Hazard Affects the Choice Between Debt and Equity Contracts (3/3)
Tools to Help Solve the Principal-Agent Principal Agent Problem (Equity)
Production of Information: Monitoring Government Regulation to Increase Information Financial Intermediation (e.g, venture capital) Debt D bt C Contracts t t Explains why debt (rather than equity) is the most important source of financing for business However, debt d b i is still ill subject bj to moral l hazard. h d In fact, debt may create an incentive to take on very risky projects. Most debt contracts require the borrower to pay a fixed amount (interest), so the borrower can keep any cash flow above this amount.
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Investor protection p
Reference
Anthony A h Saunders S d and d Marcia M i Millon Mill C Conett, 2008 Financial 2008, Fi i l Institutions Management, 6th edition, Chapter 1. Erederic ede c S S. Mishkin s and a d Stanley S a ey G. G Eakins, a s, 2012, 0 , Financial a ca Markets and Institutions, 6th edition, Chapters 2 & 7
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