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Chapter 8 An Economic Analysis of Financial Structure

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... the most important sources of external financing for businesses ... (43%) of total financing ... responsible for 56% of U.S. financing. Eight Basic Facts ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 8 An Economic Analysis of Financial Structure


1
Chapter 8 An Economic Analysis of Financial
Structure
2
Chapter 8 An Economic Analysis of Financial
Structure
  • Basic Facts About Financial Structure Throughout
    the World
  • Transaction Costs
  • Asymmetric Information Adverse Selection and
    Moral Hazard
  • The Lemons Problem
  • Moral Hazard Applications
  • Conflicts of Interest

3
Eight Basic Facts
  • Stocks are not the most important sources of
    external financing for businesses
  • Issuing marketable debt and equity securities is
    not the primary way in which businesses finance
    their operations
  • Less than half (43) of total financing
  • Indirect finance is many times more important
    than direct finance
  • Direct financing is used in less than 10 of all
    external financing
  • Financial intermediaries are the most important
    source of external funds
  • Bank loans are responsible for 56 of U.S.
    financing

4
Eight Basic Facts
  • The financial system is among the most heavily
    regulated sectors of the economy
  • Promotes efficiency and economic growth
  • Only large, well-established corporations have
    easy access to securities markets to finance
    their activities
  • Small firms are confined to banks
  • Collateral is a prevalent feature of debt
    contracts
  • Debt contracts are extremely complicated legal
    documents that place substantial restrictive
    covenants on borrowers

5
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6
Transaction Costs
  • Financial intermediaries have evolved to reduce
    transaction costs
  • Economies of scale
  • Deceasing average total costs
  • Able to bundle funds from many investors
  • Mutual funds are the best example of a financial
    intermediary taking advantage of economies of
    scale
  • Expertise

7
Asymmetric Information
  • Adverse selection occurs before the transaction
  • Bad credit risks most actively seek out loans
  • Moral hazard arises after the transaction
  • Borrower engages in undesirable activities
  • Agency theory analyzes how asymmetric information
    problems affect economic behavior

8
Adverse Selection The Lemons Problem
  • If quality cannot be assessed, the buyer is
    willing to pay at most a price that reflects the
    average quality
  • Sellers of good quality items will not want to
    sell at the price for average quality
  • Good firms face higher interest rates

9
The Lemons Problem
  • The buyer will decide not to buy at all because
    all that is left in the market is poor quality
    items
  • Only bad firms will sell in the market
  • This problem applies to stocks and bonds
    explaining fact 2 and partially explains fact 1
  • Fact 2 Why marketable securities are not the
    most common
  • Fact 1 Why stocks are not the most important
    source of financing

10
Adverse Selection Solutions
  • Private production and sale of information (Bond
    Ratings)
  • Free-rider problem
  • Investors follow other investors which prevents
    anyone from buying information, once one person
    buys the information no one else will
  • Government regulation to increase information
  • Government agencies force firms to release
    information
  • Fact 5 Financial Markets are the most heavily
    regulated

11
Free-Rider Problem
12
Free-Rider Problem
  • In 1992 investors followed George Soros lead
  • George Soros lead investors into the belief that
    the Bank of England was going to need to let
    their currency appreciate or raise their interest
    rate
  • The Sterling appreciated
  • At the peak Soros dumped the Sterling leading to
    a large devaluation

13
Adverse Selection Solutions
  • Financial intermediation
  • Banks have better information make mostly private
    loans to avoid the free riding problem
  • Fact 3 Indirect finance is more important than
    direct financing
  • Fact 4 Banks are the most important source of
    external funding
  • Fact 6 Large firms are more likely to obtain
    funds via the securities market (more info is
    available in the market)
  • Collateral and net worth
  • Fact 7 Collateral is an important feature

14
Moral Hazard in Equity Contracts
  • Called the Principal-Agent Problem
  • Separation of ownership and control of the firm
  • Managers pursue personal benefits and power
    rather than the profitability of the firm
  • Managers are often short sided, they sacrifice
    good long term investments for short term risky
    adventures
  • Managers receive a small fraction of profits

15
Principal-Agent Problem Solutions
  • Monitoring (Costly State Verification)
  • Free-rider problem Other stockholders will do
    the monitoring
  • Fact 1 It is costly for stockholders to monitor
    managers
  • Government regulation to increase information
  • Fact 5 Governments force firms to adhere to
    high accounting standards
  • Financial Intermediation
  • Fact 3 Venture capital firms provide funds in
    exchange for shares in the company and managerial
    positions
  • Debt Contracts
  • Fact 1 Require frequent payments, lenders only
    care about receiving their payment not if the
    firm is making high levels of profit

16
Moral Hazard in Debt Markets
  • Borrowers have incentives to take on projects
    that are riskier than the lenders would like
  • Once a borrower receives the funds she/he could
    use them elsewhere, the track

17
Moral Hazard Solutions
  • Net worth and collateral
  • Incentive compatible incentives are aligned
    between the agent and the principal
  • The manager does not have an incentive to shirk
  • Monitoring and Enforcement of Restrictive
    Covenants
  • Discourage undesirable behavior
  • Encourage desirable behavior
  • Keep collateral valuable
  • Provide information
  • Fact 8
  • Financial Intermediation
  • Facts 3 4

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19
Conflicts of Interest
  • Type of moral hazard problem caused by economies
    of scope
  • Arise when an institution has multiple objectives
    and, as a result, has conflicts between those
    objectives
  • A reduction in the quality of information in
    financial markets increases asymmetric
    information problems
  • Financial markets do not channel funds into
    productive investment opportunities
  • The economy is not as efficient as it could be

20
Why Do Conflicts of Interest Arise?
  • Underwriting and Research in Investment Banking
  • Information produced by researching companies is
    used to underwrite the securities. The bank is
    attempting to simultaneously serve two client
    groups whose information needs differ.
  • Spinning occurs when an investment bank allocates
    hot, but underpriced, IPOs to executives of other
    companies in return for their companies future
    business

21
Why Do Conflicts of Interest Arise? (contd)
  • Auditing and Consulting in Accounting Firms
  • Auditors may be willing to skew their judgments
    and opinions to win consulting business
  • Auditors may be auditing information systems or
    tax and financial plans put in place by their
    nonaudit counterparts
  • Auditors may provide an overly favorable audit to
    solicit or retain audit business

22
Conflicts of Interest Remedies
  • Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (Public Accounting
    Return and Investor Protection Act)
  • Increases supervisory oversight to monitor and
    prevent conflicts of interest
  • Establishes a Public Company Accounting Oversight
    Board
  • Increases the SECs budget
  • Makes it illegal for a registered public
    accounting firm to provide any nonaudit service
    to a client contemporaneously with an
    impermissible audit

23
Conflicts of Interest Remedies (contd)
  • Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (contd)
  • Beefs up criminal charges for white-collar crime
    and obstruction of official investigations
  • Requires the CEO and CFO to certify that
    financial statements and disclosures are accurate
  • Requires members of the audit committee to be
    independent

24
Conflicts of Interest Remedies (contd)
  • Global Legal Settlement of 2002
  • Requires investment banks to sever the link
    between research and securities underwriting
  • Bans spinning
  • Imposes 1.4 billion in fines on accused
    investment banks
  • Requires investment banks to make their analysts
    recommendations public
  • Over a 5-year period, investment banks are
    required to contract with at least 3 independent
    research firms that would provide research to
    their brokerage customers

25
Financial Development and Growth
  • Recent research has found that many developing
    countries experience very low growth rates due to
    an under developed financial system
  • Legal system
  • Many developing countries the system of property
    rights functions poorly. This makes it difficult
    to use collateral and covenants when making
    loans.
  • It often takes years for a lender to actually
    receive the collateral payment, and by the time
    they receive collateral it is worthless

26
Financial Development and Growth
  • An increase in asymmetric information
  • Makes it more costly to find good borrowers
  • Harder for investors with productive investments
    to secure funds
  • A poorly developed legal system also increases
    moral hazard

27
Financial Development and Growth
  • Corrupt Governments
  • Use their financial system to direct funds to
    themselves or favored sectors of the economy
  • Low interest rates are set loan for certain types
    of loans
  • Governments generally dont care about profits
    and often channel funds to lower productive
    investments
  • Banks are often state owned

28
Financial Development and Growth - China
  • China A counter example
  • Very weak legal system
  • Poor accounting standards
  • Regulating of banking is in its early stages
  • Large state owned banks
  • Nevertheless China has experienced rapid growth

29
Financial Development and Growth - China
  • What explains Chinas rapid growth?
  • High savings rates (40) have allowed the country
    to build up its capital stock
  • Shifted a massive pool of underutilized labor
    from the agricultural sector into higher
    productive jobs using the new capital stock
  • Rapid growth in the export sector
  • Artificially maintain low exchange rate

30
Financial Development and Growth - China
  • Can China continue?
  • The U.S.S.R. experience a very similar pattern to
    growth in the 1950s and 1960s, but once the
    pool of unskilled labor dried up, their growth
    slowed below that of the western economies
  • U.S.S.R. failed to develop the institutions
    needed to allocate capital efficiently
  • China has a much larger population
  • State owned banks are becoming privatized
  • They are developing a more regulated financial
    system

31
Financial Crises and Aggregate Economic Activity
  • What causes financial crises?
  • Major disruptions in the financial markets
    characterized by sharp declines in asset prices
    and the failures of many financial and
    non-financial firms
  • What impact do financial crises have on economic
    activity?
  • Studying past problems helps prevent future
    occurrences

32
Factors Causing Financial Crises
  • Increases in interest rates
  • Only attracts firms with risky opportunities
  • Reduces capital investment
  • Asset market effects on balance sheets
  • A decline in the stock market lowers a
    corporations net worth, lenders decreases loans
  • Firms will make riskier investments
  • Decreasing price level decreases net worth
    (interest rates are generally nominal), firms
    debt burdens increase

33
Factors Causing Financial Crises
  • Problems in the banking sector
  • Bank panics start to occur
  • Government fiscal imbalances
  • Increases in uncertainty
  • Harder to screen good credit risks from bad risks
  • Concern over government/bank defaults

34
Financial Crises in the U.S.
  • Last major crises 1930-1933
  • Start with a deterioration in banks balance
    sheet, a sharp increase in interest rates, steep
    stock market decline, and increases in
    uncertainty (price level)
  • These increase the severity of adverse selection
    and moral hazard problems making it less
    attractive for lenders to lend
  • A decrease in lending leads to a decline in
    economic activity and investment

35
Financial Crises in the U.S.
  • The decline in economic activity increases
    uncertainty in the banking sector and depositors
    begin to withdraw their funds
  • The decline in the number of banks allow other
    banks to raise interest rates even further
  • At this point firms and banks were sorted out by
    bankruptcy proceedings and asymmetric information
    decreased

36
Financial Crises in the U.S.
  • Sometimes the decline in economic activity causes
    a rapid fall in the price level
  • Debt-Deflation
  • This leads to a further deterioration in firms
    net worth and balance sheet.
  • The Great Depression

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38
Financial Crises in Emerging Countries
  • Seen in Mexico 1994-1995, East Asia 1997-1998,
    and Argentina 2001-2002
  • How can these countries prevent financial crises
    after experiencing rapid growth?
  • These crises differ from the U.S. due to
    different institutional features in debt markets

39
Financial Crises in Emerging Countries
  • Mexico and East Asia experience large losses on
    banks balance sheets due to loan defaults
  • Deregulation in the 1990s lead to a financial
    boom
  • Weak regulation allowed banks to make very risky
    loans
  • Banks net worth fell dramatically
  • Investors began to pull out funding

40
Financial Crises in Emerging Countries
  • Argentina also experienced a deterioration in
    bank balance sheets
  • Argentina has a well supervised and regulated
    banking system
  • Fiscal problem lead to the deterioration in bank
    balance sheets
  • Argentina was running large fiscal deficits
    financed by foreign investment

41
Financial Crises in Emerging Countries
  • Argentinas government forced banks to pick up
    this debt
  • Foreign investors lost confidence in the
    government to pay back the debt
  • Investors pulled funds out of the banking sector
  • Government eventually defaulted

42
Financial Crises
  • The effect of interest rates abroad
  • When the U.S. (large economy) increases interest
    rates developing countries are forced to follow
    or else lose funds
  • U.S. in the 19th century, Mexico and Argentina
    were forced to raise interest rates
  • This increases adverse selection

43
Financial Crises
  • The interest rate effect
  • Central banks are reluctant to raise rates
  • Leads to a speculative attack on the countrys
    currency
  • Investors dump the currency
  • Large current account deficits
  • Large trade deficits
  • Large government deficits
  • Weak financial systems

44
Financial Crises
  • Forces countries to devalue their currency
  • The devaluation increases the countries
    indebtedness
  • Most debt is financed in foreign currency
  • Also causes high levels of inflation
  • Due to risk most developing countries only issue
    short term debt
  • Short term changes have large balance sheet
    effects

45
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