Financial Innovation How it Affects the Macroeconomy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Financial Innovation How it Affects the Macroeconomy

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Title: Introduction to Financial Innovation Author: P.V. Viswanath Last modified by: P.V. Viswanath Created Date: 10/17/1999 3:59:29 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financial Innovation How it Affects the Macroeconomy


1
Financial InnovationHow it Affects the
Macroeconomy
  • P.V. Viswanath
  • Summer 2007

2
How Financial Innovations improve economic
performance
  • Completing markets expanding opportunities for
  • risk-sharing
  • risk-pooling
  • hedging
  • intertemporal or spatial transfers of resources
    lowering transactions costs or increasing
    liquidity
  • reducing agency costs caused by
  • asymmetric information between trading parties
  • principals incomplete monitoring of agents
    performance.

3
Financial System Functions
  • Payments system for the exchange of goods.
  • Mechanism for the pooling of funds for
    large-scale indivisible enterprises.
  • Transfer of economic resources through time and
    across geographic regions and industries.
  • Management of uncertainty and control risk.
  • Provision of price information to coordinate
    decentralized decision-making.
  • Managing agency costs.

4
Financial System Functions Payments system
  • Decreasing the cost of processing payments for
    transactions
  • E.g. SWIFT, CHIPS
  • Increasing the speed
  • Decreasing the possibility of fraud
  • Examples Credit cards, debit cards

5
Financial System FunctionsPooling of funds
  • Mechanism for the pooling of funds to create
    large-scale indivisible enterprises.
  • Creating a mechanism for pooling capital in a
    low-cost way and/or minimizing related agency
    problems.
  • Example Limited Liability Companies, hedge
    funds, mutual funds, private equity funds

6
Financial System FunctionsResources transfer
through time and space
  • Investors need ways of transferring savings from
    the present (when they are not needed) to the
    future (when they will be needed).
  • They might also need to transfer resources
    through space.
  • The same applies to borrowers as well.
  • Examples All securities, e.g. Bonds, Currency
    Swaps.

7
Financial System FunctionsRisk Management
  • Reducing the risk by selling the source of it.
  • In general, adjusting a portfolio by moving from
    risky assets to a riskless asset to reduce risk
    is called hedging this can be done either in the
    post cash market or in a futures or forward
    market.
  • Examples Securitization (ABS, GNMAs)

8
Financial System FunctionsRisk Management
  • Even if aggregate risk is not reduced, the risk
    of an individual investors position can be
    reduced by diversification
  • Examples Mutual funds, Index funds, SPDRs.

9
Financial System Functions Risk Management
  • Reducing the risk by buying insurance against
    losses.Selling part of the return distribution
    the fee or premium paid for insurance substitutes
    a sure loss for the possibility of a larger loss.
    In general, the owner of any asset can eliminate
    the downside risk of loss and retain the upside
    benefit of ownership by the purchase of a put
    option.
  • Examples Options, Range floaters

10
Financial System Functions Information for
decentralized decision-making
  • Decision makers need information about demand and
    supply and prices in their own and in other
    sectors of the economy. This might involve the
    collection of data from many individuals.
  • Examples Futures markets, stock markets

11
Innovations and Information
  • Portfolio Insurance was developed as a means of
    synthetically creating a put, so that there would
    be a lower bound on the value of a portfolio.
  • Unfortunately, the lack of an actual market where
    such puts were traded meant that information was
    not aggregated and provided to market
    participants.
  • The Oct. 1987 liquidity crunch and market
    meltdown was due partly to this.

12
Financial System Functions Managing agency costs
  • Investors and Issuers may be unwilling to trade
    because of concerns as to whether the other party
    to the trade is informed or not.
  • The benefits to trade might decrease if the
    relationship is long-lived and there are negative
    incentives for the participants in the trade.
  • Examples Puttable stock, convertible debt

13
The Impact of Government on Financial Markets
  • The primary role of government is to promote
    competition, ensure market integrity (including
    macro credit risk protections), and manage
    public good type externalities.

14
Other government functions that affect financial
markets
  • As a market participant following the same rules
    for action as other private-sector transactors,
    such as with open market operations.
  • As an industry competitor or benefactor of
    innovation, by supporting development or directly
    creating new financial products such as
    index-linked bonds or new institutions such as
    the Government National Mortgage Association.

15
How governments affect financial markets
  • As a legislator, by setting/ enforcing rules and
    restrictions on market participants, financial
    products, and markets such as margins, circuit
    breakers, and patents on products.
  • This can encourage financial innovation by
    setting and enforcing rules for property rights
    to innovation.
  • As a negotiator, by representing its domestic
    constituents in dealings with other sovereigns
    that involve financial markets.
  • This can encourage innovations intended to
    promote international flows of resources.

16
How governments affect financial markets
  • As an unwitting intervenor, by changing general
    corporate regulators, taxes, and other laws or
    policies that frequently have significant
    unanticipated and unintended consequences for the
    financial services industry.
  • This can spur innovation to try and get around
    the intended effects of government legislation

17
How governments affect financial markets
  • These activities can have potential costs that
    can be classified as follows
  • direct costs to participants, such as fees for
    using the markets or costs of filings
  • distortions of market prices and resource
    allocations
  • transfers of wealth among private party
    participants in the financial markets.
  • transfers of wealth from taxpayers to
    participants in the financial markets
  •  Financial Innovations are sometimes geared to
    avoidance of these regulatory costs.

18
The dynamic of financial innovation
  • Aggregate Trading Volume expands secularly
  • Trading is increasingly dominated by institutions
  • Further expansion in round-the-clock trading
    permits more effective implementation of hedging
    strategies.
  • Financial services firms will increasingly focus
    on providing individually tailored solutions to
    their clients investment and financing problems.

19
The dynamic of financial innovation
  • Sophisticated hedging and risk management will
    become an integrated part of the corporate
    capital budgeting and financial management
    process.
  • Retail customers (households) will continue to
    move away from direct, individual financial
    market participation such as trading in
    individual stocks or bonds and move to aggregate
    bundles of securities, such as mutual funds,
    basket-type and index securities and
    custom-designed securities designed by
    intermediaries.

20
Implications
  • Liquidity will deepen in the basket/index
    securities, while individual stocks will become
    less liquid.
  • There will be less need for the traditional
    regulatory protections and other subsidies of the
    costs of retail investors trading in stocks and
    bonds.
  • The emphasis on disclosure and regulations will
    tend to shift up the security-aggregation chain
    to the interface between investors and investment
    companies, asset allocators, and insurance and
    pension products.

21
Production Technologies
  • Underwriting
  • Synthesizing

22
Underwriting Method
The method involves creating two or more
securities or security classes from a single cash
flow stream. E.g., a Collateralized Mortgage
Obligation, with an underlying fixed-rate pass
through can have a tranche split into a
floating-rate class and a corresponding
inverse-floating rate class. If the coupon rate
for the original tranche had been 7.5 fixed, the
coupon rate for the floating-rate class could be
1mth LIBOR 50 basis points, while the coupon
rate for the inverse floater could be 28.50 -
3x(1mth LIBOR).
23
Expected Price Progression Over Time
Underwriting Method
The object in this example is to create a
security with a floor value, beginning with
another security that has no floor.
24
Underwriting Method
XYZ Stock Price Class A Insured Equity Class B Residual Claim XYZ Trust
70 100,000 70,000 170,000
90 100,000 90,000 190,000
110 110,000 100,000 210,000
140 140,000 100,000 240,000
25
Underwriting Method
  • Advantages
  • Transparent payments flow through trust
  • No need for dynamic adjustment
  • No need to make assumptions regarding future
    progression of stock prices.
  • Disadvantage
  • Need to find a buyer for residual security
  • More Risk Capital Required

26
Synthesizing Method - 1
At Year 0
70,000 Buy 704 shares XYZ _at_100/share
35,915 Short-term cash investment _at_ 5
106,315 Total Investment
27
Synthesizing Method - 2
At Year 1 If S90, sell 454 shares _at_ 90 Value
Before Value After
63,360 704 shares XYZ _at_100
37,711 Cash and Interest
101,071 Total Investment
22,500 250 shares XYZ _at_90
78,571 Cash investment _at_ 5
101,071 Total Investment
28
Synthesizing Method - 3
At Year 1 If S115, buy 96 shares _at_ 115
Value Before Value After
80,960 704 shares XYZ _at_115
37,711 Cash and Interest
118,671 Total Investment
92,000 800 shares XYZ _at_115
26,671 Cash investment _at_ 5
118,671 Total Investment
29
Synthesizing Method 4
At Year 2 If S 70
If S 110
17,500 250 shares XYZ _at_70
82,500 Cash and Interest
100,000 Total Investment
27,500 250 shares XYZ _at_110
82,500 Cash and Interest
110,000 Total Investment
30
Synthesizing Method 5
At Year 2 If S 90
If S 140
72,000 800 shares XYZ _at_90
28,000 Cash and Interest
100,000 Total Investment
112,000 250 shares XYZ _at_110
28,000 Cash and Interest
140,000 Total Investment
31
Portfolio Insurance
  • Value of portfolio is never less than 100,000.
  • This is achieved by shifting out of the risky
    security into the riskless security as the stock
    price drops.
  • Exposure to risk is dynamically managed.
  • Synthetically creates a put.

32
Synthesizing Method
  • Advantages
  • No residual security to sell
  • No intervening institution (trust)
  • Lower Amt of Risk Capital Reqd
  • Disadvantages
  • Highly dependent on technology
  • Must make distributional assumptions for price.
  • Complicated hence more subject to error
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