Title: Money, Banking, and Financial Markets : Econ. 212
1Money, Banking, and Financial Markets Econ. 212
- Stephen G. Cecchetti Chapter 11
- The Economics of Financial Intermediation
2- The Role of Financial Intermediaries
- As a general rule, indirect finance through
financial intermediaries is much more important
than direct finance through the stock and bond
markets. - In virtually every country for which we have
comprehensive data, credit extended by financial
intermediaries is larger as a percentage of GDP
than stocks and bonds combined. - Around the world, firms and individuals draw
their financing primarily from banks and other
financial intermediaries. - The reason for this is information financial
intermediaries exist so that individual lenders
dont have to worry about getting answers to all
of the important questions concerning a loan and
a borrower.
3- Lending and borrowing involve transactions costs
and information costs, and financial
intermediaries exist to reduce these costs. - Financial intermediaries perform five functions
1. they pool the resources of small savers 2.
they provide safekeeping and accounting services
as well as access to the payments system 3. they
supply liquidity 4. they provide ways to
diversify risk and 5. they collect and process
information in ways that reduce information
costs. - The first four of these functions have to do with
the reduction of transactions costs. - International banks handle transactions that
cross borders, which may mean converting
currencies.
4- Pooling Savings
- The most straightforward economic function of a
financial intermediary is to pool the resources
of many small savers. - To succeed in this endeavor the intermediary must
attract substantial numbers of savers. This is
the essence of indirect finance, and it means
convincing potential depositors of the soundness
of the institution. - Banks rely on their reputations and government
guarantees like deposit insurance to make sure
customers feel that their funds will be safe.
5- Safekeeping, Payments System Access, and
Accounting - Goldsmiths were the original bankers people
asked the goldsmiths to store gold in their
vaults in return for a receipt (banknote) to
prove it was there. - People soon realized that trading the receipts
(banknotes) was easier than trading the gold
itself. - Eventually the goldsmiths noticed that there was
gold left in the vaults at the end of the day, so
it could safely be lent to others. - Today, banks are the places where we put things
for safekeeping we deposit our paychecks and
entrust our savings to a bank or other financial
institution because we believe it will keep our
resources safe until we need them.
6- Banks also provide other services, like ATMs,
checkbooks, and monthly statements, giving people
access to the payments system. - Financial intermediaries also reduce the cost of
transactions and so promote specialization and
trade, helping the economy to function more
efficiently. - The bookkeeping and accounting services that
financial intermediaries provide help us to
manage our finances. - Providing safekeeping and accounting services as
well as access to the payments system forces
financial intermediaries to write legal
contracts, which are standardized.
7- Much of what financial intermediaries do takes
advantage of economies of scale, which means that
the average cost of producing a good or service
falls as the quantity produced increases.
Information is also subject to economies of
scale. - Providing Liquidity
- One function that is related to access to the
payments system is the provision of liquidity. - Liquidity is a measure of the ease and cost with
which an asset can be turned into a means of
payment. - Financial intermediaries offer us the ability to
transform assets into money at relatively low
cost (ATMs are an example).
8- By collecting funds from a large number of small
investors, a bank can reduce the cost of their
combined investment, offering the individual
investor both liquidity and high rates of return. - Financial intermediaries offer depositors
something they cant get from the financial
markets on their own. - Financial intermediaries offer both individuals
and businesses lines of credit, which are
pre-approved loans that can be drawn on whenever
a customer needs funds. - Risk Sharing
- Financial intermediaries enable us to diversify
our investments and reduce risk.
9- Banks mitigate risk by taking deposits from a
large number of individuals and make thousands of
loans with them, thus giving each depositor a
small stake in each of the loans. - Providing a low-cost way for individuals to
diversify their investments is a function all
financial intermediaries perform. - Information Services
- One of the biggest problems individual savers
face is figuring out which potential borrowers
are trustworthy and which are not.
10- There is an information asymmetry because the
borrower knows whether or not he or she is
trustworthy, but the lender faces substantial
costs to obtain the same information. - Financial intermediaries reduce the problems
created by information asymmetries by collecting
and processing standardized information. - Information Asymmetries and Information Costs
- Information plays a central role in the structure
of financial markets and financial institutions. - Markets require sophisticated information in
order to work well, and when the cost of
obtaining information is too high, markets cease
to function.
11- Asymmetric information is a serious hindrance to
the operation of financial markets, and solving
this problem is one key to making our financial
system work as well as it does. - Asymmetric information poses two obstacles to the
smooth flow of funds from savers to investors
adverse selection, which involves being able to
distinguish good credit risks from bad before the
transaction and moral hazard, which arises after
the transaction and involves finding out whether
borrowers will use the proceeds of a loan as they
claim they will. - Adverse Selection
- Used Cars and the Market for Lemons In a market
in which there are good cars (peaches) and bad
cars (lemons) for sale, buyers are willing to
pay only the average value of all the cars in the
market. This is less than the sellers of the
peaches want, so those cars disappear from the
markets and only the lemons are left.
12- To solve this problem caused by asymmetric
information, companies like Consumer Reports
provide information about the reliability and
safety of different models, and car dealers will
certify the used cars they sell. - Adverse Selection in Financial Markets
Information asymmetries can drive good stocks and
bonds out of the financial market. - Solving the Adverse Selection Problem
- Disclosure of Information Generating more
information is one obvious way to solve the
problem created by asymmetric information.
13- This can be done through government required
disclosure and the private collection and
production of information. - However, the accounting scandals of 2001 and 2002
showed that in spite of such requirements
companies can distort the profits and debt levels
published in their financial statements. - Reports from private sources such as Moodys and
Value Line are often expensive. - Collateral and Net Worth Lenders can be
compensated even if borrowers default, and if the
loan is so insured then the borrower is not a bad
credit risk. - The importance of net worth in reducing adverse
selection is the reason owners of new businesses
have so much difficulty borrowing money.
14- Moral Hazard Problem and Solutions
- An insurance policy changes the behavior of the
person who is insured. Moral hazard plagues both
equity and bond financing. - Moral Hazard in Equity Financing people who
invest in a company by buying its stock do not
know that the funds will be invested in their
best interests. - The principal-agent problem, which occurs when
owners and managers are separate people with
different interests, may result in the funds not
being used in the best interests of the owners.
15- Solving the Moral Hazard Problem in Equity
Financing The problem can be solved by if
owners can fire managers and by requiring
managers to own a significant stake in their own
firm. - Moral Hazard in Debt Finance Debt goes a long
way toward eliminating the moral hazard problem,
but it doesnt finish the job debt contracts
allow owners to keep all the profits in excess of
the loan payments and so encourage risk taking. - Solving the Moral Hazard Problem in Debt Finance
To some degree, a good legal contract with
restrictive covenants covenants can solve the
moral hazard problem in debt finance.
16- Financial Intermediaries and Information Costs
- Screening and Certifying to Reduce Adverse
Selection - Borrowers must fill out a loan application that
includes information that can be provided to a
company that collects and analyzes credit
information and which provides a summary in the
form of a credit score. - Your personal credit score tells a lender how
likely you are to repay a loan the higher your
score the more likely you are to get a loan. - Banks collect additional information about
borrowers because they can observe the pattern of
deposits and withdrawals, as well as the use of
credit and debit cards.
17- Financial intermediaries superior ability to
screen and certify borrowers extends beyond loan
making to the issuance of bonds and equity. - Underwriting represents screening and certifying,
because investors feel that if a well-known
investment bank is willing to sell a bond or
stock then it must be a high-quality investment. - Monitoring to Reduce Moral Hazard
- Intermediaries monitor both the firms that issue
bonds and those that issue stocks. - Banks will monitor borrowers to make sure that
the funds are being used as intended.
18- Financial intermediaries that hold shares in
individual firms monitor their activities, in
some cases placing a representative on a
companys board of directors. - In the case of new firms, a financial
intermediary called a venture capital firm does
the monitoring. - The threat of a takeover helps to persuade
managers to act in the interest of the stock and
bondholders.
19- Lessons of Chapter 11
- Financial intermediaries specialize in reducing
costs by - pooling the resources of small savers and lending
them to large borrowers. - providing customers with safekeeping and
accounting services, as well as access to the
payments system. - providing customers with liquidity services.
- allowing for risk sharing by offering financial
instruments in small denominations. - providing information services.
- For potential lenders, investigating a borrowers
trustworthiness is costly. This problem, known
as asymmetric information, occurs both before and
after a transaction. - Before a transaction, the least creditworthy
borrowers are the ones most likely to apply for
funds. This problem, known as adverse selection,
is similar to the lemons problem in the used
car market. - Adverse selection can be reduced by
- collecting and disclosing information on
borrowers. - requiring borrowers to post collateral and show
sufficient net worth. - After a transaction, a borrower may not use the
borrowed funds as productively as possible. This
problem is known as moral hazard. - In equity markets, moral hazard exists when the
managers interests diverge from the owners
interests. - Finding solutions to the moral hazard problem in
equity financing is difficult.
20- In debt markets, moral hazard exists because
borrowers have limited liability. They get the
benefits when a risky bet pays off, but they
dont suffer a loss when it doesnt. - The fact that debt financing gives
managers/borrowers an incentive to take too many
risks gives rise to restrictive covenants, which
require borrowers to use funds in specific ways. - Financial intermediaries can solve the problems
of adverse selection and moral hazard. - They can reduce adverse selection by collecting
information on borrowers and screening them to
check their creditworthiness. - They can reduce moral hazard by monitoring what
borrowers are doing with borrowed funds.
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28Key Terms adverse selection asymmetric
information Collateral deflation economies of
scale free rider moral hazard net
worth unsecured loan venture capital firm