Title: Review of Chapters 2 and 8, and Advanced Discussion
1Review of Chapters 2 and 8, and Advanced
Discussion
Eco 2154 PPP 3
2When a Company needs funds for a project, how
would it do?
- - It is in the Primary Market, not in Secondary
Market, that a non-financial corporation raises
the fund - Internal financing use accumulated funds from
Undistributed Corporate Profits - External financing get the funding from outside
of the company
3Out of two External Financing Methods,Indirect
Financing predominates.
- Direct Finance vs. Indirect Finance
Indirect Finance
Through Financial Intermediaries
Savers Households
Investors Business Firms
Financial Market
Direct Finance Doing by itself
4Who does Indirect Financing?
- Financial Intermediaries, which consists of
- Depository Institutions (banks, trust co., credit
unions), - Investment Intermediaries (securities co.,
finance co.), - And Contractual Savings Institutions (insurance
co, pension funds).
5What are being Dealt in? Financial Instruments
Indirect
- Bank Loans
- Bonds
- Stocks(equities)
Debt Contract or Instruments
Marketable Securities
indirect
In theory, they can be instruments for Direct
Financing as well. However it is pretty small.
6(Review ) Observation of FactsSources of
External Corporate Financingin U. S. 1970-1985
Note these are funds raised through issues of
New Securities-Stocks and Bonds. Of course,
stock exchanges trade existing stocks as well,
which account for the majority of the outstanding
market values.
7Puzzle 1
- Stocks or Equities are relatively unimportant
- compared with
- Debt Contracts/Instruments
- ( Bonds Loans)
8Puzzle 2
- Marketable Securities(Bonds Stocks) are not
so important as Bank Loans
9Puzzle 3
- Direct Finance is insignificant compared to
Indirect Finance. - Financial Intermediaries buy most of Marketable
Securities
10Answers to All these Puzzles
- 1) FI Lowers Transactions Costs
- due to expertise and EOS
- 2) Information Asymmetry
- 3) Capital Structure
- - interest payment is tax-deductible
- - real cost of borrowing is the (actual) real
interest rate (nominal interest rate inflation
rate) - 4) Issues of Management Control and a Possible
Hostile Take Over
11- Provides rationales for Financial Institutions
- Provides grounds for Government Regulations of
Financial Institutions/Financial Sector. - Lets focus on the second issue of Government
Regulations
12- In Chapter 2, we have learned that government
regulation is necessary because of the intrinsic
problem of the Financial Sector, that is,
Information Asymmetry. In case of indirect
financing, Information Asymmetry occurs at 2
levels between lenders and FI, and FI and
borrowers. - Etymology A-sym-metry means Not-the
sameness-of proportions, from Greek word from
asymmetros, from a- "not" symmetros
"commensurable."
13Information Asymmetry leads to
- Ex-ante (Before Deal)
- May lead to Adverse Selection Problem
- Lemon and Jewel problem
- -Definition Bad financial intermediaries/assets
look better than good financial
intermediaries/assets. - Ex-post (After Deal)
- May lead to Moral Hazard Problem
- -Definition Once being given money, the
so-far-good borrower is subject to the hazard to
be engaged in riskier activities than are agreed
with the lender.
14Adverse Selection Fatal Attraction
- Called Lemon Jewel Problem by G. Ackerloff
- Security price is set between value of a good
firm and value of a bad firm Securities Market
(overvalue/undervalue) bad borrowers securities
and (overvalue/undervalue) good borrowers
securities.
15Now, how can we reduce/resolve Information
Asymmetry?
- Information Production
- Monitoring
- To what degrees are Financial Institutions
successful in generating Information? - -Not Complete, and Varying Degrees
- Thus it is argued that Government Regulation
should fill in for Information Generation/Revelati
on, and different Financial Institutions are to
be faced with different degrees of market
receptions and government regulations
16IA Marketable Securities versus Bank Loans
- bank loans are less subject to information
asymmetry than Marketable Securities. Thus, the
financial investor prefers bank loans to
marketable securities. - Why? The key lies in that enough information is
generated about the borrower in the case of bank
loans which can use Restrictive Covenant. -
17- Still banks cannot completely remove Moral
Hazards of borrowers. - Japanese banks may have the answer for a further
reduction of IA and Moral Hazards.
18IA Equities versus Debts
- Equities without Restrictive Covenant are subject
to a more severe Moral Hazard Problem than debts
with Restrictive Covenant are. - This particular problem in equity contract
- is called the Principal-Agent Problem
- Thus, equities have doubly risky in the eyes of
finanical investors, and get less fund(demand).
19 Wait a second, this has not been the case all
the time in financial history
- J. Bradford De Long at Harvard Univeristy
concludes - Up to the 1920s (prior to Glass-Steagall Act),
Financial Trusts were less subject to Moral
Hazards of their borrowers
20(Recap) Why should the financial industry be
regulated by government?
- Because Information Asymmetry is an intrinsic
problem of the industry adverse selection and
moral hazards - Information Asymmetry is not to be completely
resolved in the market. - Ultimately, Public Provision of Information is
required,which calls for Government Regulation.
21However .
- The above view is a majority view, but
everyone does not agree with it. This
revisionist view has been gaining an increasing
popularity in the era of financial
liberalization.
22First, Information Asymmetry is a fact of life,
and does not have to automatically ask for
government intervention.
- Marriage is subject to IA.
- However, there is no room for public intervention
in private marriage. - The reason is that enough, if not complete,
information is produced/demanded by individuals.
23Second, Government Intervention should be
preceded by Private Information Market Failure
- And this happens in the Securities Market as
opposed to Bank Loans due to Information Free
Rider Problem - Only then, public intervention is justified, but
even it is not the only solution and is not for
ever.
24- To Recap, Private Information Market fails (to
coordinate Demand and Supply of information) if
there is Free Rider Problem. - This is the case of Securities Market, where
multiple lenders(financial investors) buy a
lender(borrower)s securities. - Who is willing to pay for information?
25Can you again explain how the Private
Information Market fails in the securities market?
- Information is about ______________
- Demand of Information by __________
- Supply of Information by _________
- Why wouldnt be enough of supply of information?
26- Information Revolution will resolve Free Rider
Problem - eg) Microsoft Operating System has become
non-duplicable or non-transferable. - Meanwhile, within industry, Merger Acquisitions
will reduce Moral Hazards
27Historical Evidence also tells us
-
- Would enough, if not complete, information be
generated in the unregulated financial sector so
as to ensure that the investor with due diligence
or prudence may be protected from frauds in a
reasonable way to a certain acceptable degree? - If so, government intervention is not
necessary. -
- Theoretically, it is possible, and
empirically, there is a historical evidence from
the Free Banking System experiences.
28Free Banking Free Entry and Self Regulated Note
Issues
- Historical Instances of Self-Regulated, or
Free-Market Financial Industry - Scotland 1720-1840
- U. S. A. 1836/7-1863
- Canada prior to Bank of Canada 1935
- Sweden 19C
- Hong Kong Contemporary
29Were They Stable?
- Conventional Wisdom
- -gt Yes, Scotland, Canada, Sweden and HK
- -gt No, U. S. A.
- ? We would like to challenge the second part of
Conventional Wisdom
30Scottish Free Banking
- Period 1720-1840
- How did it work?
- -Banks could print out paper monies, or notes as
long as they do not default on redemption request
of the notes for species - -No government charter needed
- Self regulated, competitive (free market driven)
supply of money and banking practices
31 Evaluation of the Scottish Free Banking
- Compared with the Contemporary British Banking
Experience - Stability no major bankruptcy
- -exception Ayr Bank
- Availability more banking services per capita
- Competition small banks along with large ones
- Efficiency
- spontaneous evolution of a clearing house
(payment association) - Rapid propagation of information
32American Experiences
- Free Banks were viciously called Wildcat Banks.
- However, Revisionist Studies by A. Rolnick and W.
Weber have proved that they were Not So Bad. - Why?
33Three Point Arguments
- The bank note holders(lenders) had been well
informed of the true value of the assets/notes
from Minnesotan Free Banks. - Free Market is more efficient in propagating
information than we might expect - (Evidence Well conversed the New York/Chicago
Market Value of Government/Railway Bonds as
Major Assets and Reserves of the Banks)
34 Lessons to be Learned from Free Banking
Experiences
- Self-Regulated,
- Regulation-Free,
- Banking/Financial Industry may be Viable
- and even be superior.
35Securities Market
- From studies on the Amsterdam Bourse of the 17th
century, Edward Stringham of UC San Jose,
concludes - In the 1600s, the first century when equities
were traded, we can see that there was a
considerable degree of financial innovation. We
also see that most of the financial instruments
were officially outlawed by the state. Brokers
discovered new trading instruments and abided by
their contracts not because of legal compulsion
but because of market incentives. The regulations
were not advancing the market, they were
trammeling it, though the market developed in
spite of the law. Contrary to the idea that the
government is needed for financial innovation and
contractual performance, the case of the
Amsterdam Bourse provides evidence that
securities markets can function successfully with
little assistance from the state..
36References
- Read Neil Reynoldss inspiring article on the
Dutch Securities market of the 16th Century,
entitled, Self-regulation The Dutch had it
right, The Globe and Mail, Aug.12, 2006. - Edward Stringham, The extralegal development of
securities trading - in seventeenth-century Amsterdam, The
Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 43
(2003) 321344 - J. Bradford De Long, Harvard University, Did J.
P. MORGANS MEN Add Value? An Economists
Perspective on Financial Capitalism, 1995. - Kam Hon Chu Is Free Banking More Prone to Bank
Failures than Regulated Banking?, Cato Journal,
Vol. 16 No. 1
37- Sun Bae Kim, Banking and Commerce The Japanese
Case, Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco
Weekly Newsletter, March 1991. - A.J.R. Rolnick and W. Weber, "New Evidence on the
Free Banking Era," American Economic Review,
1983, Vol. 73, No. 51080-1091 - A.J.R. Rolnick and W. Weber, "Explaining the
Demand for Free Bank Notes," Journal of Monetary
Economics, 1988, Vol. 21 47-71.