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Credit

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Title: Time Series Basics Author: Blake LeBaron Last modified by: Blake LeBaron Created Date: 8/30/2005 10:43:59 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Credit


1
Credit
  • Fin254f
  • Spring 2010 1.3
  • Kindleberger/Aliber (4)
  • Reinhart/Rogoff(2)

2
Outline
  • Credit and money
  • Money mechanisms
  • Currency Schools
  • Types of credit
  • Credit collapse in great depression
  • Sovereign debt and serial defaults

3
Money Supply
  • What is it?
  • Is it exogenous or endogenous?
  • How is it connected to credit/collateral?
  • M1 demand deposits
  • M2 M1 time deposits
  • M3 M2 government securities
  • Mi etc., etc
  • How do you measure?

4
Creating Money
  • Investor buys a 1000 AAA MBS (mortgage backed
    security
  • Use as collateral to borrow 900
  • Buy 900 AAA MBS
  • Use as collateral to borrow 810
  • ..

5
Collateral and Borrowing
  • Reserve requirements
  • Amounts banks must hold (not lend) (10-20
    percent)
  • Margin requirements
  • Amount of own money for stock investors
  • 50 today, in 1920s 10-20
  • Haircuts
  • 1 haircut, means can borrow 1000 - 0.011000
    990
  • For AAA securities often low
  • During crises can rise dramatically

6
Other Credit Expansion Methods
  • Vendor financing
  • Tulip bubble
  • Reportage
  • Speculators in France 1882 (14 days to pay for
    stock purchases)
  • Consumer installment credit
  • US consumer auto purchases in 1920's

7
Cyclical Credit and Money
  • Expansions
  • Lending and credit expands
  • Collateral levels fall
  • New credit technology
  • Crises
  • Credit dries up
  • All effectively monetary disturbances
  • Fisher Black and endogenous money

8
Schools of Monetary Thought
  • Currency School
  • Banking School

9
Currency School
  • Hard restrictions on monetary growth
  • Like 2
  • Eventually became monetarists (Friedman)
  • Inflation and monetary growth locked to this
    policy
  • No big role for "endogenous money" and credit
  • Hesitant about banking/financial restrictions

10
Banking School
  • Increases in money and credit natural in
    expansion
  • Will generally not overheat
  • Driven by increases in business activity

11
Monetary Difficulties
  • Too much credit
  • Inflation and instability (Currency school!)
  • During early growth periods expansion of credit
    necessary
  • Banking school!
  • How do we balance this?
  • How do you eventually shut down credit growth as
    bubbles take off?

12
Defining Money Again
  • Problematic
  • Cash Deposits short term assets long term
    assets real estate ...
  • What about "total credit"?
  • Can you measure this?

13
Debt Quality
  • Periods of euophoria
  • Quantity of debt increases
  • Quality falls
  • Quality and Minsky (Hedge, Speculative, Ponzi)

14
Debt Instruments
  • Bills of exchange
  • Vendor finance (seller extends credit to buyer)
  • Initially directly tied to goods and shipments
  • Later more general
  • Were they money?
  • Occasionally periods when debts of firms far
    exceeded their net worth
  • LTCM 5 billion in capital -gt 125 billion
    assets, 25-1
  • Similar ratios in early booms

15
Call Money
  • One day loan (origins France 1882)
  • Used by security traders for short term liquidity
  • France(1882) and US(1920s)
  • Supports speculative stock buying
  • Increased demands for credit as market rises
  • Massive defaults on loans as market falls
  • Curbed in 1930s (margin requirements to 50
    percent), but
  • Is this different from SP futures traders (10
    percent margin requirement)

16
Gold Exchange Standard
  • Central bank holdings of British Pound based
    securities
  • Early 1900's
  • Country borrows in pounds
  • Adds to reserves
  • Increases global credit and money supply

17
The Great Depression and Credit
  • Competing theories
  • Monetary
  • Friedman/Schwartz
  • Decline in money supply from 29-33
  • Keynesian
  • Peter Temin
  • Consumption and normal consumption
  • Real money (M/P) increases, 29-33

18
The Great Depression and Credit
  • Industrial production
  • June 29 127
  • Sept 29 122
  • Oct 29 117
  • Nov 29 106
  • Dec 29 99
  • Credit drawn to stock market as rises to peaks in
    October 29
  • Credit freezes after stock market crash
  • Auto production 660K (March) - 92.5K (December)

19
The Great Depression and Credit
  • Trade also collapses
  • Loans to finance trade credits drop
  • (Classic explanations are protectionism)
  • Minsky and Henry Simmons only proponents of
    credit mechanisms
  • Simmons policy reco's
  • 100 percent currency reserves for banks
  • Ban most other forms of lending
  • All financial wealth to be equity based

20
Austrians and Money
  • Private money issuance
  • "Good money drives out bad"
  • Several historical experiences suggest otherwise

21
Central Banks and Money/credit
  • Can they influence?
  • Can they restrain when credit begins to blow up?
  • Can they expand credit during a crisis?

22
Sovereign Debt LevelsReinhart and Rogoff (2)
  • Troubling debt levels
  • Lower for emerging economies
  • Recurrent defaults
  • Some developed countries high
  • Japan 170 of GDP
  • Much crises start at lower levels for developing
    countries

23
Developing Examples1970-2008 Extern. Debt/GDP
  • Mexico,
  • 1982 (47)
  • Chile,
  • 1972 (31), 1983, (96)
  • Ecuador,
  • 1984 (68.2), 2000(106), 2008(20)
  • Russia
  • 1998 (59)
  • Turkey
  • 1978(21)
  • Average 69.3 (gt100 in only 16)

24
Debt Distributions
  • Larger for defaulters
  • Trouble thresholds depend on many variables
  • Troubled history (inflation/repayment) matters a
    lot
  • Worse, this is lower is the "debt threshold"

25
Debt and Risk
  • Correlations of External Debt/ GDP and
    Institutional Investor ratings
  • Generally large and positive
  • (Table 2.3, 0.3-0.5, except Middle East 0.14)

26
Debtors Clubs (groups)
  • Low risk, low debt
  • Type I
  • Low risk, high debt
  • Type 2
  • High risk, low debt
  • Type 3
  • High risk, high debt
  • Type 4

27
Debt Intolerance
  • How can countries become debt intolerant?
  • Institutions, government, other soft factors
    matter
  • Risk sharing by open capital markets may be small
  • Capital flows may be procyclical and
    destabilizing (Iceland)

28
Summary
  • Crises seem tied to increases in debt
  • Public debt and private debt
  • Related to monetary control too
  • Continue to analyze
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