Economics and Finance,

Similar documents
Economics and Finance,

Economics and Finance

(Some theoretical aspects of) Corporate Finance

(Some theoretical aspects of) Corporate Finance

Concentrating on reason 1, we re back where we started with applied economics of information

Asymmetric Information and the Role of Financial intermediaries

Principles of Banking (II): Microeconomics of Banking (3) Bank Capital

Monetary Economics. Lecture 23a: inside and outside liquidity, part one. Chris Edmond. 2nd Semester 2014 (not examinable)

Basic Assumptions (1)

Maturity Transformation and Liquidity

Rural Financial Intermediaries

A Solution to Two Paradoxes of International Capital Flows. Jiandong Ju and Shang-Jin Wei. Discussion by Fabio Ghironi

Advanced Financial Economics 2 Financial Contracting

Teoria das organizações e contratos

EC476 Contracts and Organizations, Part III: Lecture 3

Definition of Incomplete Contracts

Topics in Contract Theory Lecture 6. Separation of Ownership and Control

Advanced Financial Economics 2 Financial Contracting

UNIVERSITY OF OSLO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

Advanced Macroeconomics I ECON 525a - Fall 2009 Yale University

Angels, Venture Capitalists, and Entrepreneurs: A Dynamic Model of Private Equity Financing

Chapter 7 Moral Hazard: Hidden Actions

CHAPTER 2 LITERATURE REVIEW. Modigliani and Miller (1958) in their original work prove that under a restrictive set

Macroprudential Bank Capital Regulation in a Competitive Financial System

Topics in Contract Theory Lecture 5. Property Rights Theory. The key question we are staring from is: What are ownership/property rights?

ECON 4245 ECONOMICS OF THE FIRM

The role of dynamic renegotiation and asymmetric information in financial contracting

Economics 101A (Lecture 25) Stefano DellaVigna

Competition and risk taking in a differentiated banking sector

Online Appendix. Bankruptcy Law and Bank Financing

The role of asymmetric information

Revision Lecture. MSc Finance: Theory of Finance I MSc Economics: Financial Economics I

Bank Runs, Deposit Insurance, and Liquidity

CONTRACT THEORY. Patrick Bolton and Mathias Dewatripont. The MIT Press Cambridge, Massachusetts London, England

Moral Hazard. Economics Microeconomic Theory II: Strategic Behavior. Instructor: Songzi Du

Intermediate Macroeconomics

Advanced Macroeconomics I ECON 525a, Fall 2009 Yale University. Syllabus

Investment and Financing Policies of Nepalese Enterprises

Reservation Rate, Risk and Equilibrium Credit Rationing

DETERMINANTS OF DEBT CAPACITY. 1st set of transparencies. Tunis, May Jean TIROLE

Illiquidity and Interest Rate Policy

CUR 412: Game Theory and its Applications, Lecture 12

Mechanism Design: Single Agent, Discrete Types

Game-Theoretic Approach to Bank Loan Repayment. Andrzej Paliński

Theories of the Firm. Dr. Margaret Meyer Nuffield College

ECO 300 MICROECONOMIC THEORY Fall Term 2005 FINAL EXAMINATION ANSWER KEY

OWNERSHIP AND RESIDUAL RIGHTS OF CONTROL Ownership is usually considered the best way to incentivize economic agents:

Lecture 10 Game Plan. Hidden actions, moral hazard, and incentives. Hidden traits, adverse selection, and signaling/screening

Ex ante moral hazard on borrowers actions

A Theory of Bank Liquidity Requirements

Deposits and Bank Capital Structure

Peer monitoring and moral hazard in underdeveloped credit markets. Shubhashis Gangopadhyay* and Robert Lensink**

The Procyclical Effects of Basel II

The usual disclaimer applies. The opinions are those of the discussant only and in no way involve the responsibility of the Bank of Italy.

Financial Intermediation, Loanable Funds and The Real Sector

ADVERSE SELECTION PAPER 8: CREDIT AND MICROFINANCE. 1. Introduction

Book Review of The Theory of Corporate Finance

Comment on Lucas & Phaup: The Cost of Risk to the Government and Its Implications for Federal Budgeting

Problems with seniority based pay and possible solutions. Difficulties that arise and how to incentivize firm and worker towards the right incentives

SUMMARY OF THEORIES IN CAPITAL STRUCTURE DECISIONS

Market Failure: Asymmetric Information

Monetary and Financial Macroeconomics

Deposits and Bank Capital Structure

Lecture Note: Monitoring, Measurement and Risk. David H. Autor MIT , Fall 2003 November 13, 2003

Theories of the Firm. Dr. Margaret Meyer Nuffield College

Problem Set: Contract Theory

Dividend Policy and Stock Repurchases

The lender of last resort: liquidity provision versus the possibility of bail-out

Discussion of Calomiris Kahn. Economics 542 Spring 2012

Chapter 2. Literature Review

Chapter 17 Payout Policy

Delegated Monitoring and Legal Protection. Douglas W. Diamond University of Chicago, GSB. June 2005, revised October 2006.

Economics 101A (Lecture 24) Stefano DellaVigna

: Corporate Finance. Financing Projects

Financial markets in developing countries (rough notes, use only as guidance; more details provided in lecture) The role of the financial system

An Incomplete Contracts Approach to Financial Contracting

Are Banks Special? International Risk Management Conference. IRMC2015 Luxembourg, June 15

Chapter 8 Liquidity and Financial Intermediation

Chapter 9 THE ECONOMICS OF INFORMATION. Copyright 2005 by South-Western, a division of Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.

Liquidity Insurance in Macro. Heitor Almeida University of Illinois at Urbana- Champaign

Rethinking Incomplete Contracts

Bernanke & Gertler (1989) - Agency Costs, Net Worth, & Business Fluctuations

Financial Economics Field Exam August 2011

EXAMPLE OF FAILURE OF EQUILIBRIUM Akerlof's market for lemons (P-R pp )

Explicit vs. Implicit Incentives. Margaret A. Meyer Nuffield College and Department of Economics Oxford University

M. R. Grasselli. February, McMaster University. ABM and banking networks. Lecture 3: Some motivating economics models. M. R.

Transactions with Hidden Action: Part 1. Dr. Margaret Meyer Nuffield College

ECMC49S Midterm. Instructor: Travis NG Date: Feb 27, 2007 Duration: From 3:05pm to 5:00pm Total Marks: 100

Financial Contracting Theory Meets the Real World: An Empirical Analysis of Venture Capital Contracts

Lecture Notes: November 29, 2012 TIME AND UNCERTAINTY: FUTURES MARKETS

Moral Hazard: Dynamic Models. Preliminary Lecture Notes

Advanced Risk Management

Development Economics: Theoretical Overview

SCREENING BY THE COMPANY YOU KEEP: JOINT LIABILITY LENDING AND THE PEER SELECTION EFFECT

Financial Intermediation and the Supply of Liquidity

Revision Lecture Microeconomics of Banking MSc Finance: Theory of Finance I MSc Economics: Financial Economics I

PAPER No.: 8 Financial Management MODULE No. : 25 Capital Structure Theories IV: MM Hypothesis with Taxes, Merton Miller Argument

Econ 101A Final exam May 14, 2013.

DARTMOUTH COLLEGE, DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS ECONOMICS 21. Dartmouth College, Department of Economics: Economics 21, Summer 02. Topic 5: Information

Econ 138 Financial and Behavioral Economics. Lecture 1 Introduction + the MM Theorem

Transcription:

Economics and Finance, 2014-15 Lecture 5 - Corporate finance under asymmetric information: Moral hazard and access to external finance Luca Deidda UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS October 2014 Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 1 / 18

Plan Introduction Model Equilibrium Rationing Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 2 / 18

Corporate finance under perfect capital markets What does perfect capital markets mean? Perfect capital markets imply Irrelevance of the separation between ownership and control Irrelevance of financial structure (Modigliani and Miller irrelevance result, see lecture 4 and Problem set 1) What does perfect capital markets mean? No transaction costs, and no informational frictions Agents can write complete contracts: i.e. contracts that establish ex ante the allocation of property rights over all future cash flows of the firm in any possible contingent event This is not what reality is about Information is incomplete and asymmetric: as a result, contracts are incomplete Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 3 / 18

Asymmetric information and corporate finance Corporate finance under asymmetric information As we shall see, asymmetric information has profound implications on firm s governance Potential conflict of interests arise, which are costly to deal with Inefficiencies The design of appropriate incentive mechanisms becomes key to the good governance of a firm and therefore to its success In this part of the course, we shall analyze a variety of issues arising due to: Informational asymmetries ex post: Moral hazard Informational asymmetries ex ante: Adverse selection Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 4 / 18

Moral hazard and rationing Concept of credit rationing Definition (Credit rationing) [..]A would be borrower is said to be rationed if he cannot obtain the loan he wants even though he is willing to pay the interest the lenders are asking, perhaps even a higher interest rate [..] (Bester and Hellwig, 1987, Moral Hazard and Credit Rationing: An overview of the issues. In, Agency Theory: Information and Incentives, (Ed. Bamberg and Spremann). Heidelberg: Springer. For a more general definition, replace the word credit with the word external finance We shall show that credit rationing is the result of informational asymmetries Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 5 / 18

Empirical evidence Moral hazard and rationing Survey on Small Business Finance (SSBF), US 11% of firms over total is discouraged or rationed This means 22% of those firms that demand credit Note: this underestimates the phenomenon Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 6 / 18

Moral hazard and rationing Credit rationing and asymmetric information As the interest rate increases, the residual cash flow that can be appropriated by the firm-owner (entrepreneur) is reduced As a consequence Entrepreneurs might pursue private interests rather than try and maximize firm s value: Moral hazard Safer entrepreneurs might be discouraged from applying for credit relatively to riskier ones: Adverse selection Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 7 / 18

Moral hazard and rationing Moral hazard and access to external finance In this lecture we will analyze how moral hazard affects firms access to credit (or more generally external financing) Subsequently we will extend the model to analyze a number of corporate finance issues Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 8 / 18

Model The model Model s ingredients: Agents: preferences and endowments Investment technology Market for financial resources Time horizon Information Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 9 / 18

Model Agents: preferences and endowments; Time horizon One entrepreneur (insider, potential borrower) He is risk-neutral Owns and manages the firm Owns an amount A of financial resources Third financial investors (Lenders) They face an opportunity cost of lending, r They are risk-neutral Financial resources are abundant Time horizon: Two dates, 0, and 1 Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 10 / 18

Model Production technology The entrepreneur has access to an investment project of fixed size I that yields R at the end of the period, with probability p and 0 with probability 1 p A < I holds, hence the entrepreneur needs financial resources R is observable and verifiable The probability of success depends on entrepreneurial effort: it equals p H if the entrepreneur exerts high effort and p L if the entrepreneur exerts low effort Effort is not observable and not verifiable Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 11 / 18

Model Moral hazard If exerting low effort in the conduct of the firm, the entrepreneur can pursue private benefits B Private benefits are not observable and not verifiable If exerting high effort in the conduct of the firm, private benefits equal zero We assume: p H R 1 + r > I > p R L 1 + r Moral hazard: As the residual cash flow that the entrepreneur can appropriate after payments to third investors falls, the entrepreneur might develop the incentive to misconduct the firm and pursue private benefits (1) Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 12 / 18

Model Financing contract The financing contract establishes if the entrepreneur s project is financed or not The amount, I A The overall financing cost, defined as R L Implicitly, it also defines the residual cash flow appropriated by the entrepreneur, which is given by: R B : R B + R L = R R B = R R L (2) Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 13 / 18

Model Sequence of events and equilibrium concept Time 0 Stage 0: Loan agreement (we can think that lenders offer the contracts ) Stage 1: Investment takes place Stage 2: Entrepreneurs privately choose effort Time 1: Payoff are realized Definition (Equilibrium) An equilibrium in pure strategies is defined as a contract and a set of strategies for lenders and borrowers such that: Strategies are optimal given opponent s best reply at any stage of the interaction Lenders make zero expected profits Task: We need to find the equilibrium contract Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 14 / 18

Model Incentives If the project is financed, the contract should give the entrepreneur the incentives to choose high effort This implies guaranteeing him some stake R B > 0 of firm s cash flow How much? Enough to satisfy his incentive compatibility constraint Incentive compatibility constraint: Given a contract, If the entrepreneur chooses low effort gets: pl R B + B If the entrepreneur chooses high effort gets: ph R B Incentive compatibility requires: (ICC B ) : p H R B p L R B + B R B B p (3) Accordingly we can define the concept of pledgeable income: P = p H (R B p ) (4) Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 15 / 18

Model Characteristics of the optimal contract If the contract states that the entrepreneur is financed, then the contract ensures the right incentives as to induce a high level of effort, so that p = p H Competition among lenders implies that the equilibrium contract satisfies: p H R L = (1 + r)(i A) R L = (1 + r)(i A) p H (5) Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 16 / 18

Who is rationed? Rationing as the equilibrium result of moral hazard By definition, the pledgeable income is the maximum amount of income that an entrepreneur can credibly promise to pay external financiers without loosing the incentive to exert high effort Therefore, a necessary condition for an entrepreneur to be financed is P (1 + r)(i A) A A I P 1 + r (6) That is, the necessary condition for an entrepreneur to be financed is that the entrepreneur has enough internal financial resources Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 17 / 18

Rationing as the equilibrium result of moral hazard Role of internal resources In the presence of informational asymmetries, the fact that the entrepreneur has access to a project that can guarantee a positive NPV is not enough to be granted external financing The problem is that the financial structure of the firm affects entrepreneurial private decisions in a way which can be detrimental to external financiers This is more likely to be the case if the financial structure is too skewed toward external financial resources Possible interpretations of the conflict of interest Debt vs equity External vs internal equity Luca Deidda (UNISS, DiSEA, CRENoS) EF October 2014 18 / 18