Reciprocal Lending Relationships in Shadow Banking

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Reciprocal Lending Relationships in Shadow Banking

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Reciprocal Lending Relationships in Shadow Banking Yi Li Federal Reserve Board January 3, 2019 Federal Reserve Day Ahead Conference at Atlanta Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of the Federal Reserve Board or its staff.

Motivation Literature has focused on relationship lending between banks and their borrowers (i.e., on the asset side of banks balance sheet). Bank Balance Sheet Assets Liabilities Loans Retail Deposits Equity

Motivation (Cont.) As banks expand their balance sheets, their funding sources are not limited to retail deposits. Bank Balance Sheet Assets Liabilities Loans Retail Deposits Wholesale Funding Financial Assets Equity

Motivation (Cont.) This paper focuses on the liability side of banks balance sheet, exploring the relationship between banks and their institutional creditors. Bank Balance Sheet Assets Liabilities Loans Financial Assets Retail Deposits Wholesale Funding Eurodollar time deposits; Repos; Commercial paper; Negotiable CDs Equity

Motivation (Cont.) Money market funds (MMFs) are key wholesale funding providers. Prime MMFs in U.S. managed about $2 trillion as of October 2015. Two-thirds of MMFs money was lent to banks. Disruptions in funding markets between MMFs and banks could pose severe systemic risks. Examples: MMF runs in the asset-back commercial paper market MMF runs in the tri-party repo market Post-crisis regulations apply stricter liquidity rules on both MMFs and banks. Generate inevitable tensions between the lender (i.e., MMF) and the borrower (i.e., bank).

What Are The Tensions? MMFs lend money to banks in many different markets, with maturities ranging from overnight to one year. Post-crisis regulations aim at limiting financial institutions liquidity risks. Regulations on MMFs (the 2010 SEC Reforms) Discourage MMFs from investing in long-term debt. Motivate MMFs to engage in more overnight lending. Regulations on banks (Basel III: LCR, NSFR) Promote stable long-term funding. Implicitly punish overnight borrowing.

What Are The Tensions? (Cont.) Both under stricter liquidity rules, MMFs and banks lean toward opposite ends of the maturity spectrum... MMF (lender) Bank (Borrower) Time Deposit ABCP CDs Repos Financial CP

How to Resolve The Dilemma? MMFs and banks may have incentives to develop a mutually beneficial relationship and trade in a reciprocal manner. On the borrowing side: Banks may be willing to tolerate some overnight borrowing as a means to an end, in exchange for long-term funding from MMFs. On the lending side: MMFs may be willing to provide some long-term funding, in exchange for access to overnight investments. A MMF and a bank may negotiate a suite of contracts consisting of various funding instruments, i.e., bundling across markets.

Preview of Results MMFs and banks develop a bundling strategy across funding markets in face of contradictory regulations on liquidity. MMFs substantially increase their investments in long-term debt issued by banks who ve recently accommodated MMFs overnight investment needs. Robust after controlling for bank credit risks and traditional relationship measures Not weakened during the European sovereign debt crisis Stronger between MMFs and foreign banks Foreign banks that have been accommodative in the overnight market enjoy significantly lower rates on their long-term debt with MMFs.

Contributions to Literature Provides a completely new perspective on lending behaviors of MMFs. [Chernenko and Sunderam (2014); Hu, Pan, and Wang (2015)] First to differentiate between long-term and short-term markets First to document any reciprocal bundling across these markets Complements the literature on the crucial role of U.S. MMFs in funding global banks. [Ivashina, Scharfstein, and Stein (2015)] Adds to the general literature on relationship lending. Existing papers on relationship lending focus on banks lending to firms. [Surveys: Boot (2000); Elyasiani and Goldberg(2004)] This paper explores the role of relationships when banks borrow. Contributes to the emerging literature on the unintended consequences of post-crisis regulations.[acharya (2012); Allen etc. (2012); Munyan (2015)]

Bundling What? Two Key Markets of Interest Negotiable CDs Maturities up to 1 year Major market for banks to obtain longer-term funding from MMFs. Eurodollar Time Deposits (Mostly) overnight, used by both foreign and U.S. banks 3-4 times larger than the federal funds market U.S. prime MMFs are the dominant lenders (80%-90%). To improve liquidity levels. To manage daily cash buffers.

Bundling What? Two Key Markets of Interest (Cont.) In the post-crisis period, CDs make up about 27% of MMF assets, and time deposits make up about 8%. Prime MMF Holdings of CDs and Time Deposits, as Share of Total Assets.35 Main Sample.3.25.2.15.1.05 0 2000m1 2002m1 2004m1 2006m1 2008m1 2010m1 2012m1 2014m1 2016m1 month Certificates of Deposits (CDs) Eurodollar Time Deposits

Data and Hypotheses Main Dataset Form N-MFP: Month-end security-level holdings of MMFs, Nov 2010-Oct 2015 Construct a dataset of fund-bank pairs at monthly frequency Hypotheses A MMF rewards a bank who has recently accommodated the MMF in the overnight market by increasing long-term funding to the bank by reducing the long-term funding costs of the bank Such reciprocal relationship is stronger for foreign banks. Foreign banks depend on MMFs for stable dollar funding more than U.S. banks do.

Regression Models Dependent Variable: Change in Long-Term CD i,j,t Explanatory Variable of Interest: Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 =1 if bank j has accommodated fund i at least once in the past three months. Controlling for Traditional Relationship Measures Fund-Bank Exposure i,j,t 1 Dependence on Bank i,j,t 1, Dependence on Fund i,j,t 1 Num of Fund Counterparties j,t 1, Num of Bank Counterparties i,t 1 Fund Charateritics (Flows, AUMs, maturities, yields) Fixed Effects: Bank, Fund, Year-Month.

Reciprocal Lending: Funding Amount Dependent Variable: Change in Amount of Longer-Term CDs All Foreign Domestic Banks Banks Banks Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 11.633*** 12.833*** 4.229** (4.71) (4.72) (2.51) Dependence on Bank i,j,t 1-1.156*** -1.485*** -0.346*** (-5.84) (-5.80) (-3.72) Dependence on Fund i,j,t 1-1.617*** -2.019*** -0.757** (-3.75) (-3.93) (-2.14) Num of Fund Counterparties j,t 1-0.148*** -0.157*** -0.092* (-4.53) (-4.53) (-1.77) Num of Bank Counterparties i,t 1-0.109-0.105-0.154 (-0.38) (-0.34) (-0.79) Fund Characteristic Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Year-Month Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.013 0.015 0.013 Number of observations 304,100 250,606 53,494

Reciprocal Lending: Funding Amount (Cont.) There is significant bundling across CD and time deposit markets. If a bank has accommodated a MMF at least once in the time deposit market over the past quarter... the outstanding amount of long-term CDs between the two increases by about $12 million. MMFs are more likely to engage in reciprocal lending with foreign banks than with U.S. banks. These results hold under a variety of robustness checks.

Reciprocal Lending in Funding Amount: Robustness Alternative Dependent Variables Baseline: Change in CDs (with maturity over 1 month) Alternative I: Change in CDs (with maturity over 2 months) Alternative II: Change in all direct debt (with maturity over 1 month) The bundling results remain strong and robust. Alternative Explanatory Variables Baseline: Lagged time deposit dummy Alternative: Lagged time deposit transaction amount Obtain consistent and significant results.

Reciprocal Lending between Top MMFs and Top Banks Select top 50 MMFs and top 50 bank borrowers (39 foreign, 11 domestic) Construct a monthly dataset of all possible fund-bank pairs (2,500 per month) Coverage: 81% of total funding, 84% CDs, 82% time deposits 1 Coverage of Outstanding Debt by Top 50 Banks and Top 50 MMFs.9.8.7.6.5 2010m12 2011m12 2012m12 2013m12 2014m12 2015m12 month All Securities Certificates of Deposits Eurodollar Time Deposits

Reciprocal Lending between Top Participants: Funding Amount Dependent Variable: Change in Amount of Longer-Term CDs All Top 50 Foreign Domestic Banks Banks Banks Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 35.504*** 37.840*** 17.413*** (5.81) (5.72) (4.06) Dependence on Bank i,j,t 1-6.902*** -7.862*** -2.439*** (-4.93) (-4.98) (-2.91) Dependence on Fund i,j,t 1-2.465*** -3.623*** -0.842* (-3.36) (-4.35) (-1.96) Num of Fund Counterparties j,t 1-0.537*** -0.500** -0.394 (-2.98) (-2.61) (-1.61) Num of Bank Counterparties i,t 1-0.154 0.012-0.495 (-0.23) (0.02) (-1.28) Fund Characteristics Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Year-Month Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.019 0.024 0.014 Number of observations 142,500 111,150 31,350

Reciprocal Lending between Top Participants: Quarter-End Effects MMFs usually find it more difficult to park their cash at quarter-ends. The reciprocal effects of a quarter-end accommodation should be stronger than regular month-end. Dependent Variable: Change in Amount of Longer-Term CDs All Foreign Domestic Banks Banks Banks Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 31.599*** 33.652*** 13.414** (5.11) (5.10) (2.49) Qtr-End Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 7.194* 7.823* 6.584 (1.77) (1.76) (1.07) Fund-Bank Relationship Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Characteristic Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Year-Month Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.019 0.023 0.014 Number of observations 142,500 111,150 31,350

Reciprocal Lending between Top Participants: European Debt Crisis European sovereign debt crisis: June 2011-June 2012 250 U.S. Prime MMF Assets and Bank CDS Spreads 2 CDS Spreads (bps) 200 150 100 50 1.6 1.2.8.4 MMF Assets (trillion $) 0 2010m12 2011m12 2012m12 2013m12 2014m12 2015m12 month 0 Prime MMF Assets North American Banks European Debt Crisis European Banks Other Banks

Reciprocal Lending between Top Participants: European Debt Crisis (Cont.) Reciprocal lending relationships remained stable during the crisis. Dependent Variable: Change in Amount of Longer-Term CDs All Foreign Domestic Banks Banks Banks Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 34.609*** 35.638*** 20.079*** (5.89) (5.64) (3.59) Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 Crisis t 1.012 5.704-5.234 (0.17) (0.85) (-1.64) Crisis t -12.936*** -16.290*** -0.266 (-4.34) (-4.15) (-0.27) Fund-Bank Relationship Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Characteristic Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.017 0.021 0.008 Number of observations 142,500 111,150 31,350

Reciprocal Lending: Ruling out Alternative Stories What if MMFs investment decisions in all markets are based on banks credit risk levels? Solution I: Control for banks credit risks, proxied by CDS spreads. Solution II: Control for the bank month two-way fixed effects. Dependent Variable: Change in Amount of Longer-Term CDs Foreign Domestic Foreign Domestic Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1 23.872*** 29.326*** 32.399*** 16.839*** (3.07) (4.01) (6.20) (4.08) TD i,j,t 1 CDS Spread j,t 1 0.161** -0.099*** (2.07) (-2.79) CDS Spread j,t 1-0.248*** -0.002 (-4.06) (-0.20) Fund-Bank Controls Yes Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Yes Year-Month Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Yes Bank Month Fixed Effect No No Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.026 0.014 0.072 0.060 Number of observations 97,550 30,450 111,150 31,350

Reciporal Lending: Funding Costs Do MMFs reward accommodative banks with lower long-term funding costs? Yes, but only to foreign banks. Methodology: Regress CD Yield on its potential determinants Filter: Size of CD > $1 million, Maturity of CD > 30 days Winsorize CD yields at the top and bottom 5 percent level Robustness: Results for foreign CDs remain strong if Apply no filter on CD size and maturity Apply looser wisorization (i.e. 1% level) Extend sample period to Jun. 2017 Control for bank credit risks Control for two-way fixed effects

Reciporal Lending: Funding Costs (Cont.) Dependent Variable: CD Yield i,j,k,t All Foreign Domestic Banks Banks Banks Time Deposit Dummy i,j,t 1-0.878*** -0.864*** 0.723 (-9.02) (-8.71) (1.55) log(cd Size i,j,k,t ) -0.444*** -0.445*** -0.634*** (-9.13) (-8.74) (-4.59) log(cd Maturity i,j,k,t ) 3.382*** 3.305*** 3.248*** (45.15) (43.79) (33.72) Relationship Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Characteristic Controls Yes Yes Yes Fund Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Bank Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Year-Month Fixed Effect Yes Yes Yes Adjusted R 2 0.595 0.600 0.573 Number of observations 218,346 199,714 18,632

Summary of Results MMFs and banks develop a bundling strategy across funding markets in face of contradictory regulations on liquidity. MMFs substantially increase their purchases of long-term debt issued by banks who ve recently accommodated MMFs overnight investment needs. Robust after controlling for bank credit risks and traditional relationship measures Not weakened during the European sovereign debt crisis Stronger between MMFs and foreign banks Not explained by alternative stories Foreign banks that have been accommodative in the overnight market enjoy significantly lower rates on their long-term debt with MMFs.

Summary of Results (Cont.) This paper reveals novel yet sophisticated relationship management in shadow banking. Investment decisions across multiple markets are made collectively in a reciprocal manner. My findings are consistent with anecdotal evidence. MMFs have indicated that relationship management is an important part of their investment decision process. Similarly, some banks have mentioned that they accommodate MMFs in the overnight market to maintain a good relationship with them.