Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Financial intermediation occurs when a surplus unit lends to an intermediary, rather than lending directly to a deficit
unit. The financial intermediary then lends to deficit units.
In developed economies, most funds flow through intermediaries than directly from surplus to deficit units.
Financial intermediaries such as banks, are able to undertake this process. Essentially they are able to undertake this
process because they have skills, structure and processes that enable them to manage the risks that asset
transformation exposes them to.
Depository institutions are ‘pools of liquidity’ that provide households with insurance against idiosyncratic shocks
that affect their consumption needs. Depository institutions are ‘consumption smoothers’ that enable economic
agents to smooth consumption by offering insurance against shocks to a consumer consumption path.
The underlying operation in this model is the basis for fractional reserve banking.
If the shocks in householder consumption needs are imperfectly correlated, the total cash reserve needed by a bank
of size N (a coalition of N depositors) increases less than proportionally with N (= Fractional reserve system)
Fractional reserve system says some fraction of the deposits can be used to finance profitable but illiquid loans.
but this is also the source of the potential fragility of banks (it is depositors withdraw funds for not due to liquidity
needs- e.g. loss of confidence in the bank)
The role of banks as liquidity insurers creates systemic risk problems for the banking system. This leads banks to be
exposed to liquidity risk (i.e. banks have mainly illiquid assets financed by mainly liquid deposits).
A loss of confidence can cause a liquidity shock which can then be transmitted throughout the banking system
(contagion) because of asymmetric information.
Asymmetric information
= one party to a transaction has less information than the other party, so unable to make an accurate decision.
Examples of asymmetric information
e.g.1. Potential investors have less information than the managers, as they do not know (i) how good the projects
to be financed are (ii) unable to evaluate the risks & returns of the projects.
e.g.2 Life insurance companies do not know the precise health of the purchaser of a life insurance policy.
e.g.3. Banks do not know how likely a borrower is to repay.
Asymmetric information causes: (i) Adverse selection problem (ex-ante) or (ii) Moral hazard (ex-post) problem
(ii) Moral hazard – is a problem created after (the loan) transaction is made
This is the risk (hazard) that created by the borrower who use the borrowed funds recklessly or engage in undesirable
(immoral) thus increase the default risk and reduce the repayment probability, Hence lenders need to monitor
borrowers after loan is made and this increases costs of lending. So the lenders may not provide loan.
In the financial markets with asymmetric information, lenders have less information than borrowers. Lenders charge
an interest rate reflecting the quality (risk) of borrowers, which is higher than good quality (with low risk) borrowers
willing to pay so only poor quality (with high risk) borrowers will seek a loan.
i.e. lender may resulted in lending to higher risk borrower so bank may decide not to lend thus reducing credit and
hence funds for investment by companies.
Adverse selection explains (1) why bank loans are the most important source of external funds and
(2) why indirect finance is more important than direct finance.
Adverse selection problem can be: Reduced by (1)government regulation & (2) private production of information &
solved by (3) financial intermediaries
(i) Government regulation - Governments (e.g. SEC) can regulate firms to disclose full information & adherence to
standard accounting principles to investors. But the recent collapse of the Enron Corporation shows that disclosure
requirements do not solve the adverse selection problem.
(ii) Private production & sale of information -Private companies (e.g. Standard & Poor’s, Moody’s, Value Line) can
produce & sell the information (e.g. financial statements, investment activities) to investors to distinguish firms & to
select their securities. S&P classify 7 quality ratings (e.g. AAA, AA, A, BBB) based on the perceived credit quality of
the bond issuers. But free-rider problem exists when people who do not pay for information take advantage of
information acquired by other people. Investor can buy the information & use it to purchase undervalued securities.
But free-rider investors (who do not purchase the information) may observe your behaviour & buy the same
security, so the demand & price for the undervalued securities will increase. This reduces the value of information.
This causes the investors reluctant to buy information & as a result the adverse selection problem remains.
(iii) Financial intermediaries-Financial intermediaries (e.g. banks) produce accurate valuations of firms & are able to
select good credit risks. Banks have information about borrowers from their bank accounts & know their
creditability (& loan repay ability). Banks can avoid the free-rider problem because bank loans are private securities
and not traded in the open financial market. Investors are unable to observe the bank & bid up the price of the loan,
Banks ask the borrower to provide collateral (i.e. property promised to the lender if the borrower defaults) to
reduce the losses due to loan default.
The solution to the problems by financial intermediaries is more efficient as banks do not face a free rider problem
in acquiring information (to solve adverse selection) or monitoring (to solve moral hazard). This is because their
loans are not traded so no one can front-run the bank and extract some of the benefits from information acquisition
or monitoring by trading the same loans.
a) Monitoring-
Stockholders can engage in the monitoring (auditing) of firms’ activities to reduce moral hazard because
Monitor (auditing) firms’ activities can ensure that information asymmetry is not exploited by one party at the
expense of the other determines the value of contract which is determined by the post-contract behaviour of a
counterparty(information acquired before the contract is agreed may become irrelevant at the maturity due to
changes in conditions.).
However, monitoring is expensive in terms of money and time, or rather it is a costly state verification. Investor may
free-ride on the activities that other stockholders are paying to monitor the activities of the firm you hold stocks in.
Free-ride problem reduces monitoring (which will reduce the moral hazard principal-agent problem). This is similar
to adverse selection & makes equity contracts less desirable.
In addition, if you know that other stockholders are paying to monitor the activities of the firm you hold stocks in,
you can free ride on the activities of the others. As every stockholder can free ride on others, the free-rider problem
reduces the amount of monitoring that would reduce the moral hazard (principal-agent) problem.
This is the same as with adverse selection and makes equity contracts less desirable.
d) Debt contracts
Debt contracts require borrowers to pay the lender a fixed amounts of money independently from the profits of the
firm. & let them keep any profit above this amount.
This can lead the borrowers to have more incentives to take investments riskier than lenders would like.
Moral hazard is less in debt contracts than in equity contracts because
A equity contracts they are claims on profits in all situations, whether the firm makes or loses money
A debt contract is one that pays a contractual amount of money without reference to whether the firm makes a
profit or not. This reduces the need to monitor managers.
Consequently debt contracts have lower moral hazard than equity contracts.
Moral hazard problem in equity markets causes stocks are not the most important external source of financing.