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Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all agents?
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Page 1: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing

Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of

all agents?

Page 2: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

1. We want to show that under asymmetric information there is a competitive market failure

Define (x1, x2) as the state-contingent consumption vector of a customer where x1 (with loss) = W – L + d – ρ · d and

x2 (without loss) = W – ρ · d

W = wealth, L = loss, d = coverage, ρ = rate premium

Define (y1, y2) as the state-contingent profit vector of the insurer where y1 (with loss)= ρ·d - d= W – L - x1 and

y2 (without loss) = ρ·d = W - x2

The insurance policy (d,ρ) corresponds to state-contingent consumption vectors (x1, x2) for customers and (y1, y2) for the insurer.

Page 3: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Risk neutral insurer’s problem

Assume that an insurer cannot distinguish between high-risk and low-risk customers, with loss probabilities πH and πL, and provides the same amount of insurance (D) to both customers under the policy (d,ρ).

The insurer’s optimization problem is

max (π·(ρ-1)·D + (1-π)· ρ·D = (ρ-π) ·D

A “risk-neutral insurer” will supply any amount of insurance if ρ=π. That is, in equilibrium the price of insurance must equal the probability of loss. We can show this graphically in a state-contingent consumption diagram.

Page 4: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Since y1 = (ρ-1)·D and y2 = ρ·D the choice of D for a given premium ρ corresponds with the restriction that y2 = [(ρ-1) / ρ] · y1

But y1 = W – L – x1 and y2 = W – x2 So, the restriction is,

x2 = [W- ρ·L]/(1-ρ) – [ρ / (1- ρ)] · x1

which gives the slope of the insurer’s offer curve = ρ / (1- ρ)

The expected profit of the insurer can be written as

G = π·y1 + (1 - π)· y2 = π·(W - L - x1) + (1 – π)·(W - x2) By fixing G, the iso-expected profit lines for the insurer are

x2 = [W - π·L – G] / (1 - π) – [π / (1- π)] · x1 which gives the slope of the iso-expected profit curves = π / (1- π)

Page 5: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Insurance contract curve for a risk-neutral insurer

Define the customer’s endowment point as (W-L,W). For the insurer the more profitable contracts lie closer to the origin.

Page 6: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Customer’s problem

Consider the demand for insurance of customers whose loss probabilities are πH and πL .

The customer will choose policy (d,ρ) to maximize his expected utility. But that maximization problem can also be written as a function of the choice variables x1 and x2.

Page 7: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The “full insurance” solution isd = L, x1 = x2 and MRS = π / (1 – π)

(this would be the preferred point if ρ ≤ π)

Page 8: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Optimal insurance of two customers - - high risk (broken curves), low risk (solid curves)

The equilibrium insurance premium, ρ*, will result in an expected loss to the insurer, since πH > ρ* = θ·πH + (1- θ)·πL > πL.

Page 9: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Insurance market equilibrium

Under asymmetric information low-risk customers (low loss probability) will demand incomplete, or no, insurance and high-risk customers (high loss probability) will demand full insurance.

Anonymity breaks down as customers reveal their types to the insurer by the level of their demands for insurance.

To induce self-selection the insurer will offer different policies, (d,ρ), with different price-quantity pairs.

Page 10: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

An optimal insurance contract under asymmetric information

The insurer maximizes an objective function subject to the following constraints:

• feasible (the insurer can provide sufficient funds to support the

contract),

• individually rational (allocations below the indifference curve through the endowment point are ruled out), and

• incentive-compatible (allocations must not provide incentives for agents to misrepresent their private information, truth-telling).

Page 11: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The optimal contract pair must solve the following set of constraints

Page 12: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

“Full insurance contracts” are more profitable for the insurer if they lie closer to the origin.

Page 13: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Incentive compatibility (ICL) requires that (x1L, x2

L) lie on or above the indifference curve of the low-risk customer

through (x1H,x2

H).

Page 14: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Contracts (x1H,x2

H) that are ICH given (x1L, x2

L) and that improve the expected profit from the high-risk

customer contract

Page 15: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Contracts that are IRL and yield the insurer a higher expected profit, if ICH is binding & the high-risk

customer is fully insured

Page 16: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

2. We want to show that differences in incentives of borrowers and lenders may lead to nonprice credit rationing

Assume a project return function, f(s), and repayment, R. Then we can write the state-dependent expressions,

π(s, R) = max {f(s)-R, 0} (return of the entrepreneur)

ρ(s, R) = min {R, f(s)} (repayment to the lender)

and,

π(s, R) + ρ(s, R) = f(s) (neglecting losses due to monitoring costs)

Page 17: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Return functions of the borrower and lender

Page 18: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Conflict of interest - the borrower prefers riskier project f(s)A and the lender prefers safer project f(s)B

Page 19: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Credit rationing (Stiglitz & Weiss, 1981)

• Assume a bank faces N loan applicants that are of two types, t = 1, 2 (distinguished by their project riskiness).

• The return distribution of type-2 applicant project returns (x2) is a “mean preserving spread” of the return distribution of type-1 applicant project returns (x1).

• There are two states of project returns, high (H) and low (L). The probability of each state = 0.5

• Half of the applicants are of each type, but the bank cannot distinguish between applicants according to their type due to asymmetric information.

• The bank can raise funds through deposits at an interest rate

I = (1+ i) with linear supply of funds L(I) = α · I, α>0.• Competition between banks forces expected profit to equal zero, so

E[ρ( )] = I. • Banks can recover amount C from a bankrupt customer.

Page 20: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Expected return for a loan applicant

Page 21: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Expected return for a loan applicant: positive for R ≤ Rt (loan demand is positive) negative otherwise (loan demand is zero).

If Rt is the interest rate at which expected profit = 0, then Rt = xHt – C

is a critical value for the exit of customer t. Also, R2 > R1.

Page 22: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Expected return to the bank, E[ρt(s, R, C)], is a concave function of the loan interest rate, R

Page 23: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The bank’s expected return is the weighted average of the expected returns. Therefore, banks will not simply raise

interest rates when facing excess demand for loans

The return function drops whenever a customer leaves the market. Low risk customers leave the market first.

Page 24: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The bank’s loan supply and demand functions

The bank has no incentive to increase interest rates above R1 because the expected return unambiguously falls and at R1 credit rationing occurs.

Page 25: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

3. Extensions of SW: Arnold & Riley (2009)

The expected revenue for lenders in the SW adverse selection model is not globally hump-shaped as a function of the loan rate. Rather,

• if there is credit rationing, there must be two equilibrium loan rates, • there is rationing at the low rate, but the credit market clears at the

high rate as long as customers are willing to pay the higher rate.

Model:• Lenders earn expected revenue per loan V(R) with gross loan rate

R. • All borrowers (with type t) have the same mean project return μ, but

they vary in risk. So, the gross project return is

y(t) = μ + z(t) where return (z) is random. • Project payoff to a successful loan applicant is written

u(z, R) = Max (μ + z – R, -C) where C is collateral

Page 26: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Arnold & Riley (2009)

The expected payoff of borrower type t is

The average expected profit of all loan applicants is

where θ(R) is the lowest borrower type in the market with gross loan rate R.

Page 27: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Arnold & Riley (2009)

Since all projects have the same mean return we have E[U(R)] = μ - R and the lender’s expected revenue on a loan is, V(R) = μ – E[U(t, R)]

• For small R there is no bankruptcy and U(t, R) = μ – R for all t.• Let R be the rate at which the riskiest borrower just loses his

collateral if a bad state occurs. The probability of bankruptcy is positive if R > R.

• At R = μ the probability of bankruptcy of the borrower is strictly positive. So, adverse selection starts at some interest rate Ra > μ.

• Let R* be the interest rate at which only the riskiest projects break even, U(R*) = 0. Then, the expected revenue of the lender

= V(R*) = μ.

Then, there are two possibilities: V(R) is everywhere increasing, or

V(R) has at least two turning points.

Page 28: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Expected lender revenue function, V(R), with turning points R1 and R2.

Page 29: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The market for loanable funds has no single equilibrium loan rate

The demand curve segments are in bold. At R1 there is excess demand and at R3 there is excess supply. There is a two interest rate (separating) equilibrium.

Page 30: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

4. Extensions of SW: “Risk rationing” - - Boucher et al.(2008)

Information asymmetry and enforcement costs make some credit contracts infeasible if they are conditional on borrower behavior.

• This restricts the set of available contracts by eliminating as incentive incompatible those loans that carry high interest rates and low collateral requirements.

• The result of this “contraction of contract space” is quantity rationing in credit markets.

“Risk rationing” is where so much contractual risk is shifted to the borrower that the borrower voluntarily withdraws from the market even though s/he has sufficient collateral for the loan contract.

• Nonprice (quantity) rationing: borrowers who are willing to pay the market interest rate, but do not qualify for a loan.

• Nonprice (risk) rationing: borrowers are willing to pay the market interest rate and qualify for the loan, but afraid to take a loan because they are afraid of losing their collateral.

Page 31: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Risk rationed farms appear similar to quantity rationed farms

Page 32: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

The optimal loan contract In a competitive loan market, the optimal contract maximizes the borrower’s

expected utility subject to the lender’s participation constraint (3) and the borrower’s incentive compatibility constraint (4) where e = borrower effort, ptT = land holdings, x = gross revenues, s = project state dependent payoffs, Ф = state probability, d( ) is a disutility of effort function

Page 33: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Incentive compatibility requires that sg>sb

The incentive compatible boundary is an upward-sloping function as long as marginal utility of consumption, u′ (C) > 0.

Page 34: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Risk rationing First best contract is at point A. If at point B (bad state) the IC constraint is

binding. π(sj|H) is the lender’s zero expected profit curve. Point B lies below the indifference curve through point C, so a contract at point B is not IC.

Page 35: Debt Contracts and Credit Rationing Question: How do financial markets operate when we drop the assumption of complete and identical information of all.

Risk rationing and activity choice (numerical analysis)


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