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Marking to Market, Liquidity and Financial Stability

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Marking to Market, Liquidity and Financial Stability. Guillaume Plantin Haresh Sapra Hyun Song Shin. 12 th International Conference IMES, Bank of Japan May 30-31, 2005. Themes. Mark-to-market accounting impacts on financial stability - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Marking to Market, Liquidity and Financial Stability Guillaume Plantin Haresh Sapra Hyun Song Shin 12 th International Conference IMES, Bank of Japan May 30-31, 2005
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Page 1: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Marking to Market, Liquidity and Financial Stability

Guillaume PlantinHaresh Sapra

Hyun Song Shin

12th International ConferenceIMES, Bank of Japan

May 30-31, 2005

Page 2: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Themes

• Mark-to-market accounting impacts on financial stability

• The phenomenon of “reaching for yield” (much discussed at the moment) owes much to marking to market.

• Monetary policy has far-reaching implications for financial stability

Page 3: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Case for Marking to Market

• Market price reflects current terms of trade between willing parties

• Market price gives better indication of current risk profile– Market discipline– Informs investors, better allocation of resources

Page 4: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

What about volatility?

• If fundamentals are volatile, then so be it.

– Market price is volatile…

– …but it simply reflects the volatility of the fundamentals

Page 5: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Theory of the Second Best

• When there is more than one imperfection in an economy, removing one of them need not improve welfare.

• In the presence of other imperfections (agency problems, feedback, etc.) marking to market need not be welfare improving.

Page 6: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Dual Role of Market Prices

• Two roles of market price– Reflection of fundamentals – Influences actions

• Reliance on market prices distorts market prices

Actions Prices

Page 7: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Balance Sheet Propagation

• Accounting numbers influence financial institutions’ decisions– They provide certification, and hence provide

justifications for actions– Emphasis on management accountability and

good corporate governance sharpens these incentives

– Marking to market creates externalities in the form of balance sheet spill-over effects

Page 8: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Simplified Financial System

Households

Financial Intermediaries

Pension Funds

Page 9: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Households

Assets Liabilities

Property

Other assets

Net Worth

Mortgage

Page 10: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Financial Intermediaries

Assets Liabilities

Mortgage

Other Assets

Net Worth

Bonds

Page 11: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Pension Funds

Assets Liabilities

Bonds

Cash

Net Worth

PensionLiabilities

Page 12: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Bonds

• Bonds issued by financial intermediaries are perpetuities

• Price p, yield r

• Duration is/dp dr

pp

Page 13: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Pension Liabilities

1 2 3

Duration of bond

Duration of pension liability

Price of bond

duration

Page 14: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Pension Funds

• Pension funds are required to mark their liabilities to market (e.g. FRS 17).

• Pension funds are required to match duration of liabilities with assets of similar duration

Page 15: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Pension funds’ demand for bonds

Price of bonds

demandfor bonds

durationof bonds

duration of pension liabilities

Page 16: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Weight of Money into Property

• Financial intermediaries accommodate increased demand for bonds by new issues of bonds

• Households are always willing to increase borrowing– Increase in balance sheet size of financial

intermediaries

Page 17: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Property Market

“Cash in the market” pricing (Shapley-Shubik)

supply

vv

Page 18: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Property Price as Function of Bond Price

p increase bond issue v increase

v(p)

p

Page 19: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Credit Quality

• Credit quality of bonds depends on household net worth

v increase + net worth p increase

Page 20: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Bond Price as Function of Property Price

p(v)

v

Page 21: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Define h(.) as inverse of v(p)

p

v

h(v)

p(v)

Page 22: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Step Adjustment:Fall in Treasury Yields

p

v

h(v)

p(v)

p(v)

Page 23: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Link between Credit SpreadTreasury Yields

• As price of risk-free perpetuity increases, the credit quality of bonds improves

• link between level of yields and credit spreads

• Monetary policy has financial stability implications

Page 24: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Contrast with Historical Cost Accounting Regime

p

v

h(v)

p(v)

p(v)

Page 25: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Step Adjustment:Property Price Fall

p

v

h(v)

p(v)

new equilibrium

Page 26: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Property as Sole Real Asset

• In this simplified model, the only asset propping up the financial system is property

• Property price can be rationalised in terms of present value of future housing services

• But “housing service” is not fungible.

• It cannot be used to meet mortgage liabilities

Page 27: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

Channels of Contagion

• The main channel of propagation is change in asset prices (property, bond)

• Even without “domino effect” of defaults contagion can be potent (Cf. European insurers, summer 2002)

• Counterparty risk will reinforce the price effects

Page 28: Marking to Market, Liquidity  and Financial Stability

v

s

s(v)

d(v)


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