Name the benefits of relationship banking (Boot, J Fin Inter 2000)
6
don’t need to disclose private information to the entire market —> only 1 party knows your private information (your bank) -> bank loans not traded
easier to renegoiate with a loan than with a bond -> can be done on a one-to-one basis -> more flexible
allows young, risky entrepreneurial firms to seek financing —> banks may make some losses now but can recoup later
easier approval
less colleteral requirements
monitoring by bank can reduce agency problems in the borrower and thus, act as a corporate governance mechanisms (Nini, Smith & Sufi, Rev Fin Stud 2012)
Name the two main problems/ costs of relationship banking (Boot, J Fin Inter 2000)
1) Hold-up problem
banks overcharge a “trapped” borrower
borrowers are trapped when the advantages of relationship lending becomes too big to let it go
2) Soft-budget constraint
when borrowers are in borderline default, banks lend more to prevent liquidation
borrowers are aware of this and take less effort to prevent bad outcome
Name Boot’s conclusion about relationship Banking
relationship lending allows efficient allocation of funds —> it does add value
however, in recent years the value-adding part of relationship lending is eroding
Benefits of bank loans - Supplying credits
What does the paper “Oesch, Schuette, and Walter (2005), Real Effects of Investment Banking Relationships: Evidence from the Financial Crisis, Working paper ask and focus on?
2
the paper asks: What happens to borrower’s capital spending and investment activities after their lenders (i.e. Lehman, Bear Stearns & Merrill Lynch) went bankrupt?
Focus on bankruptcy event of Lehman Brothers and the near death event of Bear Sterns and Merrill Lynch
What are the findings of “Oesch, Schuette, and Walter (2005), Real Effects of Investment Banking Relationships: Evidence from the Financial Crisis, Working paper?
Explain Findings
3
Findings:
US firms that have a troubled bank as a lead lender of a capital issue in the 3 years prior to September 2008 experience a 6.3% reduction in investment spending and 12.4% reduction in financing relative to unaffected firms
Why?
these borrowers have to start all over again with a new bank
relationship lending is reset to zero
Tougher lending standards and more expensive loans
What is the implication of “Oesch, Schuette, and Walter (2005), Real Effects of Investment Banking Relationships: Evidence from the Financial Crisis, Working paper?
1
Implication:
Only know you love her when you let her go :)
What does the paper "Chodorow-Reich (2014) The Employment Effects of Credit Market Disruptions: Firm-level Evidence from the 2008-09 Financial Crisis, Quaterly Journal of Economics” ask? What is their sample?
This paper asks:
how does banking lending friction affect employment outcomes?
Sample:
2,000 nonfinancial US firms between 2008-2009
What are the two-step results of "Chodorow-Reich (2014) The Employment Effects of Credit Market Disruptions: Firm-level Evidence from the 2008-09 Financial Crisis, Quaterly Journal of Economics”?
First step: Borrowers that had pre-crisis relationships with less healthy banks are
(1) less able to obtain a loan
(2) pay a higher interest rate
—> this effect is detected even among the largest corporate borrowers
Second step: these borrowers are forced to lay off workers
What is the bottom line of "Chodorow-Reich (2014) The Employment Effects of Credit Market Disruptions: Firm-level Evidence from the 2008-09 Financial Crisis, Quaterly Journal of Economics”?
Bank credit has real effects on corporate borrowers!
What does the paper “Dwenger, Fossen, and Simmler (2015) From Financial to Real Economic Crisis: Evidence from Individual Firm-Bank Relationships in Germany, Working paper ask?
The paper asks:
whether and to what extend are firms able to compensate for the shortage in loan supply by switching banks and by using other types of financing?
What are the two-step resutls of the paper “Dwenger, Fossen, and Simmler (2015) From Financial to Real Economic Crisis: Evidence from Individual Firm-Bank Relationships in Germany, Working paper?
Two-step results:
1) “Bad-banks” cut their lending at the onset of the financial crisis
2) Firms that borrow from these banks reduced borrowing, forced to cut their investment and lyoff their empoyees
What are the findings of “Ongena, Peydró, van Horen (2015) Shocks abroad, pain at home? Bank-firm level evidence on financial contagion during the recent financial crisis, IMF Economic Review?
Relative to locally-funded banks, foreign banks and domestic banks that rely on international funding cut their lending more aggressively during the crisis
Affected borrowers will experience a drop in their
i) asset based
ii) operating revenue
iii) ROA
iv) short-term funding
What is the takeaway from “Ongena, Peydró, van Horen (2015) Shocks abroad, pain at home? Bank-firm level evidence on financial contagion during the recent financial crisis, IMF Economic Review?
Takeaway:
Shock abroad, pain at home (financial globalization has intensified the international transmission of financial shocks with substantial real consequences)
What is the overall takeaway from Benefits of bank loans - Supplying credits ?
Overall takeaway:
Do love your bankers. You will miss them when they are gone
Benefits of bank loans: Monitoring corporate borrowers:
What are banks supposed to do according to Boot (2000)?
Banks are supposed to monitor borrowers to ensure borrowers repay loans
What does the paper “Nini, Smith and Sufi (2012), Credit Control Rights, Corporate Governance & Firm Value, Review of Financial Studies” ask?
do creditors take action when borrowers misbehave, such as when they violate their convenant requirements?
What are the findings of “Nini, Smith and Sufi (2012), Credit Control Rights, Corporate Governance & Firm Value, Review of Financial Studies” ?
5
YES —> creditors take action when borrowers misbehave
Following financial convenants, violated firms sharply reduce their:
Acquisitiveness; Capital expenditures; Leverage
Shareholder payouts
And increase:
Rate at which CEO is being fired
Operating performance
Stock performance
According to “Nini, Smith and Sufi (2012), Credit Control Rights, Corporate Governance & Firm Value, Review of Financial Studies” what do banks often force borrowers to following convenant violations ?
4
Following convenant violations, banks also force borrowers to:
Layoff their unproductive workers
Cut their unproductive operating units
Appoint more outside directors to the board to improve its internal monitoring
Improve its innovation capacity
Waht is the bottom line of “Nini, Smith and Sufi (2012), Credit Control Rights, Corporate Governance & Firm Value, Review of Financial Studies” ?
Bottom line:
banks take action when borrowers misbehave
bank intervention is an important governance mechansim that improves borrower’s performance
1) What does the paper “Huang, Lu, and Srinivasan (2013) Do Banks Monitor Corporate Decisions? Evidence from Bank Financing of Mergers and Acquisitions, Working Paper ask?
1) whether banks monitor firms’ mergers and acquisitions to the extent that will benefit acquirer’s shareholder?
Assume that Unilever borrows from Bank of America. Now Unilever is trying to acquire Kraft Food. Does Bank of America help Unilever in carrying out the deal?
Answer:
No
Banks don’t care
having a bank loan doesn’t allow borrowers to make better M&A deals
BUT, after Bank of America realises Unilever is trying to make a larger capital investment:
Unilever receives much harsher borrowing conditions: more expensive loan prices, shorter maturity, higher colleteral requirements and more convenant restricitons
What are the combined takeaways of
i) “Huang, Lu, and Srinivasan (2013) Do Banks Monitor Corporate Decisions? Evidence from Bank Financing of Mergers and Acquisitions, Working Paper
ii) the Unilever/ Bank of America example
Combined takeaways:
Banks don’t monitor to help borrowers make better strategic decisions
Banks only monitor when their benefits are potentially hurt such as when borrowers misbehave
Banks are selfish!
Acquiring access to finance
What does the paper “Cornaggia & Li (2018), The Value of Access to Finance: Evidence from M&A, Journal of Financial Economics ask?
Quesion:
Given the benefits of bank financing, do corporate borrowers actively manage their chance of obtaining credits?
What are the findings of “Cornaggia & Li (2018), The Value of Access to Finance: Evidence from M&A, Journal of Financial Economics ?
YES!
corporate borrowers go out of their way to “buy” access to bank finance
firms acquire companies in areas that have better access to banks just to increase their ability to borrow more
What is the takeaway of Acquiring access to finance?
Firms go out of their way to buy access to bank financing
Sum up the most important points from Lecture Week 6
1) Debt issuance is the most popular financing option
2) firms can either borrow from a bank or issue a bond; but bank borrowing is much more popular
3) Banks: supply credits & monitor borrowers
-> borrowers go out of their way to improve access to bank credit
Overview: the firm and the capital markets
1) Name the three main activties of firms?
2) What are firms also called?
1)
Operating activities
Investing activities
Financing activities
2) firms are also called value generators
1) Name the two main players on capital markets?
2) Name key characteristic of Capital Market
1) Debtholders & Shareholders
2) trading value
Human Nature
What is human nature and why is it important if we want to understand firms?
people respond creatively to opportunities presented by environment
want to loosen constraints that prevent them from doing what they wish
humans not only care about money but about almost everything (e.g. respect, honour, power, love, welfare of others)
—> firms run by humans
—> if we want to understand firms, we need to understand human nature
Explain the Agency Theory?
Agents (e.g. manager) vs principals (e.g. shareholders)
Incomplete contract between managers and shareholders —> managers hold significant residual control right (Shleifer and Vishny, 1997)
agency porblems arise from divergent interests between managers and shareholders and can be mitigated by monitoring
helps explain many coporate finance phenomena
Which authors established the Agency theory?
Coase (1937)
Jensen and Meckling (1976)
Fama and Jensen (1983)
What is information asymmetry?
one party has private access to informaton which is not available to others
Information Asymmetry
What is the “lemons” problem?
the presence of information asymmetry between buyers and sellers leads to degraded quality of goods traded in a market (Akerlof, 1970)
sellers: well informed
buyers: less informed
What happens to buyer of a used car according to information asymmetry?
Take car example
if you are a buyer & you are going to buy
1) a used car &
2) you don’t know anything about cars
—> it is in your best interst to assume any used care to have low-quality
Using car example from before: Name market consequences of information asymmetry/ lemons problem
Market consequences:
sellers with high-quality used cars wouldn’t want to sell their cars
Bad drives out good
Sellers with high-quality cars need to signal the quality of their cars to potential buyers
Signaling
1) What is signaling and who intorduced it ?
2) what does signaling indicate in the example of used car?
1) signaling = method by which more informed individuals pass information to the less informed one
introduced by Spence (1973)
2) the seller needs to advertise the car’s benefits (e.g., energy consumption, emissions, fuel usage etc.)
1) What can you say about information asymmetry & signaling in the context of coprorate finance?
2) Describe the Funders’ and Firm’s perspective
information asymmetry and signaling are at the heart of many corporate finance issues
e.g., Information asymmetry between the firm & its potential external funders
1) Funders’ perspective: Will firm use my money wisely? Will it be able to pay me back? Why is does firm want to issue shares now - is it being overvalued?
—> to be safe, let’s charge them expensively!
2) Firm’s perspective: Better not borrow externally. Should just use own pocket money. Not enough money?
—> Let’s just forego the project
Descirbe the example of information asymmetry between managers and shareholders
Shareholders: Does the CEO work hard enough? Why is she using my money to invest in that risky R&D project
CEO: Let’s not do anything too innovative or “crazy”. Let’s try to “tick the box” to make shareholders happy
—> palying safe, lack of innovation etc.
Name the two categories of financing options as well as examples for each
1) Internal Funds
Profits
2) External capital
Equity
Debt (tax deductable + gives investors fixed claim)
Bank loan
Bond
Structures Debt securities
What are the most dominant financing choices of public coporations and why?
1) Internal financing by far the most dominant financing choice
no interest payments
more flexible
easy to get
2) Debt issuance is the most popular external financing choice
—> becomes increasingly more popular in recent years
Name the characteristics of a bank loan
i) characterized by on-going relationship between bank and borrower
ii) bilateral loan/ sole lender (= only one bank involved) vs. syndicated loan (= more banks involved; one leading bank which has highest proportion)
iii) borrowers need to meet a host of convenant requirements
(= Kreditnehmer müssen eine Reihe von praktischen Anforderungen erfüllen)
iv) customized contracts, not to be traded
Name the three key characteristics of market-based finance (e.g., Bond)
i) Credit rating expected
ii) no relationship with borrower
iii) can be traded, many investors
What does the paper “Ubiquity of bank borrowing (Hadlock and James, J Fin 2002) find?
in 1980:
median firm has 79% of their total debt as bank debt
this figure increases to 88% for the median firm in 1993
US public firms in 2018:
only 23% have long-term credit rating and thus, are eligible to seek market-based finance such as Bond
—> 77% has no choice but borrowing from banks
only 14% (out of this 23%) actually seeks market-based debt such as bonds
—> bank borrowing is even more importnat in bank-based economies such as China and Germany
What are the key characterisitcs of bank loans (Boot, J Fin Inter 2000) ?
bank loans characterized by “relationship banking”
i) bank invests in obtaining private information about the borrower
bank provides screening (Allen, 1990)
bank frequently monitors the borrowers (Diamond, 1984)
ii) bank has “multiple interactions” with their borrowers
“relationships” are not restricted to commercial banking
—> investment banking, private equity and venture capital all involve relationships
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