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Competition for Deposits, Fragility, and Insurance

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(2), 184-216
In the presence of economies of scale, depositors' expectations are shown to give rise to vertical differentiation and to yield multiple market equilibria, some of which exhibit institutional or systemic collapse. This fragility is due to a coordination problem among depositors and not to bank competition. Nevertheless, failure perceptions do influence rivalry which in turn affects the failure probability in particular equilibria. Deposit insurance improves welfare by preventing collapse, extending the market, and minimizing frictions. However, deposit insurance also may induce fiercer competition for deposits and increase the deadweight losses associated with failing institutions. The welfare impact of deposit insurance is shown to depend on market structure, and is thus ambiguous even in a world of full liability and no moral hazard in bank investments.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: G21, G28.

Tick Size, Spread, and Volume

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(1), 2-22
The AMEX changed the tick size from[formula]to[formula]for low-price stocks on September 3, 1992. Consistent with the prediction of L. E. Harris (1994, Minimum price variations, discrete bid–ask spreads, and quotation sizes,Rev. Finan. Stud.7,149–178), the change has reduced both quoted and effective spreads, although the magnitude of the reduction is much smaller than predicted. However, we fail to find evidence of a significant increase in trading volume. Our cross-sectional regressions show that stocks with greater trading activity, lower prices, and stronger competition from the regional exchanges experienced greater spread reductions.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: G10, G18, G20.

The Optimal Regulation of Insider Trading

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(1), 49-73
This paper models inside trading regulation with a well-defined objective and introduces an explicit measure of regulatory strictness. The regulator's objective is to minimize the trading loss of liquidity traders. With market professionals whose information-based trading is not regulated, the objective of regulation can be achieved by promoting competition between these market professionals and the insider. When stricter regulation induces improvement in the precision of the market professionals' information, tolerating some insider trading can be the optimal regulatory policy. It is also shown that allowing more market professionals to enter the market and disclosing information to them are as effective in achieving the regulatory objective as the direct restriction of insider trading.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: D82, G10, L13.

Contagious Bank Runs: Evidence from the 1929–1933 Period

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(4), 409-423 open access
This paper empirically examines contagion effects of bank failures by analyzing the behavior of deposit flows in a sample of failed and healthy banks over the 1929–1933 period. We find evidence of contagion for 1930–1932, while none seems to have existed in 1929 or 1933. In addition, the pace of contagion accelerated over 1930–1932. We find that even during 1930–1932, failing-bank deposit outflows exceeded those at a matched control sample of nonfailing banks. This finding is consistent with the presence of a significant number of informed depositors who distinguished among ex ante failing and nonfailing banks.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Number: G21.

The Regulation of Bank Capital: Do Capital Standards Promote Bank Safety?

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(2), 160-183
We show that in an imperfect information environment the equity value of an impaired bank may increase or decrease when it is required to meet a capital standard. Regardless of the change in the bank's equity value, however, its stock price will fall in response to a forced recapitalization, consistent with recent empirical evidence. Simulations of our model suggest that this stock price decline is likely to be larger the smaller is the share of ownership held by the managers of the bank, also consistent with recent empirical evidence in the literature. Our model further predicts a rise in bank's non-interest expenses following a required recapitalization. Given the increase in the regulator's exposure that would accompany a reduction in the bank's market value of equity, the regulator may choosenotto enforce the regulation. Hence, capital regulation may be time-inconsistent in this situation and consequently not have its intended risk-mitigating incentives.

Optimal Incorporation, Structure of Debt Contracts, and Limited-Recourse Project Financing

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(4), 372-408 open access
We analyze the interrelationships among the corporate organization structure, the capital structure, and the ownership structure of a firm with multiple projects, when incumbent management derives control benefits. The choices made by firm management are: (1) Whether to set up projects as a joint firm or as separate firms (spin-off), (2) the amount of debt financing to use, (3) the structure of the debt contract (e.g., straight debt on the joint firm, limited-recourse project financing, or spin-off with straight debt), and (4) the fraction of equity to hold in each firm (ownership structure). Differences in managerial ability across projects, benefits of control, and the probability of loss of control through a takeover or through bankruptcy are driving factors in this model. We relate the project characteristics to the optimality of spin-offs and limited-recourse project financing arrangements, and derive implications for the allocation of debt and the ownership structure across projects.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: G32, G34, D21.

Optimal Transparency in a Dealer Market with an Application to Foreign Exchange

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(3), 225-254
This paper addresses a fundamental trade-off in the design of multiple-dealer markets. Namely, though greater transparency can accelerate revelation of information in price, it can also impede dealer risk management. If dealers could choose the transparency regime ex ante, which regime would they choose? We show that dealers prefer incomplete transparency (meaning marketwide order flow is observed with noise). Slower price adjustment provides time for nondealers to trade, thereby sharing risk otherwise borne by dealers. At some point, however, further reduction in transparency impedes risk sharing: too noisy a public signal provides nondealers too little information to induce them to trade.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: F31, G15.

The Performance and Market Impact of Dual Trading: CME Rule 552

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(1), 23-48
This paper analyzes dual trading on futures contracts restricted by Chicago Mercantile Exchange Rule 552. Using floor trader data, several categories of traders are identified, and differences in strategies and profitability are examined. When unrestricted, dual traders execute most customer orders and few personal trades. The evidence supports the hypothesis that dual traders are superior brokers. However, there is no evidence of informational advantages in dual traders' personal trading. Dual traders are shown to provide liquidity with their personal trades. Finally, Rule 552 does not appear to have increased trading costs.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: G12, G13, D82.

A Model of Trading Volume with Tax-Induced Heterogeneous Valuation and Transaction Costs

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(4), 340-371 open access
We develop a model of trading volume when agents have different valuation and face transaction costs. In particular, the differential valuation is induced by differential tax status which generates trading around the distribution of cash dividends. Our model predicts that trading volume is negatively affected by idiosyncratic risk of dividend-paying stocks. Volume is negatively affected by the systematic risk of these stocks only in the presence of transaction costs.Journal of Economic LiteratureClassification Numbers: G11, G12, H20.

The Marketing of Closed-end Fund IPOs: Evidence from Transactions Data

Journal of Financial Intermediation 1996 5(2), 127-159
We examine aftermarket transactions for closed-end fund IPOs and document large sell-to-buy imbalances (“flipping”), extensive price stabilization, and sharp subsequent price drops. The timing of the price drop is related to both the amount of initial flipping, and use of the over-allotment options. The extent of the flipping activity is related to the composition of the syndicate. Moreover, aftermarket buys (sells) are mainly small (large) trades. These findings suggest that lead underwriters price stabilize and manage the supply of shares in the aftermarket, and that closed-end fund IPOs are marketed to a poorly informed public.