Global vs. Local Banking: A Double Adverse Selection Problem

Global vs. Local Banking: A Double Adverse Selection Problem

by Leslie Sheng Shen (UC Berkeley)

A summary of this research is provided here.

This paper provides a new theory of credit allocation in financial systems with both global and local banks, and tests it using cross-country loan-level data. I first point out that the traditional theory in banking and corporate finance of firm-bank sorting based on hard versus soft information does not explain the sorting patterns between firms and global versus local banks. In light of this puzzle, I propose a new perspective: global banks have a comparative advantage in extracting global information, and local banks have a comparative advantage in extracting local information. I formalize this view in a model in which firms have returns dependent on global and local risk factors, and each bank type can observe only one component of the firms’ returns. This double information asymmetry creates a segmented credit market with a double adverse selection problem: in equilibrium, each bank lends to the worst type of firms in terms of the unobserved risk factors. Moreover, I show that the adverse selection problem has important macroeconomic implications. When one of the bank types faces a funding shock, the adverse selection affects credit allocation at both the extensive and intensive margins, generating spillover and amplification effects through adverse interest rates. I formally test the model using empirical strategies that tightly map to the model set-up. I find firm-bank sorting patterns, and effects of US and Euro area monetary policy shocks on credit allocation that support the model predictions. This evidence reveals a novel adverse selection channel of international monetary policy transmission.

Photo source: blog.iese.edu

 

Topics

Capital flows

Initiatives

Financial Globalization

International Trends in Financing Innovation and Entrepreneurship

International Trends in Financing Innovation and Entrepreneurship

hosted by Lee Fleming and Gustavo Manso

The aim of workshop is to bring together leading scholars who study the financing of innovation and entrepreneurship in a variety of countries. It will explore various institutional, legal, and financial sector developments that affect the creation of entrepreneurial firms and technological innovation, their rate of success, the dynamism of incumbent firms, and their different contributions to economic development. The conference will also focus on understanding the role of entrepreneurs, emergent phenomena such as crowdfunding and FinTech, institutional investors, and financial markets in the governance of entrepreneurial firms; it will highlight differences across countries as a way to identify salient dynamics. The conference is made possible through the generous support of the Clausen Center for International Business and Policy. See program here.

Type

Conferences

Location

Blum Center 330

Date & Time

Jun 29, 2017

Website

none

The Euro Crisis: A Look Back and a Look Forward

The Euro Crisis: A Look Back and a Look Forward

Barry Eichengreen, Professor of Economics and Political Science at the UC Berkeley will provide a retrospective on the euro crisis — which aspects were a surprise and which were predictable — and sketch a viable way forward for the Eurozone.

 

Type

Conferences

Location

Moses Hall

Date & Time

May 4-21, 2017

Website

none

Africa Business Forum

Africa Business Forum

The big-picture theme of 3rd annual Berkeley-Haas Africa Business Forum is how technology is disrupting every industry on the continent.
But the focus of the event, organized by the Africa Business Club at Berkeley-Haas and to be held on the UC Berkeley Campus, is on interaction, discussion, and building a network.
The Berkeley Haas Africa Business Forum seeks to act as a magnet for people with a vested interest in private sector development in Africa, and as a catalyst for action The goal is to build a diverse network of change agents who are capable and motivated to tackle the complex challenges and vast opportunities present in African economies.

Type

Conferences

Location

330 Sutardja Dai Hall, MC 1764 Berkeley, CA 94720-1764

Date & Time

Apr 29 – Mar 21, 2017

Website

https://www.abf-berkeleyhaas.com/

Bridge 2017 Asia Business Conference

Bridge 2017 Asia Business Conference

Celebrating its 17th year, Bridge is the premier student-led conference that connects those seeking greater involvement with business in Asia, the most dynamic region of the world.
It is a one-day conference featuring inspiring keynote presentations, in-depth panel discussions, and networking opportunities.

Type

Conferences

Location

Haas School of Business

Date & Time

Apr 14, 2017

Website

https://www.berkeleybridge.org/