Issue 3 (May 2023)

Finace Theory Insights

Issue 3 (May 2023)

Unexpected Consequences of Financial Contracts

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Financial contracts are often designed to mitigate conflicts of interest between different parties. Their features, and more broadly tradability of financial securities, can give rise to unexpected outcomes. "Asset Management Contracts and Equilibrium Prices" shows that constraining asset managers to hold portfolios close to the benchmark indices against which they will be evaluated amplifies any mispricing in the underlying assets, and the aggregate market becomes overvalued. "Why Aren’t Mortgages Indexed to House Prices?" examines the curious absence of mortgage loans indexed to house prices, and singles out as a culprit the benefit that lenders obtain from basing such loans on low-quality house price indices. "Trading and Shareholder Democracy" highlights that not only can shareholder voting result in inefficient outcomes, just like voting in a political context, but tradability of shares before a corporate election can in fact make the situation even worse. Finally, "A Theory of Liquidity Spillover between Bond and CDS Markets" points to unexpected positive effects of naked CDS trades on the market for the underlying bonds---the bonds become more liquid, and their price also improves.

Andrea Buffa, Dimitri Vayanos, Paul Woolley

Asset Management Contracts and Equilibrium Prices

Delegated portfolio management has grown dramatically over the past 60 years, and so has...
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Benjamin Hébert, Barney Hartman-Glaser

Why Aren’t Mortgages Indexed to House Prices?

As house prices fell and unemployment rose during the great financial crisis of 2008,...
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Nadya Malenko, Doron Levit, Ernst Maug

Trading and Shareholder Democracy

In many advanced economies, regulatory reforms and charter amendments have empowered shareholders of publicly...
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Batchimeg Sambalaibat

A Theory of Liquidity Spillover between Bond and CDS Markets

Credit default swaps (CDS) are thought to be harmful to the issuers of the underlying...
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