Helena Maria Krebs analyzes equilibrium credit rationing when banks
compete for loans and deposits in a double-sided Bertrand game.
Borrowers and lenders are allowed to switch market sides. Thus,
investors do not only base their decisions on loan rates, but also on
opportunity costs in the form of deposit rates. Credit rationing may
occur if adverse selection due to borrowers’ informational advantage
leads to a lower expected return on loans if the loan rate increases.
In that case, banks may have an incentive to offer loan rates below
the market-clearing rate. At these rates loan demand exceeds loan
supply. The author reveals the important role of bank equity and its
distribution: Banks with high equity offer cheap loans and reject
superfluous loan applicants, whom banks with low equity then offer
expensive loans. Thereby expensive banks realize a higher expected
return on loans thancheap banks. Furthermore, this book is the first
to formally model the process of acceptance and rejection of loan
applicants as a separate stage of the double-sided Bertrand game after
banks have decided on their interest rates. It is shown that for fixed
chosen interest rates, the deposit and loan volumes of all banks in a
subgame perfect Nash equilibrium of the resource allocation game are
uniquely determined.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783658444884
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter