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Current
Landscape
Temasek Holdings as well as
several other sovereign wealth funds such as Qatar Investment
Authority have invested in troubled financial service firms
such as Merrill Lynch and Barclays. One of the important
aspects of this crisis is the claim by many banks that their
credit portfolios are trading at ‘fire sale’ prices or at
steep discounts relative to their true value, which in turn
results in their stock prices also being below its fundamental
value. Is this justified? Can assets trade below true value?
Several financial crises including the current one are
often accompanied by adverse economic circumstances. For
example, the current crisis was triggered by loose lending
standards. Thus, the current reduction in value of banks could
be a downward correction of correct magnitude to account for
earlier over pricing resulting from inadequate recognition of
risk. On the other hand, finance research has documented many
cases where the market overreacts to current events. Many
previous financial crises have been accompanied by a ‘flight
to quality’ where investors shun all risky assets in an
indiscriminate fashion.
If the market has overreacted in the current credit crisis,
then investors such as Temasek, who are buying into troubled
banks, are getting a good deal by investing in cheap assets at
fire sale prices. On the other hand, if the reduction in the
value banks is solely attributable to loose lending standards
and other adverse economic circumstances, then such fire sale
investments should not be expected to yield higher returns
relative to returns realised by investing in normal times. To
the extent that the overpricing due to loose lending standards
has not fully corrected, such investment in troubled companies
may even result in lower than normal returns.
Current
Research
This paper focuses on two things, both of which are very
relevant to the current credit crisis. In particular, it
studies the determinants of recovery rates (and loss given
default) for a set of bank loans and public debt of US
companies over a time period of 18 years from 1980 to 1999. It
finds that industry distress has a strong impact on recovery
rates, with recoveries being around 20% lower if a firm
defaults when its industry peers are also experiencing
distress.
A second important focus of this paper is to study the
impact of fire sales on the market value of defaulted debt and
defaulted bank loans. We found strong evidence in favour
of fire sales. In particular, market values of bank loans and
publicly traded debt are very negatively impacted by the
possibility of fire sales. There is also evidence to show that
that fire sale effects are larger when the industry peers of
the defaulted firm are also experiencing financial
difficulties, something quite similar to the current status of
the banking industry. Further, the magnitude of the loss in
value due to fire sales is exacerbated when the defaulted firm
has assets that are highly specific to the industry, i.e., the
assets have few alternative uses outside the industry. For
example, a real estate firm has assets that have many
alternative uses. A financial service firm’s assets (example:
loans) cannot be used outside of this industry. Thus,
real estate firms should be less impacted by fire sales than
banks.
Implications
The study has several important implications. In
particular, to the extent that financial buyers such as
sovereign investment funds and other buyers with deep pockets
can identify fire sales, they can profit by buying these
assets cheaply and sell them when the industry returns to a
normal state from its current distressed state.
A
second important implication of this research is that several
of the current credit risk models used in banks assumed
constant recovery rates (or LGD). To the extent that recovery
rates vary systematically with industry conditions, this
suggests that Value at Risk (VAR) is measured incorrectly. The
next generation of credit risk models would have to take into
account the time varying nature of recovery rates, its
correlation with the state of the industry as well as the its
correlation with the default rate.
This paper was published in the Journal
of Financial Economics in 2007 and took first runner-up place
for the FAMA-DFA Best Paper Award. It was co-written with Prof
Viral Acharya at the London Business School and Prof Sreedhar
Bharath at the University of Michigan. Adapted by Tanmay
Satpathy. |