Walking Wounded or Living Dead? Making Banks Foreclose Bad Loans
Because of limited liability, insolvent banks have an incentive to roll over bad loans, in order to hide losses and gamble for resurrection, even though this is socially inefficient. We suggest a scheme that regulators could use to solve this problem. The scheme would induce banks to reveal their bad loans, which can then be foreclosed. Bank participation in the scheme would be voluntary. Even though banks have private information on the quantity of bad loans on their balance sheet, the scheme avoids creating windfall gains for bank equity holders. In addition, some losses can be imposed on debt holders.
Year of publication: |
2011-03
|
---|---|
Authors: | Bruche, Max ; Llobet, Gerard |
Institutions: | Financial Markets Group |
Saved in:
freely available
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Debt Maturity and the Liquidity of Secondary Debt Markets
Bruche, Max, (2013)
-
Recovery Rates, Default Probabilities and the Credit Cycle
González-Aguado, Carlos, (2006)
-
Walking wounded or living dead? : making banks foreclose bad loans
Bruche, Max, (2011)
- More ...