Centre for Economic Policy Research
Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry 1.8
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10 Conflicts of Interest in the Financial Services Industry
1.8 Plan of the study The next four chapters discuss the conflicts of interest in each of the four types of financial service activities discussed above. These discussions are followed by a final chapter which provides an overview of our analysis of conflicts of interest and the policy remedies that may help to reduce these conflicts of interest, making the financial system more efficient. What Are the Issues? 11 2 Investment Banking: Conflicts of Interest in Underwriting and Research 2.1 Information synergies and conflicts of interest Investment banks provide a varied array of financial services that bridge informa- tional asymmetries in the primary and secondary capital markets. In the primary market, they float new and seasoned securities and advise on mergers and acquisitions; in the secondary markets, they act as brokers or dealers, providing research for both markets (Bloch, 1986). Joined with market making and proprietary trading, these services have important complementarities in the collection and use of information that encourage their joint provision. Taken altogether, investment banks, as intermediaries, play a central role in the formation of capital and provision of liquidity to the markets. When a new issue is floated by a syndicate of investment banks, the bank that serves as the lead underwriter engages in intense information collection. The bank needs to provide information to build a book of committed investors, set the price of the initial public offering (IPO) and create a secondary market. The lead underwriter of an IPO syndicate is the delegated monitor not only for individual investors who are considering purchasing newly issued equities but also for the other members of the syndicate. This underwriter incurs quasi-fiduciary responsi- bilities to other members of the syndicate and risk from holding the largest share of the issue. Moving a firm ‘from the closet to the goldfish bowl’ gains the lead underwriter an information advantage, which is greatest at the beginning when there is relatively little public information. This advantage can form the basis for a long-term relationship with the issuing firm. In addition, to promote transparency, the Securities Act of 1933 imposes legal sanctions to ensure that the lead bank energetically pursues all material information in a process called due diligence. 1 The investment bank’s research analysts who have been part of this discovery process should be able to offer better buy/sell recommendations and superior forecasts of the firm’s performance. Market making in the secondary markets for brokerage customers, provides investment banks with skills to manage the sale of IPOs. The lead underwriter is the dominant market maker, taking a substantial inventory, while co-managers play a negligible role (Ellis et al., 2000). Even if there are other market makers, many lead underwriters act as market makers after the offering is completed and the syndicate is dissolved because it takes time for the market to deepen. The information gained will be additionally valuable if the firm issues more securities. The information synergies from underwriting, research and market making thus provide a rationale for combining these distinct financial services. 2 The success of an investment bank’s combination of these activities will contribute to 13 its reputation, thereby enhancing its future business in this information intensive industry. There are potential conflicts of interest between these activities, however. For example, proprietary trading may conflict with the fiduciary responsibility of an investment bank to its brokerage clients for the best execution of trades. While this is a potential problem, the greatest focus of public concern has centred on the perceived conflicts between underwriting and brokerage, where investment banks are serving two clients, the issuing firm and investors. Issuers may benefit from optimistic research while investors should desire and seek unbiased research. If the incentives for these two activities are not appropriately aligned, there will be a temptation for employees on one side of the firm to distort information to the advantage of their clients and the profit of their department. When the potential revenues from underwriting greatly exceed brokerage commissions, there will be a strong incentive to favour issuers over investors or risk losing the former to competitors. Yet, these conflicts may not be exploited because investment banking is an information intensive industry, where reputation is a key element in a firm’s long-term success, and conflicts of interest are potentially damaging to reputation. Given the multiple services that are provided, informational advantages and conflicts of interest will be present to some degree in an investment bank. The concern is whether costly conflicts of interest may dominate the benefits from the informational synergies. Conflicts of interest may be minimized either by a firm’s desire to maintain and build its reputation or by legal sanctions. An investment bank’s reputation is vital to attract and retain customers. If it is concerned about the discipline of the market, it will devise various structures and incentives to prevent the exploitation of conflicts that would alienate customers. In the United States, the law recognizes the potential for conflicts and attempts to discourage corporate finance departments from exerting inappropriate influence on analysts. Although the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 does not require a firewall to prevent information transmission between departments, the idea was endorsed by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in its rules promulgated under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The 1940 Act and the Codes of Ethics and the Standards of Professional Conduct of the Financial Analysts Federation required that if a firm provides corporate finance services to a company, the analysts must disclose this information in research reports (Dugar and Nathan, 1995). In spite of these sanctions and the threat of market discipline, conflicts of interest were not suppressed in the late 1990s, imposing costs on many individual customers. Furthermore, damage appears to have been done to the capital markets and economy by the diminished reputation and confidence in investment banks as intermediaries. Download 1.95 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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