Incentive Effects of Contingent Capital
发布时间:2013-05-03
Topic:
Incentive Effects of Contingent Capital
Time:
星期四,2013-05-03 10:30-12:00
Venue:
Room 505, Datong Building West Huaihai Road 211, SAIF
Speaker:
Sergey Tsyplakov

Incentive Effects of Contingent Capital

Contingent Capital bonds – also known as contingent convertibles (or CoCos) – are bonds that automatically write-down or convert to equity when the financial health of the issuer (typically a bank) deteriorates to a pre-defined threshold or trigger. This paper uses a model of dynamic capital structure choice to show how the contractual terms of CoCos affect future capital structure incentives, and hence the pricing of such liabilities. The conversion ratio is particularly important. If conversion is dilutive for equity investors, we show that banks will actively seek to reduce expected dilution costs by pursuing low leverage ratios leading to lower borrowing costs. On the other hand, if conversion ratios write down bond principal without diluting shareholds, then banks have perverse incentives to pursue higher leverage and capital destructive policies resulting in wider credit spread. Finally, we show that despite the obvious private and social benefits of dilutive CoCos, banks may choose not to issue them ‘midstream’ since a large fraction of the benefits are captured by existing bondholders. These findings suggest that the contractual terms terms of CoCos – conversion ratios in particular – warrant more attention than they have received to date.