BIBLIOTECA MANUEL BELGRANO - Facultad de Ciencias Económicas - UNC

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Are buybacks back? : Menu-driven debt-reduction schemes with heterogeneous creditors / Ishac Diwan, Mark M. Spiegel

Por: Colaborador(es): Tipo de material: TextoTextoSeries Working papers ; WPS 675Detalles de publicación: World Bank Washington, D.C. 1991Descripción: 38 pTema(s): Clasificación CDD:
  • 336.3435
Contenidos:
1. Introduction -- 2. The model -- 3. Equilibrium -- 4. The optimal debtor solution -- 5. Recent experiences with buyback deals and menu programs -- 6. Concluding remarks -- References.
Resumen: There is always some price that is low enough so that a debtor country gains by buying back some of its debts. Similarly, there is always some price that is high enough so that creditors gain by selling their debt claims. What is needed is a mechanism that allows trades to take place at some price within this range. One mechanism, the market buyback, has been called a boondoggle. However, market buybacks are too expensive from the debtor ' s point of view and faced with a buyback bid, each creditor has incentives to hold onto its claim unless the bid is larger than the value of debt after the deal. Concerted debt-reduction agreements can overcome this type of coordination failure, but they may be difficult to reach in practice because of the heterogeneity of creditors. The authors argue that the menu approach to debt reduction retains the advantages but not the inconvenience of buybacks and concerted agreements. They introduce a model of bank asset pricing in the presence of tax incentives and deposit insurance. They then derive the equilibrium level of exit and new money for a distribution of creditors facing a given menu program. They show that the optimal menu includes some positive level of debt repurchase in almost all cases - challenging the argument that buybacks are undesirable. The authors conclude that the menu program dominates the standard buyback and new money approaches.
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1. Introduction -- 2. The model -- 3. Equilibrium -- 4. The optimal debtor solution -- 5. Recent experiences with buyback deals and menu programs -- 6. Concluding remarks -- References.

There is always some price that is low enough so that a debtor country gains by buying back some of its debts. Similarly, there is always some price that is high enough so that creditors gain by selling their debt claims. What is needed is a mechanism that allows trades to take place at some price within this range. One mechanism, the market buyback, has been called a boondoggle. However, market buybacks are too expensive from the debtor ' s point of view and faced with a buyback bid, each creditor has incentives to hold onto its claim unless the bid is larger than the value of debt after the deal. Concerted debt-reduction agreements can overcome this type of coordination failure, but they may be difficult to reach in practice because of the heterogeneity of creditors. The authors argue that the menu approach to debt reduction retains the advantages but not the inconvenience of buybacks and concerted agreements. They introduce a model of bank asset pricing in the presence of tax incentives and deposit insurance. They then derive the equilibrium level of exit and new money for a distribution of creditors facing a given menu program. They show that the optimal menu includes some positive level of debt repurchase in almost all cases - challenging the argument that buybacks are undesirable. The authors conclude that the menu program dominates the standard buyback and new money approaches.

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