2016
DOI: 10.3386/w22774
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Securities Lending as Wholesale Funding: Evidence from the U.S. Life Insurance Industry

Abstract: The existing literature assumes that securities lenders primarily respond to demand from securities borrowers and reinvest their cash collateral in short-term markets. We offer compelling evidence for a supply channel, using new data matching U.S. life insurers' individual bond lending and reinvestment decisions to the universe of securities lending transactions. We show that an insurer's decision to lend a bond is positively correlated with liquidity transformation in its lending program, even after controlli… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…We also assume that the supply from securities lenders depends on η, which governs their willingness to provide securities lending services. In effect, Foley-Fisher et al (2015) show that securities lending programs use funds from their activities to finance long dated assets, making their lending services depend on factors beyond repo specialness. We capture these incentives in reduced form through η, and assume ∂SL ∂η > 0.…”
Section: Securities Lendersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also assume that the supply from securities lenders depends on η, which governs their willingness to provide securities lending services. In effect, Foley-Fisher et al (2015) show that securities lending programs use funds from their activities to finance long dated assets, making their lending services depend on factors beyond repo specialness. We capture these incentives in reduced form through η, and assume ∂SL ∂η > 0.…”
Section: Securities Lendersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, in our sample the profits from trading in securities and the profits from 7 The risk shifting hypothesis has also been investigated in other sectors of the financial industry. While substantial agreement exists in favour of the risk shifting hypothesis in the mutual fund industry (see, for instance, Huang, Clemens, and Hanjiang (2011) and literature cited within), results are mixed in the insurance sector (Becker and Ivashina, 2015;Foley-Fisher, Narajabad, and Verani, 2016;Kirti, 2017). 8 Also Horvath, Huizinga and Ioannidou (2015) using similar data suggest that the risk shifting motive is a driver of the investment in domestic government bonds but they do not base their analysis on measures of bank balance sheet fragility.…”
Section: Figure 1 Herementioning
confidence: 99%