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1 Introduction This text presents the perfect capital market model and the associated Fisher separation theorem. This model demonstrates that utility maximizing and perfectly rational owners will agree on forcing the managers of the firms they own to pursue the profit-maximizing strategy. This is so for diverse time-preferences among the owners as long as capital markets are perfect. 2 The Model Model
assumptions: 1)
Capital markets are
perfect ·
Agents are perfectly
rational and they pursue utility maximization. ·
There are no direct
transaction costs, regulation or taxes, and all assets are perfectly
divisible. ·
Perfect competition
in product and securities markets. ·
All agents receive
information simultaneously and it is costless. The information is either
certain or risky. 2)
An arbitrary number
of agents are endowed with some initial resources (N0=7 mill. $)
of a good (C0). This good may either be consumed today (P0)
or be invested today (I0) and transformed into consumption
tomorrow (P1). 3)
The agents in the
economy may choose to buy stocks in a firm that has four investment projects
at its disposal. The outlays and returns on these projects are displayed in
figure I below. A manager is hired by the agents to run the firm. From the
numbers, it is clear that there is a decreasing return to scale on
investments. In other words, the marginal rate of return falls as investments
rise. 4) The agents have different but monotonous preferences, and
they exhibit decreasing marginal utility. Notation: ·
N0 is the
aggregated initial resources held by all agents. ·
rm is the
market-determined interest. ·
C0 is
today’s consumption or investment good. ·
C1 is
tomorrow’s consumption good. C1 = W*1 - (1+ rm)C0
is the capital market line. ·
P*0 is
the efficient consumption today by all agents. ·
P*1 is
the efficient production = consumption tomorrow by all agents. ·
W*0 is
the present value of efficient production and consumption: W*0 =
P*0 + P*1/(1+rm). ·
W*1 is
future value of efficient production and consumption: W*1 = W*0(1+rm). Model illustrated |
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Analysis Efficiency requires MRS = -(1+rm)
= MRT. In words, the marginal rate of substitution must equal the marginal
rate of transformation between consumption today and tomorrow. In the above
figure this is illustrated by the simultaneous tangency of the capital market
line to the production possibility curve and the agents’ time preferences of
consumption. As may be observed the agents will maximize their utility when
they invest a total of 4 million $ of their initial endowment (7 mill. $) in
stocks and then order the manager to maximize profit. The manager does that
by undertaking project D and B and produce at point B. The manager cannot pursue
his own interest because the agents have full information about the projects
and thereby about the profit maximizing strategy. In other words there are no
agency problems in this world. Very importantly, the production at point B is
strongly efficient because it maximizes the agents’ total life income. The
figure shows a situation with two agents. Agent I is patient and prefers to
consume tomorrow, and agent II is impatient and prefers to consume today.
Imagine that agent I is the only capital owner in the economy. His initial
endowment is $7 million, and he owns the entire firm. If a perfect capital
market existed, he would maximize his utility by ordering his manager to
maximize profit and produce at point B. However, he would be able to consume
at point E1 by lending money in the capital market. Without capital
markets his utility- and profit maximizing decision would imply production
and consumption at point X and his welfare would be reduced. Now, replace
agent I with agent II. If perfect capital market existed he would consume at
point E2 by borrowing, but as agent I he would also instruct his manager to
produce at point B. Without capital markets he would consume and produce at
point Z. The above results would still hold for many agents and dispersed
ownership. Imagine an economy with 100 firms each with the same production
opportunity curve as the firm above. Furthermore, imagine 100 agents each
with 7 mill. $ in initial endowment but with different time preferences. As
long as perfect capital market existed these agents would be indifferent to
having their own firm or having say 1/100 of each firm. The reason is, that
they would agree to order the manager to produce at point B, because this
would maximize the value of their ownership stakes. Now, the Fisher
separation theorem can be stated: Fisher separation theorem: Given perfect and complete capital markets, the
production decision (P0, P1) is governed solely by the
profit-maximization objective (max. present value of production, P0,
P1), and the decision is separated from the consumption decision
that is governed solely by utility-maximization (max. utility of consumption,
C0, C1). This
theorem is also known as the unanimity
principle because it unites the shareholders in agreeing on the profit
maximization strategy. The theorem is part of the general micro-economic
theory that demonstrates the welfare gains from specialization and trade. In
this model, the gain only comes from trade on differences in preferences.
Alternatively, we could demonstrate the gain from specialization by assuming
different investment opportunities but identical preferences. A caveat Unfortunately, the above model is not a general
equilibrium model. It is a short run model. To see why, consider the
following. Note that the average rate of return
on capital would always be equal to or higher than the marginal rate of
return when the latter is decreasing. Furthermore, the optimal marginal rate
of return is equal to or higher than the market determined interest rate. The
model does not say much about the cost
of capital. However, the four projects’ cost of capital have to be the
same because the agents in this model only focus on return, not on risks.
Besides, the agents determine the optimal production by ordering projects
initiated that have a higher return than the market interest rate. This imply
that the project cost of capital must be equal to the market rate. So, the
cost of capital is less than the average return of capital, and firms will
earn excess profits. This is not sustainable in the long run. In a general
long run equilibrium model, the cost of capital have to equal the return of
capital. |
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- Copyright 1997-2008, ViamInvest. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Legal notice. |