ABSTRACT
We develop a framework to explore the effect of credit ratings on loan origination. We show that ratings endogenously shift the economy from a Signaling equilibrium, in which banks inefficiently retain loans to signal quality, toward an OriginateâtoâDistribute equilibrium with zero retention and inefficiently low lending standards. Ratings increase overall efficiency provided the reduction in costly retention more than compensates for the origination of some negative NPV loans. We study how banks' ability to screen loans affects these predictions and use the model to analyze commonly proposed policies such as mandatory âskin in the game.â
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