Why are financial intermediaries willing to engage in information collection activities when investors in financial instruments may be unwilling to do​ so?
A. Decisions made by financial intermediaries are public​ knowledge, while investments made with financial instruments are not.
B. The​ free-rider problem reduces gains for financial intermediaries more than it does for investors in financial instruments.
C. Banks make private​ loans; their conclusions on who is creditworthy are not made public.
D. Credit information is asymmetric for investors but not for financial intermediaries.

Respuesta :

Answer:

C. Banks make private​ loans; their conclusions on who is creditworthy are not made public.

Explanation:

Investors in financial instruments who engage in information collection face a free-rider problem, which means other investors may be able to benefit from their information without paying for it.

Individual investors, therefore, have inadequate incentives to devote resources to gather information about borrowers who issue securities.