Shadow Market

Shadow Market

A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged with little or no oversight. The shadow market is not to be confused with the black market for illegal goods (or legal goods being sold illegally). The purpose of a shadow market is to shield participants from the oversight and transparency of conventional marketplaces, which often include significant documentation. A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged with little or no oversight. A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged. Examples include a black market for undocumented work and pay under the table, as well as a black market for illegal drugs and legal drugs that are being bought or sold illegally.

A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged.

What Is a Shadow Market?

A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged with little or no oversight.    

A shadow market is an unregulated (or less regulated) private market where goods and services are exchanged.
A shadow market could be as simple as a handshake transaction between friends, or it could be as big as the multi-billion dollar alternative lender market.
The shadow market is not to be confused with the black market for illegal goods (or legal goods being sold illegally).

Understanding the Shadow Market

The purpose of a shadow market is to shield participants from the oversight and transparency of conventional marketplaces, which often include significant documentation. Because activity and transactions on a shadow market have little or no oversight, it offers participants the opportunity for strategies or schemes otherwise unavailable in public markets.

A shadow market may describe a simple transaction between two individuals, such as one party agreeing to purchase an asset without the burden of standard methods. Alternatively, a shadow market can be much larger, such as a private mortgage lender who doesn't qualify or fall under the regulations of a bank but supplies people with credit across the country anyway. A significant number of companies fall into this category.

The expression "shadow market" conjures up images of illegal or otherwise shady business arrangements, but not all shadow markets are nefarious in nature. A robust shadow banking system of non-bank financial intermediaries provides similar services to traditional banks but with the added benefit of convenience and often less paperwork. Such institutions can include payday loan companies, private mortgage or loan lenders, hedge funds, insurance companies, and private equity funds.

Many financiers in this space take issue with the expression "shadow banking," as if they're back alley loan sharks. The behavior of some operating this way hasn’t helped their reputation, though — the shadow market for mortgages played a primary role leading up to the subprime mortgage crisis of 2007 to 2008 and the global recession that followed.

When times are good, these types of legal shadow markets or systems generally operate without much scrutiny. When the economy tanks, they're a usual suspect. This often leads to certain types of businesses having to deal with more regulation or increased oversight.

Shadow Market vs. Black Market

The shadow market should not be confused with a black market. This is the market for illegal goods, and goods and services that should be taxed but go unreported.

There are various types of black markets. Examples include a black market for undocumented work and pay under the table, as well as a black market for illegal drugs and legal drugs that are being bought or sold illegally.

Example of a Shadow Market

Traditionally, if you wanted a loan you went to the bank, or possibly facilitated a loan agreement with family or friends. In recent years, technology has allowed for the rapid expansion of another form of lending: lending between peers.

Online peer-to-peer lending platforms allow people with money to connect with someone needing money. The platform handles the exchange and repayment of funds in exchange for taking a small cut.

In the banking system, all loans are tracked for reserve requirement purposes. Since peer-to-peer lenders fall outside the banking system, there is less regulatory oversight and the size of the market is largely unknown. The size of the market can be estimated based on the advertised numbers of peer-to-peer lending firms. Or in some cases, these firms are publicly traded and their accounting records show the types of business volumes they are doing.

According to Allied Market Research, the global peer-to-peer lending market was valued at $68 billion in 2019 and is expected to grow to $559 billion by 2027, which reflects a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of almost 30%.

Related terms:

Asset

An asset is a resource with economic value that an individual or corporation owns or controls with the expectation that it will provide a future benefit. read more

Black Market

A black market is an economic activity that takes place outside government-sanctioned channels. read more

Compound Annual Growth Rate (CAGR)

The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) is the rate of return that would be required for an investment to grow from its beginning balance to its ending one. read more

Decentralized Market

In a decentralized market, technology enables investors to deal directly with each other instead of operating from within a centralized exchange. read more

Financial Markets

Financial markets refer broadly to any marketplace where the trading of securities occurs, including the stock market and bond markets, among others. read more

Financial Statements , Types, & Examples

Financial statements are written records that convey the business activities and the financial performance of a company. Financial statements include the balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow statement. read more

Lender

A lender is an individual, a public or private group, or a financial institution that makes funds available to another with the expectation that the funds will be repaid. read more

Market

A market is a place where two parties, usually buyers and sellers, can gather to facilitate the exchange of goods and services. read more

Nonbank Financial Companies (NBFCs)

Nonbank financial companies (NBFCs) are entities or institutions that provide certain bank-like and financial services but do not hold a banking license, and thus are unregulated by financial and state regulators. read more

Payday Loan

A payday loan is a type of short-term borrowing where a lender will extend high-interest credit based on your income. read more