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DANMARKS NATIONALBANK 4th EBA Policy Research workshop Financial regulation and the real economy: a microprudential perspective, London, November 2015. De Jonghe et al.: Holding strong in a storm: How banks reallocate credit according to their sector presence and specialization after a crisis Discussion by Kim Abildgren Views and conclusions expressed in the presentation are those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of Danmarks Nationalbank.

General assessment and outline of discussion An impressive and very interesting work that increases our knowledge of the links between banks and the real economy during the transition from a stress to a nonstress environment. Unique combination of several data sets. Excellent illustration the potential for future research based on loan-level data from credit registers. Currently, the both the euro area member states and Denmark consider to set up a credit register. Outline of the discussion: Brief review of the data and main findings of the paper. Discussion of identification/endogeneity issues.

Data and sample selection Rich Belgian data set that combines: granular loan-level data from credit register monthly balance sheets and quarterly income statements from banks annual balance sheets and income statements from domestic corporate customers. Collapse data to firm-bank-month level Non-financial private corporate customers from 16 sectors 134,368 firms; 39 active banks; 160,224 bank-firm observations Comment: More than 83% of the 160,224 credits are committed by the four biggest banks in Belgium - not much between variation. Sample period: July 2007 - Comment: The reader might benefit from longer aggregated time series in Figure 1 in order to get an impression of normal variations Comment: The reader might benefit from a plot of the aggregated time series evolution in the total balance sheet in Figure 1 as a supplement to the chosen subitems.

Main findings and policy conclusions Analyses lending behaviour of banks facing a negative interbank funding shock (Lehman Sep. 2008 collapse). Analyses reallocation of credit within the domestic loan portfolio. Main findings: Banks reallocate credit to sectors where they have high sector presence (high market share) Banks reallocate to sectors in which they are heavily specialized (large share of own exposure) These channels are present over and above traditional reallocation effects based on firm characteristics (size, age, risk) Real economic effects of shock limited: limited effects on investments no effect on profitability. No evidence that banks hit by the funding shock reallocate credit away from younger and smaller firms.

Direction of causality important for story telling and policy implications - 3 identification issues... estimate that the average firm, as a direct consequence of this funding outflow, faces a decline in the supply of credit of 4 percent... (page 2)... the funding shock significantly impacts credit supply already 3 months after the shock started... (page 2)... we also observe that the real effects of the shock are rather limited... (page 3) Interbank market Bank Firm Investments funding shock? credit squeeze? real effects?

Endogeneity issue 1: Identification of a negative funding shock at the bank level The funding shock is defined as the difference of the time-averaged value of interbank liabilities in the post-shock vs. pre-shock period, scaled by the time-averaged total assets pre-shock (page 9-10) Interbank credit demand or credit supply? A bank might reduce interbank borrowing because it experiences (or expects) lower credit demand and therefore doesn't need the funds. Should we look at gross or net interbank exposures? A bank might reduce gross interbank exposures on both the asset and the liability side. Net exposures seems most relevant; it seems sensible to reduce gross exposures during a financial crisis.

Endogeneity issue 2: Identification of credit demand and credit supply at the firm level In Section 4, the paper makes use of firm fixed effects and group fixed effects to control for firm-specific credit demand (Size, Sector, Location). Why not control for other firm-specific variables? It is not a credit supply effect if the banks don t tighten their credit standards but nevertheless grant less credit to firms whose credit rating decline due to the crisis. Furthermore, firms in financial distress or firms that experience sales problems etc. might demand less credit. => It might be relevant to control for firm risk, availability of collateral and other firm-specific variables.

Endogeneity issue 3: Identification of the real effects of credit-supply shocks Could the firms holdings of liquid assets be used for a clearer identification of effect of credit availability on firm investments in fixed assets? If firms with large holdings of liquid assets reduce investments it s hardly the result of credit availability Control for regression to mean effects? It is normal for firms to cut back on investments after a period of large investments => try to control for lagged investments.

Summing up Well-crafted and impressive paper Innovative data usage Very timely papir since the euro area countries curently consider to set up a credit register. Readers could benefit from an more throughout elaboration and discussion of the endogeneity issues.