Optimal versus realized bank credit risk and monetary policy

Similar documents
Optimal versus realized bank credit risk and monetary policy

Optimal versus realized bank credit risk and monetary policy

Does Macro-Pru Leak? Empirical Evidence from a UK Natural Experiment

Shocks to Bank Lending, Risk-Taking and Securitization, and their role for U.S. Business Cycle Fluctuations

Net Stable Funding Ratio and Commercial Banks Profitability

A Normative Analysis of Banking Supervision: Independence, Legal Protection and Accountability

The Effect of Size on Financial Performance of Commercial Banks in Kenya

Monetary policy and the asset risk-taking channel

Bank Lending Shocks and the Euro Area Business Cycle

CORPORATE TAX INCENTIVES AND CAPITAL STRUCTURE: EVIDENCE FROM UK TAX RETURN DATA

Banking sector concentration, competition, and financial stability: The case of the Baltic countries. Juan Carlos Cuestas

The risk-taking channel of monetary policy - exploring all avenues

Bank Profitability and Risk-Taking in a Low Interest Rate Environment: The Case of Thailand

AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF MACROPRUDENTIAL POLICIES IN PERU: The Case of Dynamic Provisioning and Conditional Reserve Requirements

Capital and profitability in banking: Evidence from US banks

Macroeconomic variables; ROA; ROE; GPM; GMM

Administered Prices and Inflation Targeting in Thailand Kanin Peerawattanachart

The risk-taking channel of monetary policy in the USA: Evidence from micro-level data

Optimal Monetary and Macroprudential Policy: Gains and Pitfalls in a Model of Financial Intermediation. March 28, 2014

Identifying and measuring systemic risk Regional Seminar on Financial Stability Issues, October 2015, Sinaia, Romania

The Nexus of Monetary Policy and Shadow Banking in China 1

JEL classification: G21, G01, G28, E address:

WORKING MACROPRUDENTIAL TOOLS

Financial Amplification, Regulation and Long-term Lending

Bank Leverage and Monetary Policy s Risk-Taking Channel: Evidence from the United States

Management Science Letters

On the new Keynesian model

Government Expenditures in Suriname

Personal income, stock market, and investor psychology

Prudential Responses to Credit Growth. The case of Spain

Access to Retirement Savings and its Effects on Labor Supply Decisions

Global Pricing of Risk and Stabilization Policies

Capital structure and profitability of firms in the corporate sector of Pakistan

Non-Performing Loans and the Supply of Bank Credit: Evidence from Italy

The Impact of Monetary Policy on Banks Risktaking: Evidence from the Post Crisis Data

The Impact of Macroeconomic Uncertainty on Commercial Bank Lending Behavior in Barbados. Ryan Bynoe. Draft. Abstract

IMPACT OF BANK SIZE ON PROFITABILITY: EVIDANCE FROM PAKISTAN

Credit Constraints, Technology Choice and Exports - A Firm Level Study for Latin American Countries

Cyclicality of SME Lending and Government Involvement in Banks

Estimating a Monetary Policy Rule for India

Bank Profitability and Risk-Taking in a Low Interest Rate Environment: The Case of Thailand

Macro Risks and the Term Structure

Monetary Policy and Resource Mobility

INTERTEMPORAL ASSET ALLOCATION: THEORY

Financial Integration, Housing and Economic Volatility

The Feasibility of Open Market Operations in Suriname: The pass-through of the policy interest rate

What determines government spending multipliers?

Debt Overhang, Rollover Risk, and Investment in Europe

Capital and liquidity buffers and the resilience of the banking system in the euro area

Return to Retail Banking and Payments

Interest rates and bank risk-taking

Monetary Policy and Defaults in the US

Banking Market Structure and Macroeconomic Stability: Are Low Income Countries Special?

Causes and consequences of Cash Flow Sensitivity: Empirical Tests of the US Lodging Industry

Banks Non-Interest Income and Systemic Risk

The Divergence of Long - and Short-run Effects of Manager s Shareholding on Bank Efficiencies in Taiwan

Volume 37, Issue 3. The effects of capital buffers on profitability: An empirical study. Benjamin M Tabak Universidade Católica de Brasília

The link between labor costs and price inflation in the euro area

IV SPECIAL FEATURES. macroeconomic environment and the banking sector. WHAT DETERMINES EURO AREA BANK PROFITABILITY?

Stress Testing U.S. Bank Holding Companies

Financial Stability and Financial Efficiency Mario I. Blejer Bank of England

Bank Capital Buffers in a Dynamic Model 1

On book equity: why it matters for monetary policy

Factors Affecting Bank Performance: Empirical Evidence from Morocco

Do Peer Firms Affect Corporate Financial Policy?

Bank Capital, Agency Costs, and Monetary Policy. Césaire Meh Kevin Moran Department of Monetary and Financial Analysis Bank of Canada

Utilización de las centrales de información de riesgo en los informes de estabilidad financiera

INTERMEDIATE MACROECONOMICS

The impact of expected losses provisioning on credit growth: the case of Mexico Closing Conference of the BIS CCA CGDFS Working Group June 13 rd

Global Liquidity, Market Sentiment and Financial Stability Indices

Effects of FDI on Capital Account and GDP: Empirical Evidence from India

Bank Bailouts, Bail-ins, or No Regulatory Intervention? A Dynamic Model and Empirical Tests of Optimal Regulation

ON THE ASSET ALLOCATION OF A DEFAULT PENSION FUND

Worker Betas: Five Facts about Systematic Earnings Risk

Lecture 2. (1) Permanent Income Hypothesis. (2) Precautionary Savings. Erick Sager. September 21, 2015

Country Spreads as Credit Constraints in Emerging Economy Business Cycles

Interest Rate Risk and Bank Equity Valuations

Government spending shocks, sovereign risk and the exchange rate regime

DETERMINANTS OF BANK PROFITABILITY: EVIDENCE FROM US By. Yinglin Cheng Bachelor of Management, South China Normal University, 2015.

The Run for Safety: Financial Fragility and Deposit Insurance

Identifying the Risk-Taking Channel of Monetary Transmission and the Connection to Credit Spreads Over the Business Cycle

Government Tax Revenue, Expenditure, and Debt in Sri Lanka : A Vector Autoregressive Model Analysis

ECON 5010 Solutions to Problem Set #3

An Examination of the Net Interest Margin Aas Determinants of Banks Profitability in the Kosovo Banking System

Graduate School of Business, University of Chicago Business 41202, Spring Quarter 2007, Mr. Ruey S. Tsay. Solutions to Final Exam

Prudential Policies and Their Impact on Credit in the United States

Is regulatory capital pro-cyclical? A macroeconomic assessment of Basel II

FORECASTING PAKISTANI STOCK MARKET VOLATILITY WITH MACROECONOMIC VARIABLES: EVIDENCE FROM THE MULTIVARIATE GARCH MODEL

Explaining Interest Rates in the Dutch Mortgage Market: A Time Series Analysis

INCOME GAP AND EXCHANGE RATE REGIME IN ASEAN. Ngoc Hong Nguyen A.Prof. Charles Harvie Prof. Sandy Suardi

Depression Babies: Do Macroeconomic Experiences Affect Risk-Taking?

LECTURE 9 The Effects of Credit Contraction and Financial Crises: Balance Sheet and Cash Flow Effects. October 24, 2018

Outward FDI and Total Factor Productivity: Evidence from Germany

Winter is Possibly not Coming: Mitigating Financial Instability in an Agent-Based Model with Interbank Market*

ScienceDirect. Banks Profitability and Financial Soundness Indicators: A Macro- Level Investigation in Emerging Countries

Competition and the riskiness of banks loan portfolios

Cash holdings determinants in the Portuguese economy 1

Credit-Induced Boom and Bust

The usual disclaimer applies. The opinions are those of the discussant only and in no way involve the responsibility of the Bank of Italy.

Stock market returns, macroeconomic activity and financial performance: Australia over the long run

Transcription:

Optimal versus realized bank credit risk and monetary policy M.D. Delis and Y. Karavias University of Surrey and University of Nottingham Conference on Effective Macroprudential Instruments November 2014

Motivation Banking is a risky business. Bank managers make risky decisions to produce profits. However, they can also produce large losses. Profit maximizing level of credit risk? Is the realized credit risk equal to the optimal? What are the implications of a discrepancy for the monetary and macroeconomic environment?

Methodology - Main Results Bank managers maximize short run profits The optimal (profit maximizing) credit risk is different than the realized It changes in time Monetary policy affects both the optimal and the realized credit risk It always increases the gap between them

Related Literature Theoretical banking: Hughes and Mester (1994), John, Saunders and Senbet (2000), Agur and Demertzis (2012) Empirical banking: Goddard, Molyneux and Wilson (2004), Berger, Hasan and Zhou (2010), Barakova and Pavlia (2014) Risk-taking chanel Borio and Zhu (2012), Agur and Demertzis (2013), Ioannidou, Ongena and Peydro (2014) Imperfections-Regulation Angeloni and Faia (2010), Acharaya, Engle and Pierret (2014), Duran and Lozano-Vivas (2014), Kaufman (2014)

The model π it = β 0 + β 1 π it 1 + β 2 r it 1 + β 3 (r it 1 ) 2 +β 4 c it 1 + u it, u it = μ i + v t + ε it Second order risk term that allows for a concave function All variables are lagged once to avoid reverse causality Profits: Risk: c1 c2 c3 c4 μ i v t roa, roe Basel I risk-weighted assets/total assets liquidity, bank size, capital, non-interest rate income problem loans, loan-loss provisions growth, credit by banks Taylor rule residuals bank regulation herding behaviour

Data Bank level data from FDIC Call Reports Quarterly, 1996q1-2011q4 N=14,359 banks, T=64 quarters, unbalanced panel Total: 574,532 observations

Prominent regressions Dependent variable ROA ROA ROA ROA ROA ROE ROA t-1 0.513*** (54.055) 0.503*** (49.960) 0.483*** (46.085) 0.480*** (35.473) 0.882*** (20.973) ROE t-1 0.521*** (78.613) Risk-weighted assets t-1 0.033*** (10.726) 0.037*** (11.846) 0.043*** (11.736) 0.748*** (5.981) 0.186*** (3.270) 0.139*** (7.361) Risk-weighted assets 2 t-1-0.024*** (-10.853) -0.026*** (-11.500) -0.030*** (-11.228) -0.530*** (-6.014) -0.128*** (-3.137) -0.097*** (-6.858) Bank size t-1-0.001*** (-14.341) 0.001*** (11.999) 0.001*** (11.459) -0.003*** (-6.825) 0.005 (1.029) 0.005*** (7.112) Capital t-1-0.018*** (-16.383) -0.013*** (-11.323) -0.012*** (-10.175) 0.013*** (2.435) 0.068** (2.369) -0.093*** (-15.836) Liquidity t-1-0.003*** (-6.118) -0.002*** (-5.121) -0.004*** (-8.271) 0.020*** (4.684) 0.022 (0.608) -0.027*** (-7.724) Non-interest income t-1 0.006*** (9.214) 0.008*** (12.308) 0.008*** (11.416) 0.003*** (4.070) 0.013 (0.624) 0.063*** (12.501) Problem loans t-1-0.079*** (-30.994) -0.069*** (-28.153) -0.074*** (-27.756) -0.087*** (-27.757) -0.094 (-0.931) -0.896*** (-28.057) Provisions t-1 0.005 (0.576) 0.000 (-0.022) -0.009 (-0.960) 0.082*** (4.892) 0.443 (1.332) -0.299*** (-4.937) Growth t-1-0.007*** (-4.146) Credit by banks t-1 0.000*** (8.191) Optimal point 0.687*** 0.711*** 0.716*** 0.700*** 0.727*** 0.715*** Quarter fixed effects No Yes No Yes Yes Yes R-square (overall) 0.356 0.390 0.364 0.378

Time-varying optimal Consider the regression 2 π it = β 0 + β 1 π i,t 1 + β 2 r i,t 1 + β 3 r i,t 1 + β 4 c i,t 1 + f j T + g j j=3 T 2 q j r i,t 1 + h j q j j=3 + u it T j=3 q j r i,t 1 the optimal level of credit risk at each quarter t π t = 0 => r r t 1 = β 2 + f j t 1 2(β 3 + g j )

Optimal versus Average Credit Risk

Monetary policy The banking sector is important in shaping macroeconomic outcomes Monetary policy affects both the cost of debt financing and the optimal debt choice both the realized and optimal credit risk Thus, the two indicators allow drawing some new insights

Empirical Analysis p 1 Y c KY Y e t t p i t i t i 1 Y=(federal funds rate, optimal bank risk, realized bank risk, real GDP growth) Unit root tests show that all variables are I(1) 1 co-integrating vector Post estimation tests of normality, serial correlation and structural change are clean

Impulse response functions Response of realized risk to a monetary policy shock Response of optimal risk to a monetary policy shock

Optimal versus Average Credit Risk

Conclusions Identification of optimal credit risk This optimal leads the business cycle. In good periods it is above the realized level while in periods of stress it is below. The optimal monetary policy in smoothing business cycles always leads to an increase in the gap between the optimal and realized risk.

Policy implications Counter-cyclical bank regulation - capital requirements Monetary policy and prudential regulation closely linked European Single Supervisory Mechanism

Stopped operating banks

Sensitivity analysis: specific bank groups Dependent variable ROA ROA ROA ROA ROA t-1 0.558*** 0.480*** 0.483*** 0.494*** (20.031) (36.105) (23.219) (57.114) Risk-weighted assets t-1 0.026 0.038*** 0.045*** 0.021*** (1.494) (9.249) (8.238) (4.215) Risk-weighted assets 2 t-1-0.020-0.027*** -0.031*** -0.015*** (-1.597) (-8.947) (-8.088) (-4.036) Bank size t-1 0.000 0.001*** 0.002*** 0.000* (1.254) (10.589) (7.659) (1.714) Capital t-1 0.009-0.015*** -0.009*** -0.002 (1.215) (-11.176) (-4.901) (-0.894) Liquidity t-1-0.004** -0.002*** -0.002** -0.005*** (-2.054) (-3.683) (-2.459) (-5.415) Non-interest income t-1 0.008*** 0.008*** 0.014*** 0.005*** (4.193) (7.196) (7.207) (8.533) Problem loans t-1-0.060*** -0.070*** -0.059*** -0.066*** (-6.195) (-22.872) (-11.863) (-18.716) Provisions t-1-0.001 0.012 0.027** -0.119*** (-0.038) (1.190) (2.262) (-12.579) Constant -0.010-0.015*** -0.012*** -0.004** (-1.639) (-10.637) (-6.810) (-2.147) Optimal point 0.640*** 0.714*** 0.710*** 0.680*** Observations 55,345 279,334 139,143 138,854 R-square (overall) 0.441 0.375 0.352 0.461

Sensitivity analysis: different time frames Dependent variable ROA ROA ROA ROA ROA ROA t-1 0.378*** 0.252** 0.489*** 0.507*** (3.295) (2.209) (47.470) (46.743) Risk-weighted assets t-1 2.523*** 0.870*** 0.068*** (7.406) (2.586) (14.197) Risk-weighted assets 2 t-1-1.837*** -0.610*** -0.047*** (-7.423) (-2.755) (-13.557) Risk-weighted assets t-4 0.011*** (4.256) Risk-weighted assets 2 t-4-0.009*** (-4.347) Σ(Risk-weighted assets t-1 t-3 ) 0.036*** (10.288) Σ(Risk-weighted assets 2 t-1 t-3) -0.026*** (-10.230) Bank size t-1-0.002*** -0.008** 0.003*** 0.001*** 0.000 (-3.117) (-2.087) (17.571) (11.061) (1.448) Capital t-1-0.001 0.024-0.031*** -0.004** -0.007*** (-0.051) (0.785) (-16.059) (-2.390) (-8.561) Liquidity t-1 0.069*** 0.045-0.004*** -0.002*** -0.001 (5.652) (1.469) (-5.526) (-5.547) (-1.499) Non-interest income t-1 0.004 0.048* 0.021*** 0.008*** 0.003*** (0.302) (1.886) (15.578) (12.829) (4.708) Problem loans t-1-0.073* -0.108-0.120*** -0.069*** -0.043*** (-1.841) (-1.388) (-32.148) (-27.390) (-17.579) Provisions t-1 0.292*** 0.511-0.040*** -0.012 0.002 (2.722) (1.549) (-2.819) (-1.468) (0.380) Optimal point 0.686*** 0.713*** 0.721*** 0.687*** 0.668***

Sensitivity analysis: delinquent loans Dependent variable ROA ROA ROE ROA t-1 0.932*** 0.911*** (7.312) (7.505) ROE t-1 0.993*** (7.793) Deliquent loans t-1 0.224* 0.238* 2.609** (1.806) (1.715) (2.019) Deliquent loans 2 t-1-6.769* -7.125* -90.303** (-1.850) (-1.755) (-2.008) Risk-weighted assets t-1-0.060** -0.059** -0.385 (-2.243) (-2.358) (-1.592) Bank size t-1 0.011 0.007 0.082 (0.929) (0.636) (0.748) Capital t-1 0.207** 0.183** 2.052** (2.563) (2.302) (2.474) Liquidity t-1-0.047-0.042-0.336 (-0.965) (-0.959) (-0.715) Non-interest income t-1-0.004 0.003-0.250 (-0.065) (0.063) (-0.618) Problem loans t-1-0.342-0.315-3.089 (-1.590) (-1.607) (-1.391) Provisions t-1-1.076-0.811-3.118 (-0.908) (-0.736) (-0.269) Commercial loans t-1 0.005 0.011 (0.735) (0.137) Loans to individuals t-1-0.018 0.014 (-0.459) (0.037) Loans to real estate t-1 0.000 0.002 (0.160) (0.214) Optimal point 0.017*** 0.017*** 0.014***

Optimal based on delinquent loans 0.1 0.08 0.06 0.04 0.02 0-0.02 2001c 2003a 2004c 2006a 2007c 2009a -0.04-0.06-0.08-0.1 Optimal Delinquent Loans Mean Delinquent Loans