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Bank Lending and Cross-border Flows

Paper Session

Saturday, Jan. 5, 2019 2:30 PM - 4:30 PM

Hilton Atlanta, 305
Hosted By: International Banking, Economics, and Finance Association
  • Chair: Larry Wall, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Eliminating the Tax Shield through Allowance for Corporate Equity: Cross-border Credit Supply Effects

Swarnava Biswas
,
University of Bristol
Balint Horvath
,
University of Bristol
Wei Zhai
,
University of Bristol

Abstract

This paper studies how the elimination of the corporate tax bias on bank leverage affects banks' credit provisioning using the introduction of an allowance for corporate equity (ACE) in Belgium. We find that affected banks increased their contribution within cross-border syndicated loan facilities relative to other foreign banks, and that this effect was stronger for relatively safe borrowers, with borrower country heterogeneity also playing some limited role. We estimate that Belgian bank-lead loans had on average 20-50 basis points lower spreads when ACE was in effect. Finally, our results suggest a relatively large, positive credit supply effect domestically.

Beyond Home Bias: Portfolio Holdings and Information Heterogeneity

Filippo De Marco
,
Bocconi University
Marco Macchiavelli
,
Federal Reserve Board
Rosen Valchev
,
Boston College

Abstract

We investigate whether information frictions are important determinants of banks’ international portfolio holdings. Going beyond the classic distinction of home versus foreign assets, we study the heterogeneity within foreign holdings. First, we document that banks invest only in a few foreign countries. This is true, especially for small banks. Large banks invest in more countries, but they still underweight foreign assets. Existing models with information frictions cannot rationalize these facts as they imply that investors still hold all foreign assets for diversification purposes, regardless of the size of the portfolio. Second, we propose a new model with a two-tiered information cost structure that includes both a fixed and a variable component, that leads to ‘sparse’ portfolios. We find strong support for the key predictions of the model in the data: if a bank acquires information about a country, it is more likely to hold debt of that country. Moreover, more optimistic and more precise forecasts predict larger portfolio holdings.

Are Banking and Capital Markets Union Complements? Evidence from Channels of Risk Sharing in the Eurozone

Iryna S. Stewen
,
University of Zurich & Johannes Gutenberg University Mainz
Mathias Hoffmann
,
University of Zürich
Egor Maslov
,
University of Zurich, Swiss Finance Institute
Bent Sorensen
,
University of Houston

Abstract

The interplay of equity market and banking integration is of first-order importance for risk sharing in the EMU. While EMU created an integrated interbank market, “direct” banking integration (in terms of direct cross-border bank-to-real sector flows or cross-border banking-consolidation) and equity market integration remained limited. We find that direct banking integration is associated with more risk sharing, while interbank integration is not. Further, interbank integration proved to be highly procyclical, which contributed to the freeze in risk sharing after 2008. Based on this evidence, and a stylized DSGE model, we discuss implications for banking union. Our results show that real banking integration and capital market union are complements and robust risk sharing in the EMU requires both.

Bank Use of Sovereign CDS in the Eurozone Crisis: Hedging and Risk Incentives

Viral V. Acharya
,
Reserve Bank of India
Yalin Gunduz
,
Deutsche Bundesbank
Timothy C. Johnson
,
University of Illinois-Urbana-Champaign

Abstract

Using a comprehensive dataset from German banks, we document the usage of sovereign credit default swaps (CDS) during 2008-2013. Banks used the sovereign CDS market to extend, rather than hedge, their long exposures to government default risk during the sovereign debt crisis period. Less loan exposure to sovereign risk is associated with more protection selling in CDS, the effect being weaker when sovereign risk is high. Bank and country risk variables are mostly not associated with protection selling. The findings are driven by the actions of a few non-dealer banks, which sold aggressively at the onset of the crisis and started covering their positions at its height. The results suggest that the increasing shift in bank loan books towards sovereign bonds and loans over the course of the crisis caused reductions to their sovereign CDS exposure.
Discussant(s)
Miguel Garcia-Posada
,
Bank of Spain
Wilko Bolt
,
De Nederslandsche Bank
Rosen Valchev
,
Boston College
Mike Mariathasan
,
KU Leuven
JEL Classifications
  • G2 - Financial Institutions and Services
  • F3 - International Finance