Regulation of International Financial Markets and International Banking
This research group analyses international capital flows as well as the consequences of regulatory changes for financial stability and intermediation. Both aspects can facilitate an efficient allocation of capital and enable risk sharing, but spark at the same time global financial instabilities. Banking regulation and supervision has accordingly changed significantly over recent years, but the impact of these comprehensive reforms on the functionality of the financial system remain unclear. In addition banks face further challenges, such as tightening monetary policy, geopolitical risks, and the emergence of new competitors due to digitalization.
Against this backdrop, the research group contributes to the literature in three ways. First, the group empirically analyses international capital flow determinants and the implications for financial stability and credit allocation. Periods characterised by a high degree of financial integration are often followed by financial crises, causing negative spill-overs to the real economy. This work package seeks to advance our understanding of how to maintain a stable banking system that is able to efficiently channel financial resources to firms and households alike.
Second, the group analyses the impact of changes in banking supervision and regulation on (inter)national activities of banks with a specific focus on the European integration process. The establishment of the European Banking Union constantly shapes the banking sector as prudential and regulatory responsibilities are transferred from the national to the Euro area level. Integrated markets allow for an early detection of soaring risks at an early stage, but new regulations can also create distortions. This work package contributes to the scant empirical evidence on this trade-off.
Third, “traditional” banks are not only operating in a tighter regulatory framework, they also face plenty of challenges threatening their business model and longer-term profitability. For example, increasing interest rates sparked deposit withdrawals and valuation losses of banks’ fixed income investment. Distortions due to the realization of political risks and rising levels of public, private, and corporate debt might bear the risk of future non-performing loans. The emergence of non-bank financial intermediaries (FinTech) challenge current business models of banks. The consequences for banks or their new competitors should be monitored.
Workpackage 1: The Shape of International Financial Markets
Workpackage 2: Evaluation of Regulatory Policies in Integrated Markets
Workpackage 3: Financial Intermediation in a Changing World
IWH Data Project: International Banking Library
The International Banking Library is a web-based platform for the exchange of research on cross-border banking. It provides access to data sources, academic research, both theoretical and empirical, on cross-border banking, as well as information on regulatory initiatives. The International Banking Library addresses researchers, policymakers, and students of international banking and economics in search of comprehensive information on international banking issues. The contents of the International Banking Library are summarised and distributed in a quarterly newsletter, thereby adding to the international visibility of the IWH (with more than 700 subscribers from academia, central banks and the industry) and facilitating a regular exchange of our research ideas with policy makers.
IWH Data Project: Financial Markets Directives Database
In Europe, financial markets have undergone significant regulatory changes since the last financial and sovereign debt crisis. One key element is the harmonisation of rules for capital regulation, bank resolution and deposit insurance. In the euro area, the sizable change in the regulatory framework is also reflected by the establishment of the European Banking Union. Another change that might have implications for financial structure is the establishment of a Capital Market Union. Evidence-based policymaking and the evaluation of (un-)intended consequences of such reforms needs information on when regulatory changes happen. In the European Union, the cornerstones of regulatory changes that apply to all member states are implemented by means of regulations or directives. The latter ones have to be implemented, with some scope for discretion, into national law by the member states. The Financial Markets Directives Database assembles the dates at which countries have published the key legal document related to several recent directives affecting financial markets. The cornerstone of the database constitutes information on the European Banking Union including its three directives on capital requirements, bank resolution and deposit insurance (CRD IV, BRRD, DGSD). The database has been made publically available via the website “International Banking Library” and is part of the Centre for Evidence-based Policy Advice (IWH-CEP).
Research Cluster
Economic Dynamics and StabilityYour contact
EXTERNAL FUNDING
07.2017 ‐ 12.2022
The Political Economy of the European Banking Union
Causes of national differences in the implementation of the Banking Union and the resulting impact on financial stability.
01.2015 ‐ 12.2017
Dynamic Interactions between Banks and the Real Economy
Refereed Publications
Aggregate Dynamics with Sectoral Price Stickiness Heterogeneity and Aggregate Real Shocks
in: Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, forthcoming
Abstract
<p>This paper investigates the relationship between heterogeneity in sectoral price stickiness and the response of the economy to aggregate real shocks. We show that sectoral heterogeneity reduces inflation persistence for a constant average duration of price spells, and that inflation persistence can fall despite duration increases associated with increases in heterogeneity. We also find that sectoral heterogeneity reduces the persistence and volatility of interest rate and output gap for a constant price spells duration, while the qualitative impact on inflation volatility tends to be positive. A relevant policy implication is that neglecting price stickiness heterogeneity can impair the economic dynamics assessment.</p>
Does It Pay to Get Connected? An Examination of Bank Alliance Network and Bond Spread
in: Journal of Economics and Business, forthcoming
Abstract
This paper examines the effects of bank alliance network on bonds issued by European banks during the period 1990–2009. We construct six measures capturing different dimensions of banks’ network characteristics. In opposition to the results obtained for non-financial firms, our findings indicate that being part of a network does not create value for bank’s bondholders, indicating a dark side effect of strategic alliances in the banking sector. While being part of a network is perceived as a risk-increasing event by market participants, this negative perception is significantly lower for the larger banks, and, to a lesser extent, for the more profitable banks. Moreover, during crisis times, the positive impact on bond spread of a bank’s higher centrality or of a bank’s higher connectedness in the network is stronger, indicating that market participants may fear spillover effects within the network during periods of banks’ heightened financial fragility.
The Effect of Bank Organizational Risk-management on the Price of Non-deposit Debt
in: Journal of Financial Services Research, April 2024
Abstract
<p>We test whether organizational risk management matters to bondholders of U.S. bank holding companies (BHCs), and find that debt financing costs increase when the BHC has lower-quality risk management. Consistent with bailouts giving rise to moral hazard among bank creditors, we find that bondholders put less emphasis on risk management in large institutions for which bailouts are expected ex-ante. BHCs that maintained strong risk management before the financial crisis had lower debt costs during and after the crisis, compared to other banks. Overall, quality risk management can curtail risk exposures at BHCs and result in lower debt costs.</p>
Ownership Structure and the Cost of Debt: Evidence From the Chinese Corporate Bond Market
in: Journal of Empirical Finance, September 2023
Abstract
Drawing upon evidence from the Chinese corporate bond market, we study how ownership structure affects the cost of debt for firms. Our results show that state, institutional and foreign ownership formats reduce the cost of debt for firms. The benefits of state ownership are accentuated when the issuer is headquartered in a province with highly developed market institutions, operates in an industry less dominated by the state or during the period after the 2012 anti-corruption reforms. Institutional ownership provides the most benefits in environments with lower levels of marketization, especially for firms with low credit quality. Our evidence sheds light on the nexus of ownership and debt cost in a political economy where state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and non-SOEs face productivity and credit frictions. It is also illustrative of how the market environment interacts with corporate ownership in affecting the cost of bond issuance.
Cultural Values of Parent Bank Board Members and Lending by Foreign Subsidiaries: The Moderating Role of Personal Traits
in: Journal of International Financial Markets, Institutions and Money, March 2023
Abstract
In this study, we investigate whether the cultural values of a parent bank’s board members affect lending by the bank’s foreign subsidiaries and how this influence is moderated by the board members’ personal traits. Using a new dataset on foreign-owned banks and their parent companies, we find that average individualism, uncertainty avoidance, and indulgence within parent bank boards significantly impact lending by foreign subsidiaries. We establish that different sensitivities of female and male directors modify the relevance of individual cultural dimensions in lending by foreign bank subsidiaries. Moreover, we show that parent bank directors’ cultural values have a stronger impact on lending by the bank’s foreign subsidiaries when those directors have enough time to fulfill their duties and possess higher ownership stakes in the parent companies.
Working Papers
Friend or Foe? Crowdfunding Versus Credit when Banks are Stressed
in: IWH Discussion Papers, No. 8, 2015
Abstract
Does bank instability push borrowers to use crowdfunding as a source of external finance? We identify stressed banks and link them to a unique, manually constructed sample of 157 new ventures seeking equity crowdfunding. The sample comprises projects from all German equity crowdfunding platforms since 2011, which we compare with 200 ventures that do not use crowdfunding. Crowdfunding is significantly more likely for new ventures that interact with stressed banks. Innovative funding is thus particularly relevant when conventional financiers are facing crises. But crowdfunded ventures are generally also more opaque and risky than new ventures that do not use crowdfunding.
Explaining Regional Disparities in Housing Prices across German Districts
in: IZA Institute of Labor Economics, March 2022
Abstract
Over the last decade, German housing prices have increased unprecedentedly. Drawing on quality-adjusted housing price data at the district level, we document large and increasing regional disparities: growth rates were higher in 1) the largest seven cities, 2) districts located in the south, and 3) districts with higher initial price levels. Indications of price bubbles are concentrated in the largest cities and in the purchasing market. Prices seem to be driven by the demand side: increasing population density, higher shares of academically educated employees and increasing purchasing power explain our findings, while supply remained relatively constrained in the short term.