Macroprudential Policy Spillovers in International Banking Groups. Beggar-Thy-Neighbour and the Role of Internal Capital Markets
2022; RELX Group (Netherlands); Linguagem: Inglês
10.2139/ssrn.4186490
ISSN1556-5068
AutoresAurea Ponte Marques, G. Cappelletti, Carmelo Salleo, Diego Vila Martín,
Tópico(s)Italy: Economic History and Contemporary Issues
ResumoBeggar-thy-neighbour in macroprudential policy? To answer this question, we study the impact of macroprudential capital buffers on banking groups’ lending and risk-taking decisions. This paper also presents the first evidence on whether banking groups respond to changes in capital buffers by adjusting their internal capital markets. Our confidential dataset includes a large set of banking groups operating in the euro area and abroad, which are subject to additional capital buffers (OSII buffers). The assignment of higher capital buffers is based on a scoring system which is exploited for identification in the context of a fuzzy regression discontinuity and a difference-in-differences matching designs. Results indicate that, on average, when parent banks are constrained with an average higher capital buffer of 0.5 percent, subsidiaries reduce their lending by around 0.48 percentage points and decrease their risk-taking by around 1.3 percentage points. This effect is more prominent for non-financial corporations. This change in behaviour is accompanied by negative effects on profitability. Furthermore, banking groups allocate capital at the consolidated (parent) level by deleveraging their holdings of debt (around 6 percentage points) and equity (around 7 percentage points) issued by their subsidiaries. Our results confirm that higher capital buffers have a positive disciplinary effect by reducing banks’ risk-taking while having a (temporary) adverse impact through a decrease in lending and a deleverage on local bank credit and capital markets.
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