Handbook of financial intermediation and banking:
Gespeichert in:
Format: | Buch |
---|---|
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Amsterdam [u.a.]
Elsevier North-Holland
2008
|
Schriftenreihe: | Handbooks in finance
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references and index |
Beschreibung: | XXV, 577 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 9780444515582 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |c ed. by Anjan V. Thakor ... |
264 | 1 | |a Amsterdam [u.a.] |b Elsevier North-Holland |c 2008 | |
300 | |a XXV, 577 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 0 | |a Handbooks in finance | |
500 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index | ||
650 | 7 | |a Banques |2 ram | |
650 | 7 | |a Intermédiation financière |2 ram | |
650 | 4 | |a Bank | |
650 | 4 | |a Intermediation (Finance) | |
650 | 4 | |a Banks and banking | |
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999 | |a oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016661948 |
Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804137905495474176 |
---|---|
adam_text | Contents
List of Contributors
xiii
Preface
xv
Introduction to the Series
xxv
Section
1
Design of Contracts and Securities
1
Overview by Franklin Allen (Pennsylvania)
1
The Design of Debt Contracts
5
Paolo Fulghieri
(UNC)
and Eitan Goldman (Indiana University,
Bloomington)
1.
Introduction
6
2.
Debt Contracts and Costly State Verification
8
2.1.
Multiperiod Contracts
11
2.2.
Stochastic Monitoring
12
3.
Debt Contracts and the Allocation of Control Rights
13
4.
Debt Contracts and the Provision of Incentives
17
5.
Debt Contracts under Asymmetric Information
18
6.
The Structure of Debt Contracts
24
6.1.
Seniority
24
6.2.
Maturity Structure
26
6.3.
Collateral
32
6.4.
The Number of Creditors
34
7.
Concluding Remarks
36
References
36
2
Subordination Levels in Structured Financing
41
Xudong An (SDSU), Yongheng Deng
(USC),
and Anthony B. Sanders
(ASU)
1.
Introduction
42
2.
Structured Financing and the Pooling and Tranching of Assets
43
vi
Contents
3.
CMBS Structure
44
3.1.
CMBS Subordination
45
4.
Research Question
and Empirical Approach
46
4.1.
The Deal
Subordination
Regression
47
4.2.
The Chow Test for Structural Change
47
5.
Data
48
6.
Results
51
6.1.
Regression Results
51
6.2.
Structural Change and Chow Tests
53
7.
Conclusion
58
References
59
Section
2
Market Structure and Structure
of Financial Markets
61
3
Limit Order Markets: A Survey
63
Christine A. Parlour (UCB) and Duane J.
Seppi (CMU)
1.
Introduction
64
2.
Modeling Limit Orders
68
2.1.
Static Equilibrium Models
71
2.2.
Equilibrium Models with Static Order Choice and a Terminal Penalty
73
2.3.
Dynamic Optimal Control Models for Single Agents
74
2.4.
Multiperiod Equilibrium Models
74
2.5.
Limit Orders and Private Information
82
3.
Market Design
84
3.1.
Competition and Limit Order Markets
84
3.2.
Imperfect Competition
87
3.3.
Dealer Markets
88
3.4.
Welfare
89
3.5.
Robustness
90
3.6.
Transparency
90
4.
Questions for Future Research
92
References
93
Sections Financial Intermediary Structure
97
Overview by Mitchell Berlin (FRB Philadelphia)
4
Bank Structure and Lending: What We Do and Do Not Know
107
Philip E. Strahan (Boston College, Wharton, NBER)
1.
Introduction
108
Contents
vii
2. Bank
Size and Lending
109
2.1.
Do Large Banks Lend More Than Small?
109
2.2.
Do Large Banks Lend Differently from Small Banks? Ill
2.3.
Bank Size, Organization Structure, and Lending
116
2.4.
How Does Bank Size Affect Credit Availability?
117
3.
Deposit-Lending Synergies
121
3.1.
Do Deposits Make Banks Better Lenders?
121
3.2.
Banks as Liquidity Providers
123
4.
Conclusion
125
References
128
5
Optimal Industrial Structure in Banking
133
Loretta
J.
Mester (FRB
Philadelphia, The Wharton School)
1
.
Introduction and Motivation
134
2.
Efficiency Concepts
137
3.
Empirical Implementation
140
3.1.
Bank Production
140
3.2.
Cost Minimization
141
3.3.
Profit Maximization
144
3.4.
More Complicated Objectives
145
4.
Measurement
148
4.1.
Estimation Techniques
148
4.2.
Functional Form, Variable Selection, and Variable Measurement
150
4.3.
Special Issues in Banking
151
5.
Empirical Findings in the Literature
153
5.7.
Scale Economies
153
5.2.
Scope Economies
157
5.3.
X-Efficiency
158
5.4.
Productivity
159
6.
Conclusion
160
References
160
6
Commercial Banks in Investment Banking
163
Amar Gande
(SMU)
1.
Introduction
164
2.
Tradeoffs in Combining Lending and Underwriting
168
2.1.
Costs of Combining Lending and Underwriting
168
2.2.
Benefits of Combining Lending and Underwriting
170
2.3.
Theory
171
2.4.
Empirical Evidence from Debt Underwritings
171
2.5.
Empirical Evidence from Equity Underwritings
175
2.6.
Organizational Form of Underwriting
178
Contents
3
.
Competitive
Effects of Commercial Bank Entry into Securities Underwriting
182
3.1.
Theory 182
3.2.
Empirical Evidence on Commercial Bank Entry in
1989 182
3.3.
Empirical Evidence on the Financial Modernization Act of
1999 184
4.
Conclusion
186
References
^86
Section
4
Mutual Funds
189
Overview by Sudipto Bhattacharya
(LSE)
7
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
191
Bruce Lehmann
(UCSD) and Allan Timmermann (UCSD)
1.
Introduction
192
2.
Theoretical Benchmarks
194
2.1.
Sources of Benchmarks
197
2.2.
A First Pass at Performance Measurement
199
3.
Performance Measurement and Market Timing
202
3.1.
Alternative Models of Market Timing
205
3.2.
Observable Information Signals
218
4.
Performance Measurement and Attribution with Observable Portfolio Weights
220
4.1.
Should Investors Hold Mutual Funds?
229
4.2.
Determining the Optimal Holdings in Mutual Funds
231
5.
The Cross Section of Managed Portfolio Returns
233
5.1.
Inference in the Absence of Performance Ability
234
5.2.
Power of Statistical Tests for Individual Funds
241
5.3.
Inference for Multiple Funds
244
5.4.
Empirical Specifications of Alpha Measures
247
6.
Bayesian Approaches
249
6.1.
Asset Mispricing and Investment in Mutual Funds
252
7.
Conclusion
255
References
256
8
The Behavior of Mutual Fund Investors
259
Lu
Zheng (UCI)
1.
Introduction
260
2.
Examining Investor Behavior Using Fund Flows
261
2.1.
Estimating Mutual Fund Flows
261
2.2.
The Decision to Choose Among Mutual Funds
262
2.3.
Mutual Fund Flows and Aggregate Market Returns
271
3.
Investment Performance of Mutual Fund Investors
272
Contents ix
4. Investor
Externality
274
4.1.
Liquidity Costs
275
4.2.
Stale-Price Arbitrage
277
5.
Strategies of Mutual Funds
277
6.
Conclusion
280
References
280
9
Incentives in Funds Management: A Literature Overview
285
Sudipto Bhattacharya
(LSE),
Amil
Dasgupta
(LSE),
Alexander Guembel (Oxford),
and Andrea Prat
(LSE)
1.
Introduction
288
2.
Theories of Incentives for Fund Managers and Informative Experts
289
2.1.
Principal-Agent Models: Effort Choice, Delegation, and Screening
289
2.2
Optimal Contracts Based on Verifiable Portfolio Composition
Choices and Returns
290
2.3.
Returns-Based and Relative Performance-Based Contracts
291
2.4.
Conformist Trading: The Roles of Career Concerns
294
2.5.
Fund Manager Incentives and Uninformed Trading
297
2.6.
General Equilibrium Implications of Fund Manager Incentives
299
3.
Evidence on the Choices and Rewards of Analysts and Fund Managers
301
4.
Conclusion
303
References
303
Sections Regulation
305
Overview by Mark J. Flannery, University of Florida
10
Consolidation in the U.S. Banking Industry: Is the Long, Strange Trip
About to End?
309
Kenneth D. Jones (FD1C) and Tim Critchfield (FD1C)
1.
Overview of Structural Change in the U.S. Banking Industry
1984-2003 311
1.1.
Industry Size
311
1.2.
Industry Concentration
315
2.
Fundamental Causes of Consolidation
318
2.1.
Environmental Factors
318
2.2.
Microeconomic
Factors in Merger Decisions
324
3.
The Effects of Consolidation
325
4.
Projections of Banking Industry Structure
333
4.1.
Review of Previous Projections and Their Methodologies
333
4.2.
New Linear Extrapolations: A Comparison with the Literature
336
4.3.
Beyond Linear Extrapolations
338
5.
Conclusion
341
References
343
Contents
11
Safety, Soundness, and the Evolution of the U.S. Banking Industry
347
Robert DeYoung (Kansas)
1.
Introduction
348
2.
The Evolution of the U.S. Banking Industry
349
2.1.
Financial Innovation and Technological Change
350
2.2.
Regulatory Reaction to Financial Innovation and Technological Change
353
2.3.
Widespread Technology Adoption and Industry Transformation
353
3.
A Stylized View of Banking Strategies
356
3.1.
Prederegulation
358
3.2.
Postderegulation
358
4.
Evidence Consistent with the Strategic Map
360
5.
Further Implications of Strategic Change
363
5./.
Industry Structure
363
5.2.
Noninterest
Income
366
5.3.
Financial Performance
368
6.
Is the Industry Safe and Sound Today?
369
References
371
12
What Caused the Bank Capital Buildup of the
1
990s?
375
Mark J. Flannery {Florida) and Kasturi P.
Rangan
(CWRU and
HBS)
1.
Introduction
376
2.
Determining a Bank s Optimal Leverage
378
3.
Rising U.S. Bank Capitalization,
1986-2001 381
3.1.
The Supervisors Focus: Book Capital Ratios
381
3.2.
Investors Focus: Market Capital Ratios
383
3.3.
ВНС
Portfolio Volatility and Default Risb
384
3.4.
Possible Causes of the Increased Capitalization
386
4.
Regression Model
388
4.1.
Lags in Adjusting Toward Target Capitalization
390
4.2.
Econometric Issues
392
4.3.
Data
393
5.
Estimation Results
395
5.7.
Decomposing the Change in
ВНС
Capitalization
398
6.
Do Higher Market Ratios Reflect Stricter Regulatory Constraints?
401
7.
Robustness
404
7.1.
Adjust for Possible Safety Net Subsidies in MKTRAT
405
7.2.
Alternative Instrument for BHCs Realized Stock Return
405
7.3.
Estimates for the
20
Largest Banks
405
7.4.
Estimate for
80
Next Largest Banks
407
7.5.
Excluding the Charter Value Proxy
407
Contents xi
8.
Summary and Implications
407
References
408
Appendix
411
Estimating
ВНС
Risk-Weighted Assets
(RWA)
in the
1986-91
Period
411
13
Basel II: A Case for Recalibration
413
Paul H.
Kupiec
(FDIC)
1.
Introduction
414
2.
A Review of the AIRB Capital Framework
415
2.1.
Discussion
418
3.
The AIRB and Financial Stability
420
4.
Establishing a Sound Benchmark for Risk Measurement Practices
423
4.1.
The Need for Capital for Bank Interest Expenses
423
4.2.
Procyclicality of the AIRB Soundness Standard
427
4.3.
Incorporating Portfolio Interest Income
428
4.4.
Capital for Systematic Risk in PD and LGD
430
4.5.
Random Loss Given Default and Downturn
LGD
431
4.6.
Asymptotic Portfolio Loss Distribution
432
4.7.
Random Exposures at Default (EADs)
436
5.
Conclusions
437
References
438
Section
6
Competition and Regulation in Banking
441
Overview by
Xavier
Vives
(IESE
Business and UPF)
14
Competition and Regulation in Banking
449
Elena Carletti (Frankfurt)
1.
Introduction
450
2.
Bank Instability and the Need of Regulation
452
2.1.
Bank Fragility: Individual Runs and Systemic Crises
452
2.2.
Excessive Risk Taking
457
2.3.
The Need of Regulation
458
3.
Competition in Banking
461
3.1.
Competition Under Asymmetric Information
461
3.2.
Competition and Switching Costs
463
3.3.
Competition and Networks
464
4.
Competition and Stability: A Positive or a Negative Link?
466
4.1.
Market Structure and Financial Fragility
467
4.2.
Market Structure and Risk Taking
470
Contents
5.
Competition and Regulation
473
6.
Conclusion
479
References
479
15
Competition and Regulation in the Banking Sector: A Review of the
Empirical Evidence on the Sources of Bank Rents
483
Hans Degryse and Steven Ongena (CentER,
Tilburg)
1.
Introduction
485
2.
Measuring Banking Competition
488
2.1.
Traditional Industrial Organization
488
2.2.
New Empirical Industrial Organization
492
3.
Competition: Conduct and Strategy
499
3.1.
Market Structure and Conduct
499
3.2.
Market Structure and Strategy: Product Differentiation and Network Effects
509
4.
Switching Costs
510
4.1.
Evidence on the Existence, Magnitude, and Determinants of Switching Costs
511
4.2.
Switching Costs and Conditions: Relationships as a Source of Bank Rents?
521
4.3.
Market Structure and Market Presence: Bank Orientation and Specialization
527
5.
Location
530
5.1.
Distance Versus Borders
530
5.2.
Distance and Conditions: Spatial Pricing
531
5.3.
Distance and Conditions: Availability
532
5.4.
Distance and Strategy: Branching
533
5.5.
Borders and Conduct: Segmentation
533
5.6.
Borders and Strategy: Entry and
M
&As
534
6.
Regulation
537
6.1.
Regulation and Market Structure
537
6.2.
Regulation and Conduct
538
6.3.
Regulation and Strategy
538
6.4.
Regulation and Financial Stability and Development
539
1.
Conclusion
540
References
542
Index
555
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Contributors
xiii
Preface
xv
Introduction to the Series
xxv
Section
1
Design of Contracts and Securities
1
Overview by Franklin Allen (Pennsylvania)
1
The Design of Debt Contracts
5
Paolo Fulghieri
(UNC)
and Eitan Goldman (Indiana University,
Bloomington)
1.
Introduction
6
2.
Debt Contracts and Costly State Verification
8
2.1.
Multiperiod Contracts
11
2.2.
Stochastic Monitoring
12
3.
Debt Contracts and the Allocation of Control Rights
13
4.
Debt Contracts and the Provision of Incentives
17
5.
Debt Contracts under Asymmetric Information
18
6.
The Structure of Debt Contracts
24
6.1.
Seniority
24
6.2.
Maturity Structure
26
6.3.
Collateral
32
6.4.
The Number of Creditors
34
7.
Concluding Remarks
36
References
36
2
Subordination Levels in Structured Financing
41
Xudong An (SDSU), Yongheng Deng
(USC),
and Anthony B. Sanders
(ASU)
1.
Introduction
42
2.
Structured Financing and the Pooling and Tranching of Assets
43
vi
Contents
3.
CMBS Structure
44
3.1.
CMBS Subordination
45
4.
Research Question
and Empirical Approach
46
4.1.
The Deal
Subordination
Regression
47
4.2.
The Chow Test for Structural Change
47
5.
Data
48
6.
Results
51
6.1.
Regression Results
51
6.2.
Structural Change and Chow Tests
53
7.
Conclusion
58
References
59
Section
2
Market Structure and Structure
of Financial Markets
61
3
Limit Order Markets: A Survey
63
Christine A. Parlour (UCB) and Duane J.
Seppi (CMU)
1.
Introduction
64
2.
Modeling Limit Orders
68
2.1.
Static Equilibrium Models
71
2.2.
Equilibrium Models with Static Order Choice and a Terminal Penalty
73
2.3.
Dynamic Optimal Control Models for Single Agents
74
2.4.
Multiperiod Equilibrium Models
74
2.5.
Limit Orders and Private Information
82
3.
Market Design
84
3.1.
Competition and Limit Order Markets
84
3.2.
Imperfect Competition
87
3.3.
Dealer Markets
88
3.4.
Welfare
89
3.5.
Robustness
90
3.6.
Transparency
90
4.
Questions for Future Research
92
References
93
Sections Financial Intermediary Structure
97
Overview by Mitchell Berlin (FRB Philadelphia)
4
Bank Structure and Lending: What We Do and Do Not Know
107
Philip E. Strahan (Boston College, Wharton, NBER)
1.
Introduction
108
Contents
vii
2. Bank
Size and Lending
109
2.1.
Do Large Banks Lend More Than Small?
109
2.2.
Do Large Banks Lend Differently from Small Banks? Ill
2.3.
Bank Size, Organization Structure, and Lending
116
2.4.
How Does Bank Size Affect Credit Availability?
117
3.
Deposit-Lending Synergies
121
3.1.
Do Deposits Make Banks Better Lenders?
121
3.2.
Banks as Liquidity Providers
123
4.
Conclusion
125
References
128
5
Optimal Industrial Structure in Banking
133
Loretta
J.
Mester (FRB
Philadelphia, The Wharton School)
1
.
Introduction and Motivation
134
2.
Efficiency Concepts
137
3.
Empirical Implementation
140
3.1.
Bank Production
140
3.2.
Cost Minimization
141
3.3.
Profit Maximization
144
3.4.
More Complicated Objectives
145
4.
Measurement
148
4.1.
Estimation Techniques
148
4.2.
Functional Form, Variable Selection, and Variable Measurement
150
4.3.
Special Issues in Banking
151
5.
Empirical Findings in the Literature
153
5.7.
Scale Economies
153
5.2.
Scope Economies
157
5.3.
X-Efficiency
158
5.4.
Productivity
159
6.
Conclusion
160
References
160
6
Commercial Banks in Investment Banking
163
Amar Gande
(SMU)
1.
Introduction
164
2.
Tradeoffs in Combining Lending and Underwriting
168
2.1.
Costs of Combining Lending and Underwriting
168
2.2.
Benefits of Combining Lending and Underwriting
170
2.3.
Theory
171
2.4.
Empirical Evidence from Debt Underwritings
171
2.5.
Empirical Evidence from Equity Underwritings
175
2.6.
Organizational Form of Underwriting
178
Contents
3
.
Competitive
Effects of Commercial Bank Entry into Securities Underwriting
182
3.1.
Theory 182
3.2.
Empirical Evidence on Commercial Bank Entry in
1989 182
3.3.
Empirical Evidence on the Financial Modernization Act of
1999 184
4.
Conclusion
186
References
^86
Section
4
Mutual Funds
189
Overview by Sudipto Bhattacharya
(LSE)
7
Performance Measurement and Evaluation
191
Bruce Lehmann
(UCSD) and Allan Timmermann (UCSD)
1.
Introduction
192
2.
Theoretical Benchmarks
194
2.1.
Sources of Benchmarks
197
2.2.
A First Pass at Performance Measurement
199
3.
Performance Measurement and Market Timing
202
3.1.
Alternative Models of Market Timing
205
3.2.
Observable Information Signals
218
4.
Performance Measurement and Attribution with Observable Portfolio Weights
220
4.1.
Should Investors Hold Mutual Funds?
229
4.2.
Determining the Optimal Holdings in Mutual Funds
231
5.
The Cross Section of Managed Portfolio Returns
233
5.1.
Inference in the Absence of Performance Ability
234
5.2.
Power of Statistical Tests for Individual Funds
241
5.3.
Inference for Multiple Funds
244
5.4.
Empirical Specifications of Alpha Measures
247
6.
Bayesian Approaches
249
6.1.
Asset Mispricing and Investment in Mutual Funds
252
7.
Conclusion
255
References
256
8
The Behavior of Mutual Fund Investors
259
Lu
Zheng (UCI)
1.
Introduction
260
2.
Examining Investor Behavior Using Fund Flows
261
2.1.
Estimating Mutual Fund Flows
261
2.2.
The Decision to Choose Among Mutual Funds
262
2.3.
Mutual Fund Flows and Aggregate Market Returns
271
3.
Investment Performance of Mutual Fund Investors
272
Contents ix
4. Investor
Externality
274
4.1.
Liquidity Costs
275
4.2.
Stale-Price Arbitrage
277
5.
Strategies of Mutual Funds
277
6.
Conclusion
280
References
280
9
Incentives in Funds Management: A Literature Overview
285
Sudipto Bhattacharya
(LSE),
Amil
Dasgupta
(LSE),
Alexander Guembel (Oxford),
and Andrea Prat
(LSE)
1.
Introduction
288
2.
Theories of Incentives for Fund Managers and Informative Experts
289
2.1.
Principal-Agent Models: Effort Choice, Delegation, and Screening
289
2.2
Optimal Contracts Based on Verifiable Portfolio Composition
Choices and Returns
290
2.3.
Returns-Based and Relative Performance-Based Contracts
291
2.4.
Conformist Trading: The Roles of Career Concerns
294
2.5.
Fund Manager Incentives and Uninformed Trading
297
2.6.
General Equilibrium Implications of Fund Manager Incentives
299
3.
Evidence on the Choices and Rewards of Analysts and Fund Managers
301
4.
Conclusion
303
References
303
Sections Regulation
305
Overview by Mark J. Flannery, University of Florida
10
Consolidation in the U.S. Banking Industry: Is the "Long, Strange Trip"
About to End?
309
Kenneth D. Jones (FD1C) and Tim Critchfield (FD1C)
1.
Overview of Structural Change in the U.S. Banking Industry
1984-2003 311
1.1.
Industry Size
311
1.2.
Industry Concentration
315
2.
Fundamental Causes of Consolidation
318
2.1.
Environmental Factors
318
2.2.
Microeconomic
Factors in Merger Decisions
324
3.
The Effects of Consolidation
325
4.
Projections of Banking Industry Structure
333
4.1.
Review of Previous Projections and Their Methodologies
333
4.2.
New Linear Extrapolations: A Comparison with the Literature
336
4.3.
Beyond Linear Extrapolations
338
5.
Conclusion
341
References
343
Contents
11
Safety, Soundness, and the Evolution of the U.S. Banking Industry
347
Robert DeYoung (Kansas)
1.
Introduction
348
2.
The Evolution of the U.S. Banking Industry
349
2.1.
Financial Innovation and Technological Change
350
2.2.
Regulatory Reaction to Financial Innovation and Technological Change
353
2.3.
Widespread Technology Adoption and Industry Transformation
353
3.
A Stylized View of Banking Strategies
356
3.1.
Prederegulation
358
3.2.
Postderegulation
358
4.
Evidence Consistent with the Strategic Map
360
5.
Further Implications of Strategic Change
363
5./.
Industry Structure
363
5.2.
Noninterest
Income
366
5.3.
Financial Performance
368
6.
Is the Industry Safe and Sound Today?
369
References
371
12
What Caused the Bank Capital Buildup of the
1
990s?
375
Mark J. Flannery {Florida) and Kasturi P.
Rangan
(CWRU and
HBS)
1.
Introduction
376
2.
Determining a Bank's Optimal Leverage
378
3.
Rising U.S. Bank Capitalization,
1986-2001 381
3.1.
The Supervisors' Focus: Book Capital Ratios
381
3.2.
Investors' Focus: Market Capital Ratios
383
3.3.
ВНС
Portfolio Volatility and Default Risb
384
3.4.
Possible Causes of the Increased Capitalization
386
4.
Regression Model
388
4.1.
Lags in Adjusting Toward Target Capitalization
390
4.2.
Econometric Issues
392
4.3.
Data
393
5.
Estimation Results
395
5.7.
Decomposing the Change in
ВНС
Capitalization
398
6.
Do Higher Market Ratios Reflect Stricter Regulatory Constraints?
401
7.
Robustness
404
7.1.
Adjust for Possible Safety Net Subsidies in MKTRAT
405
7.2.
Alternative Instrument for BHCs'Realized Stock Return
405
7.3.
Estimates for the
20
Largest Banks
405
7.4.
Estimate for
80
"Next Largest" Banks
407
7.5.
Excluding the Charter Value Proxy
407
Contents xi
8.
Summary and Implications
407
References
408
Appendix
411
Estimating
ВНС
Risk-Weighted Assets
(RWA)
in the
1986-91
Period
411
13
Basel II: A Case for Recalibration
413
Paul H.
Kupiec
(FDIC)
1.
Introduction
414
2.
A Review of the AIRB Capital Framework
415
2.1.
Discussion
418
3.
The AIRB and Financial Stability
420
4.
Establishing a Sound Benchmark for Risk Measurement Practices
423
4.1.
The Need for Capital for Bank Interest Expenses
423
4.2.
Procyclicality of the AIRB Soundness Standard
427
4.3.
Incorporating Portfolio Interest Income
428
4.4.
Capital for Systematic Risk in PD and LGD
430
4.5.
Random Loss Given Default and "Downturn
"
LGD
431
4.6.
Asymptotic Portfolio Loss Distribution
432
4.7.
Random Exposures at Default (EADs)
436
5.
Conclusions
437
References
438
Section
6
Competition and Regulation in Banking
441
Overview by
Xavier
Vives
(IESE
Business and UPF)
14
Competition and Regulation in Banking
449
Elena Carletti (Frankfurt)
1.
Introduction
450
2.
Bank Instability and the Need of Regulation
452
2.1.
Bank Fragility: Individual Runs and Systemic Crises
452
2.2.
Excessive Risk Taking
457
2.3.
The Need of Regulation
458
3.
Competition in Banking
461
3.1.
Competition Under Asymmetric Information
461
3.2.
Competition and Switching Costs
463
3.3.
Competition and Networks
464
4.
Competition and Stability: A Positive or a Negative Link?
466
4.1.
Market Structure and Financial Fragility
467
4.2.
Market Structure and Risk Taking
470
Contents
5.
Competition and Regulation
473
6.
Conclusion
479
References
479
15
Competition and Regulation in the Banking Sector: A Review of the
Empirical Evidence on the Sources of Bank Rents
483
Hans Degryse and Steven Ongena (CentER,
Tilburg)
1.
Introduction
485
2.
Measuring Banking Competition
488
2.1.
Traditional Industrial Organization
488
2.2.
New Empirical Industrial Organization
492
3.
Competition: Conduct and Strategy
499
3.1.
Market Structure and Conduct
499
3.2.
Market Structure and Strategy: Product Differentiation and Network Effects
509
4.
Switching Costs
510
4.1.
Evidence on the Existence, Magnitude, and Determinants of Switching Costs
511
4.2.
Switching Costs and Conditions: Relationships as a Source of Bank Rents?
521
4.3.
Market Structure and Market Presence: Bank Orientation and Specialization
527
5.
Location
530
5.1.
Distance Versus Borders
530
5.2.
Distance and Conditions: Spatial Pricing
531
5.3.
Distance and Conditions: Availability
532
5.4.
Distance and Strategy: Branching
533
5.5.
Borders and Conduct: Segmentation
533
5.6.
Borders and Strategy: Entry and
M
'&As
534
6.
Regulation
537
6.1.
Regulation and Market Structure
537
6.2.
Regulation and Conduct
538
6.3.
Regulation and Strategy
538
6.4.
Regulation and Financial Stability and Development
539
1.
Conclusion
540
References
542
Index
555 |
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any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author_GND | (DE-588)124187463 |
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dewey-sort | 3332.1 |
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discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
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id | DE-604.BV023479766 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T21:37:32Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:19:43Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9780444515582 |
language | English |
lccn | 2008012456 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016661948 |
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physical | XXV, 577 S. graph. Darst. |
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spelling | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking ed. by Anjan V. Thakor ... Amsterdam [u.a.] Elsevier North-Holland 2008 XXV, 577 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Handbooks in finance Includes bibliographical references and index Banques ram Intermédiation financière ram Bank Intermediation (Finance) Banks and banking Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd rswk-swf Finanzintermediation (DE-588)4368756-8 gnd rswk-swf Regulierung (DE-588)4201190-5 gnd rswk-swf Wettbewerb (DE-588)4065835-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4143413-4 Aufsatzsammlung gnd-content Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 s Finanzintermediation (DE-588)4368756-8 s DE-188 Wettbewerb (DE-588)4065835-1 s Regulierung (DE-588)4201190-5 s Thakor, Anjan V. 1951- Sonstige (DE-588)124187463 oth Digitalisierung UB Bayreuth application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016661948&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking Banques ram Intermédiation financière ram Bank Intermediation (Finance) Banks and banking Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd Finanzintermediation (DE-588)4368756-8 gnd Regulierung (DE-588)4201190-5 gnd Wettbewerb (DE-588)4065835-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4032950-1 (DE-588)4368756-8 (DE-588)4201190-5 (DE-588)4065835-1 (DE-588)4143413-4 |
title | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
title_auth | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
title_exact_search | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
title_exact_search_txtP | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
title_full | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking ed. by Anjan V. Thakor ... |
title_fullStr | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking ed. by Anjan V. Thakor ... |
title_full_unstemmed | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking ed. by Anjan V. Thakor ... |
title_short | Handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
title_sort | handbook of financial intermediation and banking |
topic | Banques ram Intermédiation financière ram Bank Intermediation (Finance) Banks and banking Kreditwesen (DE-588)4032950-1 gnd Finanzintermediation (DE-588)4368756-8 gnd Regulierung (DE-588)4201190-5 gnd Wettbewerb (DE-588)4065835-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Banques Intermédiation financière Bank Intermediation (Finance) Banks and banking Kreditwesen Finanzintermediation Regulierung Wettbewerb Aufsatzsammlung |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016661948&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT thakoranjanv handbookoffinancialintermediationandbanking |