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Bank Competition and Financial Stability

Under the traditional “competition-fragility” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decreases profit margins, and results in reduced franchise value that encourages bank risk taking. Under the alternative “competition-stability” view, more market power in the loan market may result in hig...

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Published in:Journal of financial services research 2009-04, Vol.35 (2), p.99-118
Main Authors: Berger, Allen N., Klapper, Leora F., Turk-Ariss, Rima
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Language:English
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description Under the traditional “competition-fragility” view, more bank competition erodes market power, decreases profit margins, and results in reduced franchise value that encourages bank risk taking. Under the alternative “competition-stability” view, more market power in the loan market may result in higher bank risk as the higher interest rates charged to loan customers make it harder to repay loans, and exacerbate moral hazard and adverse selection problems. The two strands of the literature need not necessarily yield opposing predictions regarding the effects of competition and market power on stability in banking. Even if market power in the loan market results in riskier loan portfolios, the overall risks of banks need not increase if banks protect their franchise values by increasing their equity capital or engaging in other risk-mitigating techniques. We test these theories by regressing measures of loan risk, bank risk, and bank equity capital on several measures of market power, as well as indicators of the business environment, using data for 8,235 banks in 23 developed nations. Our results suggest that—consistent with the traditional “competition-fragility” view—banks with a higher degree of market power also have less overall risk exposure. The data also provides some support for one element of the “competition-stability” view—that market power increases loan portfolio risk. We show that this risk may be offset in part by higher equity capital ratios.
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source EconLit s plnými texty; International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Business Source Ultimate; ABI/INFORM global; Springer Nature
subjects Adverse selection
Bank competition
Bank failures
Banking industry
Banking system
Banking system fragility
Banks
Capital and Ownership Structure G320
Competition
Economic stability
Economics and Finance
Equity capital
F30
Finance
Financial Risk and Risk Management
Financial Services
Financial stability
Financing Policy
Firm Performance: Size, Diversification, and Scope L250
G21
G38
Interest rates
L89
Loans
Macroeconomics/Monetary Economics//Financial Economics
Micro Finance Institutions
Monopolies
Moral hazard
Mortgages G210
Other Depository Institutions
Production, Pricing, and Market Structure
Ratios
Regulation
Regulation of financial institutions
Risk exposure
Size Distribution of Firms L110
Studies
title Bank Competition and Financial Stability
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