Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence

We study the behaviour of banking intermediaries focusing on the joint relationships among risk management, fragility and the market structure. Theoretically, we use the industrial organisation approach to analyse the relationships between banking behaviour and risk management goals and between bank...

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Main Author: Ruiz Porras, Antonio
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12969/
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author Ruiz Porras, Antonio
author_facet Ruiz Porras, Antonio
author_sort Ruiz Porras, Antonio
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description We study the behaviour of banking intermediaries focusing on the joint relationships among risk management, fragility and the market structure. Theoretically, we use the industrial organisation approach to analyse the relationships between banking behaviour and risk management goals and between banking behaviour and regulation effects. We develop and calibrate models to study the monopolistic competition effects on banking stability and to study the effects of asset and liability uncertainty on banking decisions. We extend such analyses to study the effects caused by portfolio restrictions and deposit interest-rate regulations on banking behaviour. Empirically, we characterise the financial and banking stylised facts associated to stable and unstable banking systems. Furthermore, we assess among competing theories and policy views regarding the relationships between banking stability and management practices, and between fragility and banking market structure. The empirical study relies on OLS regressions and random effects logit models for panel data. The dataset includes data for a sample of 47 countries during the period 1990-1997. Theoretically, we show that the optimal risk management asset allocation for banking firms depends on the banking market structure. We also show that the maximisation of long-term profits and the minimisation of financial distress are complementary and compatible management objectives. Furthermore, our findings suggest that the achievement of banking and regulatory goals may depend on the degree of competition in the banking market. Moreover, they also suggest that interest-rate instruments may be better than asset portfolio restrictions as regulatory devices. Empirically, our findings suggest that financial development is associated with market-based financial systems and non-competitive banking systems. We also provide evidence that banking competition enhances fragility. Furthermore, the analyses reject the bank-based policy view regarding the relationship between financial system and banking stability. Hence, the use of derivatives and cross-sectional risk sharing techniques might encourage stability.
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spelling nottingham-129692025-02-28T11:22:24Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12969/ Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence Ruiz Porras, Antonio We study the behaviour of banking intermediaries focusing on the joint relationships among risk management, fragility and the market structure. Theoretically, we use the industrial organisation approach to analyse the relationships between banking behaviour and risk management goals and between banking behaviour and regulation effects. We develop and calibrate models to study the monopolistic competition effects on banking stability and to study the effects of asset and liability uncertainty on banking decisions. We extend such analyses to study the effects caused by portfolio restrictions and deposit interest-rate regulations on banking behaviour. Empirically, we characterise the financial and banking stylised facts associated to stable and unstable banking systems. Furthermore, we assess among competing theories and policy views regarding the relationships between banking stability and management practices, and between fragility and banking market structure. The empirical study relies on OLS regressions and random effects logit models for panel data. The dataset includes data for a sample of 47 countries during the period 1990-1997. Theoretically, we show that the optimal risk management asset allocation for banking firms depends on the banking market structure. We also show that the maximisation of long-term profits and the minimisation of financial distress are complementary and compatible management objectives. Furthermore, our findings suggest that the achievement of banking and regulatory goals may depend on the degree of competition in the banking market. Moreover, they also suggest that interest-rate instruments may be better than asset portfolio restrictions as regulatory devices. Empirically, our findings suggest that financial development is associated with market-based financial systems and non-competitive banking systems. We also provide evidence that banking competition enhances fragility. Furthermore, the analyses reject the bank-based policy view regarding the relationship between financial system and banking stability. Hence, the use of derivatives and cross-sectional risk sharing techniques might encourage stability. 2004-12 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12969/1/PhD_Thesis_%5BUniversity_of_Nottingham-2004%5D_Ruiz-Porras_A.pdf Ruiz Porras, Antonio (2004) Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. Banks and banking risk management
spellingShingle Banks and banking
risk management
Ruiz Porras, Antonio
Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title_full Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title_fullStr Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title_full_unstemmed Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title_short Institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
title_sort institutional risk management, financial fragility and market structure in the banking firm: theories, regulation effects and international evidence
topic Banks and banking
risk management
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/12969/