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Market Discipline -Effect on Bank Risk Taking Glenn Hoggarth Patricia Jackson Erlend Nier 6th June 2003 1 Market discipline • Policy initiatives (eg Basel II) recognize importance for financial stability • Pillar III of Basel II attempts to strengthen market discipline by requiring disclosure • Greater disclosure is being resisted by banks -argue costs outweigh benefits • Hardly any evidence on effectiveness of disclosure and market discipline 6th June 2003 2 Policy: Basel Committee • Basel I - Created common metric for measuring capital relative to risk - Risk asset ratio - but some banks only publish Tier1 plus Tier 2 • Basel II- Pillar III -minimum standards pf disclosure -covering composition of capital and risks 6th June 2003 3 Evidence that market discipline may affect bank behavior • Important to consider whether there would be benefits to financial stability from greater market discipline • Or are banks right -and benefits not enough to outweigh costs • First need to consider conditions for effective market discipline 6th June 2003 4 Concepts: Effective market discipline • Market must have information to assess riskiness of banks importance of disclosure • Market participants must be at risk of loss importance of limited safety net 6th June 2003 5 A number of markets likely to discipline banks- main ones Equity market - cost and availability of new capital - takeover target Affected by • shareholders limited liability - gambling for resurrection • expectations of support • sub-contract monitoring to regulators 6th June 2003 6 Interbank market Affected by - cost and availability of short-term funding - ability to hedge risks in OTC derivatives markets, eg swaps, essential - graduated reaction more likely from wholesale counterparties • deposit protection arrangements • too big to fail 6th June 2003 7 Assemble evidence related three questions • (1) Does market discipline affect the size of bank capital buffers (resilience to shocks) • (2) Does market discipline affect the likelihood of crises • (3) Does market discipline affect costs of crisis resolution 6th June 2003 8 (1) Effect on banks’ capital (resilience to shocks) 6th June 2003 9 • Bank of England research, “Market Discipline, Disclosure and Moral Hazard in Banking”, (Nier and Baumann) tested the effect of disclosure and the safety net on individual banks’ capital buffers • cross country panel dataset • 729 individual banks from 32 countries • typically observations from 1993 to 2000 6th June 2003 10 Identified measures of the strength of market discipline 6th June 2003 11 (1) Depositor protection Index on existence and extent Depins 2 = 1 or 0 - if schemes exist Depins 3 = 1 or 0 - no co-insurance Depins 4 = 1 or 0 - interbank deposits covered Depins 5 = 1 or 0 - unlimited coverage Depins = sum of depins 2, depins 3, depins 4, depins 5 6th June 2003 12 (2) Government support Fitch Safety net 1 if public support rating = 1 or 2 0 6th June 2003 = 3, 4, 5 13 (3) Uninsured Deposits Proportion of uninsured interbank deposits 6th June 2003 14 (4) Disclosure Constructed an index on core disclosure items from BankScope 18 categories covering following areas Bank’s risk profile - interest rate risk - credit risk - liquidity risk - market risk Capital and reserves 6th June 2003 15 (5) US listing NYSE, NASDAC or AMEX 6th June 2003 16 CAPit f(RISKit,MKDit,Zit ) υit Risk - components of weekly equity returns - one period ahead loan loss provisions Z - control variables - return on equity - log of total assets - GDP growth MKD - market disclosure/market discipline variables 6th June 2003 17 Results- effect on capital relative to risk Deposit insurance and support: negative Interbank deposits: positive US listing and disclosure index: positive 6th June 2003 18 Table 1[495]: The effect of market discipline on bank capital Dependent variable Constant Provisions (t+1) Beta Idios. Risk Logsize Roe GDP growth Non-perf. Loans Market share Cap. Req. Time trend Dep. Insurance Support Bank deposits Rating Listing Disclosure No. of obs. No. of banks Goodness of fit Log likelihood (1) Cap (2) Cap (3) Cap -3.2609*** 0.3657*** 0.0044*** -0.1715*** -0.0043*** 0.0535*** 0.0058 -0.0970*** -0.0484*** 0.0148*** 0.0016*** -0.0023*** -0.0117*** -1.9414*** -0.1016*** 0.0070*** -0.0537*** -0.0138*** 0.0217*** -0.1154*** 0.0016 0.0394*** 0.0115*** 0.0011*** -0.0065*** -3.0638*** -0.0320** 0.0068*** -0.0427*** -0.0147*** 0.0247*** -0.1244*** 0.0075 0.0282*** 0.0122*** 0.0016*** -0.0059*** 0.0676*** 0.0030*** 0.0784*** 0.0031*** 0.0149*** 0.0147*** 728 199 0.46 2732 0.0098*** 0.0157*** 695 154 0.50 2424 726 199 0.46 2694 Source: Bank calculations. Indicates 6th*June 2003 ** *** significance at the 10 % level. Indicates significance at the 5 % level. Indicates significance at the 1 % level. 19 Effect on capital for given risk Banks expected to have government support have a capital ratio 1.2 percentage points lower than those without. Banks fully funded from uninsured interbank deposits would have have a capital ratio 7 percentage points higher than a bank fully funded from insured deposits Banks disclosing none of the core information measured have a capital ratio 1.5 percentage points lower than those that do. 6th June 2003 20 • Findings lend weight to assertion that market discipline could help strengthen the financial system by increasing resilience to shocks. • But is there any more direct evidence? 6th June 2003 21 (2) Effect on the likelihood of banking crises 6th June 2003 22 • Factors increasing market discipline disclosure- should reduce likelihood of crises • Factors reducing market discipline (government support, deposit protection schemes) could have two opposing effects • -(a) reduce market discipline weakening banking system but (b) prevent crisis from materialising. 6th June 2003 23 Empirical approach Baumann Nier Data-set • 32 countries 1993-2000 • 7 banking crises starting /continuing after 1993 -Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia , Japan, Turkey and Argentina. 6th June 2003 24 Market discipline variables • • • • Deposit protection Government support Disclosure US listing 6th June 2003 25 Crisis=f (MKD,Z)+e Crisis = country dummy value 1 (crisis) 0 not Simple OLS regressions of crisis dummy on market discipline variables Probit regressions of crisis dummy on market discipline and control variables 6th June 2003 26 Results- effect on likelihood of banking crisis • Disclosure and US listing - weak negative effect, appear to reduce likelihood of crisis • government support - significantly negative effect, clearly reduces likelihood of systemic crises • deposit insurance - weak positive effect, appears to increase likelihood of crises 6th June 2003 27 Effect of components of deposit insurance • Existence of scheme -negative effect, reduces likelihood of crisis • interbank and coinsurane - no evidence either way • unlimited deposit protection - strong positive effect, increases likelihood of crisis 6th June 2003 28 Probit regressions With control variables • - GDP per capita • - GDP growth market discipline variables retain sign. • With current account deficit /surplus added market discipline variables again retain sign 6th June 2003 29 Caveat: preliminary work • Small sample of crisis countries • Will go on to look at effects at bank level fall in capital indicator of problems. • But does indicate countries should question role of unlimited deposit protection schemes and should encourage greater disclosure. 6th June 2003 30 But deposit protection is there to deal with crisis • Countries concerned about future potential crises will not change procedures if they would damage ability to deal with banking problems. • Further question therefore - do unlimited deposit protection schemes improve crisis management ? 6th June 2003 31 (3) Effect on costs of crisis resolution 6th June 2003 32 Effect on resolution costs • Sample of 33 systemic banking crises • Effect of blanket guarantees • Effect of depositor protection • 1 if limited scheme exists 0 if scheme is unlimited or does not exist • regressions attempt to control for size of shock, eg dummy for currency crisis 6th June 2003 33 Results- effect on resolution cost • Blanket Government guarantees appear to increase resolution costs • Limited deposit insurance schemes reduce resolution costs - when compared to unlimited or implicit schemes 6th June 2003 34 (4) Implications for public policy 6th June 2003 35 Deposit Insurance • Explicit deposit insurance may prevent banking crises • unlimited deposit protection schemes could be harmful -affect bank behaviour make crises more likely 6th June 2003 36 Implicit government support • Support prevents crises from materialising (if support is credible in fiscal terms) • Support increases moral hazard and reduces resilience of the banking system • Where support arrangements substantial more onus on supervisors 6th June 2003 37 Disclosure • More information disclosure has the potential to strengthen the resilience of the banking system • Key is comparability of information across banks 6th June 2003 38 Nature of disclosure - comparable disclosure important VaR Lloyds HSBC Standard Abbey Chartered Barclays 95%, 1 day 99%, 10 days 95%, 1 day 6th June 2003 97.5%, > 1 day 98%, 1 day 39 Pillar III will be effective in increasing amount of comparable disclosure Important for standardised and IRB banks. 6th June 2003 40