Banks Response to Higher Capital Requirements: Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment
Reint Gropp,
Thomas Mosk,
Steven Ongena and
Carlo Wix
The Review of Financial Studies, 2019, vol. 32, issue 1, 266-299
Abstract:
We study the impact of higher capital requirements on banks’ balance sheets and their transmission to the real economy. The 2011 EBA capital exercise is an almost ideal quasi-natural experiment to identify this impact with a difference-in-differences matching estimator. We find that treated banks increase their capital ratios by reducing their risk-weighted assets, not by raising their levels of equity, consistent with debt overhang. Banks reduce lending to corporate and retail customers, resulting in lower asset, investment, and sales growth for firms obtaining a larger share of their bank credit from the treated banks. Received November 28, 2016; editorial decision March 9, 2018 by Editor Philip Strahan. Authors have furnished an Internet Appendix, which are available on the Oxford University Press Web site next to the link to the final published paper online.
Date: 2019
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Working Paper: Bank response to higher capital requirements: Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment (2018) 
Working Paper: Bank Response to Higher Capital Requirements: Evidence from a Quasi-Natural Experiment (2016) 
Working Paper: Bank response to higher capital requirements: Evidence from a quasi-natural experiment (2016) 
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