Topic: Financial Institutions

  1. Countercyclical Bank Capital Requirement and Optimized Monetary Policy Rules

    Using BoC-GEM-Fin, a large-scale DSGE model with real, nominal and financial frictions featuring a banking sector, we explore the macroeconomic implications of various types of countercyclical bank capital regulations. Results suggest that countercyclical capital requirements have a significant stabilizing effect on key macroeconomic variables, but mostly after financial shocks.

    Topics: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial stability; International topics
  2. Méthodologie de construction de séries de taux de défaut pour l’industrie canadienne

    Discussion Paper 2013-2 - Ramdane Djoudad, Étienne Bordeleau

    Default rates are series commonly used in stress testing. In Canada, as in many other countries, there are no historical series available for sectoral default rates on bank loans to firms.

    Topics: Econometric and statistical methods; Financial Institutions; Financial stability
  3. Monetary Policy and the Risk-Taking Channel: Insights from the Lending Behaviour of Banks

    The financial crisis of 2007-09 and the subsequent extended period of historically low real interest rates have revived the question of whether economic agents are willing to take on more risk when interest rates remain low for a prolonged time period. This increased appetite for risk, which causes economic agents to search for investment assets and strategies that generate higher investment returns, has been called the risk-taking channel of monetary policy. Recent academic research on banks suggests that lending policies in times of low interest rates can be consistent with the existence of a risk-taking channel of monetary policy in Europe, South America, the United States and Canada. Specifically, studies find that the terms of loans to risky borrowers become less stringent in periods of low interest rates. This risk-taking channel may amplify the effects of traditional transmission mechanisms, resulting in the creation of excessive credit.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Monetary policy framework
  4. Canadian Bank Balance-Sheet Management: Breakdown by Types of Canadian Financial Institutions

    The authors document leverage, capital and liquidity ratios of banks in Canada. These ratios are important indicators of different types of risk with respect to a bank’s balance‐sheet management. Particular attention is given to the observations by different types of banks, including small banks that historically received less attention.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  5. Price Negotiation in Differentiated Products Markets: Evidence from the Canadian Mortgage Market

    Working Paper 2012-30 - Jason Allen, Robert Clark, Jean-François Houde

    This paper measures market power in a decentralized market where contracts are determined through a search and negotiation process. The mortgage industry has many institutional features which suggest competitiveness: homogeneous contracts, negotiable rates, and, for a given consumer, common lending costs across lenders.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial services; Market structure and pricing
  6. Efficiency and Bargaining Power in the Interbank Loan Market

    Using detailed loan transactions-level data we examine the efficiency of an overnight interbank lending market, and the bargaining power of its participants. Our analysis relies on the equilibrium concept of the core, which imposes a set of no-arbitrage conditions on trades in the market.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Payment clearing and settlement systems
  7. An Analysis of Indicators of Balance-Sheet Risks at Canadian Financial Institutions

    This article examines four indicators of balance-sheet risks—leverage, capital, asset liquidity and funding—among different types of financial institutions in Canada over the past three decades. It also discusses relevant developments in the banking sector that could have contributed to the observed dynamics. The authors find that the various risk indicators decreased during the period for most of the non-Big Six financial institutions, but remained relatively unchanged for the Big Six banks. In addition, the balance-sheet risk indicators became more heterogeneous across financial institutions. The observed overall decline and increased heterogeneity follow certain regulatory changes, such as the introduction of the liquidity guidelines on funding in 1995 and the implementation of bank-specific leverage requirements in 2000. Given that these regulations required more balance-sheet risk management, they have likely contributed to the increased resilience of the banking sector.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  8. The Ex-Ante Versus Ex-Post Effect of Public Guarantees

    Working Paper 2012-22 - H. Evren Damar, Reint Gropp, Adi Mordel

    In October 2006, Dominion Bond Rating Service (DBRS) introduced new ratings for banks that account for the potential of government support. The rating changes are not a reflection of any changes in the respective banks’ credit fundamentals.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  9. Consumer Bankruptcy and Information

    Working Paper 2012-18 - Jason Allen, H. Evren Damar, David Martinez-Miera

    We analyze the relationship between the intensity of banks’ use of soft-information and household bankruptcy patterns. Using a unique data set on the universe of Canadian household bankruptcies, we document that bankruptcy rates are higher in markets where the collection of soft, or qualitative locally gathered information, is the weakest.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial services
  10. When Is It Less Costly for Risky Firms to Borrow? Evidence from the Bank Risk- Taking Channel of Monetary Policy

    Working Paper 2012-10 - Teodora Paligorova, João Santos

    In an investigation of banks’ loan pricing policies in the United States over the past two decades, this study finds supporting evidence for the bank risk-taking channel of monetary policy. We show that banks charge lower spreads when they lend to riskier borrowers relative to the spreads they charge on loans to safer borrowers in periods of low short-term rates compared to periods of high short-term rates.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Monetary policy framework
  11. Household Insolvency in Canada

    With increasing levels of household debt in recent years, the number of households that may be vulnerable to a negative economic shock is rising as well. Decisions made by both the debtor and the creditor can contribute to insolvency. This article presents some stylized facts about insolvency in Canada’s household sector and analyzes the role of creditors in insolvencies. The average debt of an individual filing for bankruptcy is more than 1.5 times that of an average Canadian household; bankruptcy filers tend to be unemployed or in low-wage jobs, and are typically renters. The article reports that banks that approve more loans per branch, which is interpreted as less-intensive use of soft information (such as the loan officer’s assessment of the applicant’s character), experience more client bankruptcies. This finding has important policy implications, because financial institutions that do not use soft information risk further deterioration in their lending portfolios.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial services
  12. Price Competition and Concentration in Search and Negotiation Markets: Evidence from Mortgage Lending

    Working Paper 2012-4 - Jason Allen, Robert Clark, Jean-François Houde

    This paper examines the impact of bank consolidation on mortgage rates in order to evaluate the extent to which mortgage markets are competitive. Mortgage markets are decentralized and so rates are determined through a search and negotiation process.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial services; Interest rates
  13. Bank Leverage Regulation and Macroeconomic Dynamics

    Working Paper 2011-32 - Ian Christensen, Césaire Meh, Kevin Moran

    This paper assesses the merits of countercyclical bank balance sheet regulation for the stabilization of financial and economic cycles and examines its interaction with monetary policy.

    Topics: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial system regulation and policies; Monetary policy framework; Transmission of monetary policy
  14. Measuring Systemic Importance of Financial Institutions: An Extreme Value Theory Approach

    Working Paper 2011-19 - Toni Gravelle, Fuchun Li

    In this paper, we define a financial institution’s contribution to financial systemic risk as the increase in financial systemic risk conditional on the crash of the financial institution. The higher the contribution is, the more systemically important is the institution for the system.

    Topics: Econometric and statistical methods; Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  15. The BoC-GEM-Fin: Banking in the Global Economy

    This article describes the Bank of Canada’s version of the Global Economy Model structured to incorporate an active banking system that features an interbank market and cross-border lending. After describing the new model, the authors use it to examine the responses of selected U.S. and Canadian macroeconomic variables to a “credit crunch” in the United States and also to study the impact of changes in the regulatory limits to bank leverage in Canada. They also discuss the relative merits of a monetary policy framework based on inflation targeting and one based on price-level targeting in the presence of shocks to the U.S. and Canadian banking sectors.

    Topics: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial system regulation and policies; Monetary policy framework
  16. Bank Balance Sheets, Deleveraging and the Transmission Mechanism

    Bank of Canada Review Article: Bank of Canada Review - Summer 2011 - Césaire Meh

    The author investigates the influence of bank capital on economic activity, using a macroeconomic model that incorporates an explicit role for financial intermediation. The analysis focuses on the role of a “bank-capital channel” in propagating and amplifying monetary policy actions and other shocks. The question of whether weaker bank balance sheets make the economy more vulnerable to adverse shocks is examined, together with the impact of initiatives, such as countercyclical capital buffers, on the transmission of monetary policy and other shocks to the real economy.

    Topics: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial system regulation and policies; Transmission of monetary policy
  17. Analyzing Default Risk and Liquidity Demand during a Financial Crisis: The Case of Canada

    Working Paper 2011-17 - Jason Allen, Ali Hortaçsu, Jakub Kastl

    This paper explores the reliability of using prices of credit default swap contracts (CDS) as indicators of default probabilities during the 2007/2008 financial crisis.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial markets; Payment clearing and settlement systems
  18. Bank Loans for Private and Public Firms in a Credit Crunch

    Working Paper 2011-13 - Jason Allen, Teodora Paligorova

    Banks reliance on short-term funding has increased over time. While an effective source of financing in good times, the 2007 financial crisis has exposed the vulnerability of banks and ultimately firms to such a liability structure.

    Topics: Financial Institutions
  19. Discounting in Mortgage Markets

    Working Paper 2011-3 - Jason Allen, Robert Clark, Jean-François Houde

    This paper studies discounting in mortgage markets. Using transaction-level data on Canadian mortgages, we document that over time there's been an increase in the average discount, along with substantial dispersion.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial services
  20. The Impact of Liquidity on Bank Profitability

    Working Paper 2010-38 - Étienne Bordeleau, Christopher Graham

    The recent crisis has underlined the importance of sound bank liquidity management. In response, regulators are devising new liquidity standards with the aim of making the financial system more stable and resilient. In this paper, the authors analyse the impact of liquid asset holdings on bank profitability for a sample of large U.S. and Canadian banks.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  21. The Macroeconomic Implications of Changes in Bank Capital and Liquidity Requirements in Canada: Insights from the BoC-GEM-FIN

    Discussion Paper 2010-16 - Carlos De Resende, Ali Dib, Nikita Perevalov

    The authors use simulations within the BoC-GEM-FIN, the Bank of Canada's version of the Global Economy Model with financial frictions in both the demand and supply sides of the credit market, to investigate the macroeconomic implications of changing bank regulations on the Canadian economy.

    Topics: Economic models; Financial Institutions; Financial stability; International topics
  22. Adverse Selection, Liquidity, and Market Breakdown

    Working Paper 2010-32 - Koralai Kirabaeva

    This paper studies the interaction between adverse selection, liquidity risk and beliefs about systemic risk in determining market liquidity, asset prices and welfare. Even a small amount of adverse selection in the asset market can lead to fire-sale pricing and possibly to a market breakdown if it is accompanied by a flight-to-liquidity, a misassessment of systemic risk, or uncertainty about asset values.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial markets; Financial stability
  23. Losses from Simulated Defaults in Canada's Large Value Transfer System

    Discussion Paper 2010-14 - Nellie Zhang, Tom Hossfeld

    The Large Value Transfer System (LVTS) loss-sharing mechanism was designed to ensure that, in the event of a one-participant default, the collateral pledged by direct members of the system would be sufficient to cover the largest possible net debit position of a defaulting participant. However, the situation may not hold if the indirect effects of the defaults are taken into consideration, or if two participants default during the same payment cycle.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Payment clearing and settlement systems
  24. Regulatory Constraints on Bank Leverage: Issues and Lessons from the Canadian Experience

    The Basel capital framework plays an important role in risk management by linking a bank's minimum capital requirements to the riskiness of its assets. Nevertheless, the risk estimates underlying these calculations may be imperfect, and it appears that a cyclical bias in measures of risk-adjusted capital contributed to procyclical increases in global leverage prior to the recent financial crisis.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial stability; Financial system regulation and policies
  25. Bank of Canada Liquidity Actions in Response to the Financial Market Turmoil

    In response to the financial crisis of 2007-09, the Bank of Canada intervened repeatedly to stabilize the financial system and limit the repercussions of the crisis on the Canadian economy. This article reviews the extraordinary liquidity measures taken by the Bank during this period and the principles that guided the Bank's interventions. A preliminary assessment of the term liquidity facilities provided by the Bank suggests that they were an important source of liquidity support for some financial institutions and, on a broader basis, served to reduce uncertainty among market participants about the availability of liquidity, as well as helping to promote a return to well-functioning money markets.

    Topics: Financial Institutions; Financial markets; Financial stability
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