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The lock-in effect of rising mortgage rates on housing market dynamics
When ESG Hurts: Environmental Policy Stringency and ESG Retreat in China’s Institutional Investors
Overconfident Bank CEOs: Risk Amplification Amid Economic Policy Uncertainty?
Option-implied systemic risk measures
Do Corporate Bond Mutual Funds Exhibit Investment Skill? Evidence from Earnings Announcements
Financialization and the drivers of commodity futures returns
High temperatures and household stock market participation
Did the Banking Union reduce stress test information production? The role of negative financial stability spillovers
We examine the impact of the EU Banking Union on the information production of stress tests by exploiting the institutional shift in supervisory responsibility for significant banks to the European Central Bank (ECB) under the Single Supervisory Mechanism (SSM). We hypothesize that a centralized authority with both supervisory and financial stability mandates may reduce the informativeness of stress tests to mitigate negative spillovers, particularly potential threats to financial stability arising from disclosure. Our findings support this hypothesis, showing that the information production from stress tests declined following the introduction of the SSM. This reduction is primarily driven by weakly performing banks. We find no support for alternative explanations such as supervisory leniency, market learning, or the absence of an acute crisis.