To make high-quality research more accessible and easier to explore.

Fields:

Why do Banks Disappear? The Determinants of U.S. Bank Failures and Acquisitions

The Review of Economics and Statistics 2000 82(1), 127-138
This paper seeks to identify the characteristics that make individual U.S. banks more likely to fail or be acquired. We use bank-specific information to estimate competing-risks hazard models with time-varying covariates. We use alternative measures of productive efficiency to proxy management quality, and find that inefficiency increases the risk of failure while reducing the probability of a bank's being acquired. Finally, we show that the closer to insolvency a bank is (as reflected by a low equity-to-assets ratio) the more likely is its acquisition.