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Climate risk and bank capital structure

Yassine Bakkar

Queen's University Belfast

Journal of Financial Stability 2026 open access

This paper examines whether climate risk affects the dynamics of banks’ regulatory capital adjustments, based on a large panel of European banks over the 2006–2021 period. Using a dynamic partial adjustment model, we find that climate-exposed banks hold higher capital adequacy ratios and adjust faster toward their optimal capital structure, particularly when exposed to transition risk and post-COP21. Climate risk also induces asymmetric adjustment behaviours. Deleveraging occurs through risk-weighted asset reallocation toward safer exposures, without asset liquidation or lending cuts. While leveraging operates through risk-weighted asset expansion, without reducing equity growth. However, pre-COP21, deleveraging is primarily achieved through lending contraction, whereas leveraging relies mainly on asset expansion. Our findings highlight the policy relevance of climate risk for prudential supervision and bank capital regulation.

DOI
10.1016/j.jfs.2026.101540
Volume
84
Pages
101540
Language
en
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