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The International Transmission of Bank Capital Requirements Evidence from the Uk

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
The International Transmission of Bank Capital Requirements Evidence from the Uk
Abstract
We use data on UK banks׳ minimum capital requirements to study the impact of changes to bank-specific capital requirements on cross-border bank loan supply from 1999Q1 to 2006Q4. By examining a sample in which each recipient country has multiple relationships with UK-resident banks, we are able to control for demand effects. We find a negative and statistically significant effect of changes to banks׳ capital requirements on cross-border lending: a 100 basis point increase in the requirement is associated with a reduction in the growth rate of cross-border credit of 5.5 percentage points. We also find that banks tend to favor their most important country relationships, so that the negative cross-border credit supply response in “core” countries is significantly less than in others. Banks tend to cut back cross-border credit to other banks (including foreign affiliates) more than to firms and households, consistent with shorter maturity, wholesale lending which is easier to roll off and may be associated with weaker borrowing relationships.
Publication
Journal of Financial Economics
Volume
113
Issue
3
Pages
368-382
Date
2014
Citation
Aiyar, S., Calomiris, C. W., Hooley, J., Korniyenko, Y., & Wieladek, T. (2014). The International Transmission of Bank Capital Requirements Evidence from the Uk. Journal of Financial Economics, 113, 368–382.
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