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Noninterest Income and Financial Performance at U.S. Commercial Banks
476
Citations
28
References
2004
Year
Financial SystemFinancial EconomicsNon-bank Financial InstitutionBusinessFinancial IntermediationFinancial PerformanceRetail BankingInterest IncomeFinanceEmpirical LinksCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
Abstract Noninterest income now accounts for over 40% of operating income in the U.S. commercial banking industry. This paper demonstrates a number of empirical links between bank noninterest income, business strategies, market conditions, technological change, and financial performance between 1989 and 2001. The results indicate that well‐managed banks expand more slowly into noninterest activities, and that marginal increases in noninterest income are associated with poorer risk‐return tradeoffs on average. These findings suggest that noninterest income is coexisting with, rather than replacing, interest income from the intermediation activities that remain banks' core financial services function.
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