Publication | Closed Access
Bank Competition: Measurement, Decision‐Making, and Risk‐Taking
158
Citations
46
References
2016
Year
Financial SystemFinancial EconomicsFinancial Risk ManagementBanking SectorBank CompetitionFinancial IntermediationBusinessFinancial CrisisLoansManagementBank DeregulationCredit MarketGreater CompetitionFinancial RegulationFinanceCorporate FinanceFinancial Risk
ABSTRACT This paper investigates whether greater competition increases or decreases individual bank and banking system risk. Using a new text‐based measure of competition, and an instrumental variables analysis that exploits exogenous variation in bank deregulation, we provide robust evidence that greater competition increases both individual bank risk and a bank's contribution to system‐wide risk. Specifically, we find that higher competition is associated with lower underwriting standards, less timely loan loss recognition, and a shift toward noninterest revenue. Further, we find that higher competition is associated with higher stand‐alone risk of individual banks, greater sensitivity of a bank's downside equity risk to system‐wide distress, and a greater contribution by individual banks to downside risk of the banking sector.
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