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Over the past two decades, the banking industry has expanded and
consolidated at a stunningly unprecedented speed. In this time
banks have also moved from focusing purely on commercial banking
activities to being heavily involved in market-based and
transaction-oriented wholesale and investment banking activities.
By carrying out an all-encompassing set of activities, banks have
become large, complex, interconnected, and inclined to levels of
risk-taking not previously seen. With the onset of the 2008 global
financial crisis it became apparent that there was an issue of
institutions being too big to fail. This book analyses the
too-big-to-fail problem of banks in the EU. It approaches the topic
from an interdisciplinary perspective using behavioural finance as
a tool to examine the occurrence of the global financial crisis and
the emergence of the structural problem in large banking
institutions. The book draws a comparison between the EU, the US
and the UK and the relevant rules to assess the effectiveness of
various approaches to regulation in a global context. Chen Chen Hu
goes on to use behavioural analyses to provide new insights in
evaluating the current structural reform rules in the EU Proposal
on Bank Structural Regulation and the newly adopted bank recovery
and resolution regime in the EU Bank Recovery and Resolution
Directive and the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) in the Single
Resolution Regulation.
Over the past two decades, the banking industry has expanded and
consolidated at a stunningly unprecedented speed. In this time
banks have also moved from focusing purely on commercial banking
activities to being heavily involved in market-based and
transaction-oriented wholesale and investment banking activities.
By carrying out an all-encompassing set of activities, banks have
become large, complex, interconnected, and inclined to levels of
risk-taking not previously seen. With the onset of the 2008 global
financial crisis it became apparent that there was an issue of
institutions being too big to fail. This book analyses the
too-big-to-fail problem of banks in the EU. It approaches the topic
from an interdisciplinary perspective using behavioural finance as
a tool to examine the occurrence of the global financial crisis and
the emergence of the structural problem in large banking
institutions. The book draws a comparison between the EU, the US
and the UK and the relevant rules to assess the effectiveness of
various approaches to regulation in a global context. Chen Chen Hu
goes on to use behavioural analyses to provide new insights in
evaluating the current structural reform rules in the EU Proposal
on Bank Structural Regulation and the newly adopted bank recovery
and resolution regime in the EU Bank Recovery and Resolution
Directive and the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM) in the Single
Resolution Regulation.
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