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The traditional role of a bank was to transfer funds from savers to
investors, engaging in maturity transformation, screening for
borrower risk and monitoring for borrower effort in doing so. A
typical loan contract was set up along six simple dimensions: the
amount, the interest rate, the expected credit risk (determining
both the probability of default for the loan and the expected loss
given default), the required collateral, the currency, and the
lending technology. However, the modern banking industry today has
a broad scope, offering a range of sophisticated financial
products, a wider geography -- including exposure to countries with
various currencies, regulation and monetary policy regimes -- and
an increased reliance on financial innovation and technology. These
new bank business models have had repercussions on the loan
contract. In particular, the main components and risks of a loan
contract can now be hedged on the market, by means of interest rate
swaps, foreign exchange transactions, credit default swaps and
securitization. Securitized loans can often be pledged as
collateral, thus facilitating new lending. And the lending
technology is evolving from one-to-one meetings between a loan
officer and a borrower, at a bank branch, towards potentially
disruptive technologies such as peer-to-peer lending, crowd funding
or digital wallet services. This book studies the interaction
between traditional and modern banking and the economic benefits
and costs of this new financial ecosystem, by relying on recent
empirical research in banking and finance and exploring the effects
of increased financial sophistication on a particular dimension of
the loan contract.
This book provides a compendium to the empirical work investigating
the hypotheses generated by recent banking theory. Such a
compendium is overdue. Since the publication of the The
Microeconomics of Banking by Xavier Freixas and Jean Charles
Rochet, work in empirical banking has further blossomed, not only
in sheer volume but also in the variety of questions being tackled,
datasets becoming available, and methodologies being introduced.
This book follows the structure in Freixas and Rochet's book and
arranges the relevant methodologies, applications, and results
according to each of their original chapters in order to have a
coherent synthesis between available theory and supporting
empirics. Each chapter in Microeconometrics of Banking contains a
modest introduction (where possible and appropriate), a concise
methodology section with one or more relevant methodologies, and
several illustrative applications. In a "muscular" results section
the authors summarize the main robust and seminal findings in the
literature that are in the text, and provide the details of many
other studies in figures and tables.
The traditional role of a bank was to transfer funds from savers to
investors, engaging in maturity transformation, screening for
borrower risk and monitoring for borrower effort in doing so. A
typical loan contract was set up along six simple dimensions: the
amount, the interest rate, the expected credit risk (determining
both the probability of default for the loan and the expected loss
given default), the required collateral, the currency, and the
lending technology. However, the modern banking industry today has
a broad scope, offering a range of sophisticated financial
products, a wider geography -- including exposure to countries with
various currencies, regulation and monetary policy regimes -- and
an increased reliance on financial innovation and technology. These
new bank business models have had repercussions on the loan
contract. In particular, the main components and risks of a loan
contract can now be hedged on the market, by means of interest rate
swaps, foreign exchange transactions, credit default swaps and
securitization. Securitized loans can often be pledged as
collateral, thus facilitating new lending. And the lending
technology is evolving from one-to-one meetings between a loan
officer and a borrower, at a bank branch, towards potentially
disruptive technologies such as peer-to-peer lending, crowd funding
or digital wallet services. This book studies the interaction
between traditional and modern banking and the economic benefits
and costs of this new financial ecosystem, by relying on recent
empirical research in banking and finance and exploring the effects
of increased financial sophistication on a particular dimension of
the loan contract.
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