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Dissertation
Basel III : Impacts on European banks' lending rates
Authors: --- --- ---
Year: 2017 Publisher: Liège Université de Liège (ULiège)

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Abstract

The last financial crisis showed that the implemented regulation was not efficient enough to protect banks from failure. The notable failure of Lehman Brothers also showed the impact that the fall of a systemic financial institution could have on the world market. After analyzing the causes and the consequences of the crisis, the Basel III was launched. This new framework is still implemented on the basis of the previous framework, but improvements have been made. Indeed, the integration of additional capital requirements, liquidity ratios, the leverage ratio, and the macro-regulation per- spective have made the regulation stronger than ever before.
The willingness to protect the financial market and maintain a certain stability has caused other un- clear impacts. Effects on profitability, on business activities, and on risk management have often been pointed out by various authors. Nevertheless, the impact of the Basel III capital requirements on the lending rates is not straightforward. Indeed, the indirect relationship between Basel III, the increase of capital levels, and the impact on lending rates have all been linked with the Chami and Cosimano model.
This paper makes use of the capital-to-asset ratio to analyze the effect of capital requirements on lending rates. Firstly, this thesis shows that there is a relationship between the capital-to-asset ratio and the implementation of Basel III capital requirements from 2010 to 2016. Since the implementa- tion of Basel III, the average capital-to-assets ratio has increased by one percent in the European banking sector. Secondly, the model shows a relationship between the increase of the capital-to-as- sets ratio and the lending rates. According to the results of the study, a one percent increase of capi- tal-to-asset ratio increases banks' optimal lending rates by 55 basis points (according to Table 1.2). In other words, this study supports the theoretical assumption that defends the idea that an increase of banks' capital requirements will increase the lending rates.


Book
Bank Lending Rates and Spreads in Emdes : Evolution, Drivers, and Policies
Authors: ---
Year: 2020 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank,

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This paper analyzes the main trends and patterns of nominal lending interest rates and lending-deposit interest rate spreads in emerging markets and developing economies. Using data from 140 emerging markets and developing economies, analysis shows that nominal lending rates and spreads declined between 2003 and 2017, with regional heterogeneity. In addition, it finds that less economically and financially developed countries tend to exhibit higher lending rates and spreads. These higher rates tend to be driven by higher spreads, not deposit interest rates. Also, illustrative regressions suggest that relevant correlates of nominal lending rates include inflation, public debt, and policy interest rate (macro-fiscal conditions); overhead costs, nonperforming loans, and non-interest income (banking characteristics); and credit bureau coverage and time to resolve insolvency (business environment). Finally, illustrative decompositions of the level and 10-year change between 2007 and 2017 of nominal lending rates find relative differences across regions. On the decline of nominal interest rates in that decade, rising public debt and nonperforming loans have pushed rates up, which was counterbalanced by a reduction in inflation, the policy interest rate, and overhead costs and a better business environment. Since the global financial crisis, a common global factor has increased in importance and has contributed to the downward trend in nominal lending rates.

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