Bank competition and financial stability in Baltic countries.
The study examines the relationship between competition and risk-taking in the Baltic banking sectors from 2000-2014. It finds a non-linear or U-shaped relationship where risk first decreases and then increases with competition. In more concentrated markets, banks take less risk but in highly competitive markets the margin effect increases risk. The results support the view that both competition and market power influence bank risk and stability, with market power significantly impacting soundness and market share influencing credit risk. The findings have implications for regulating competition and concentration in Baltic banking sectors.
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Banking sector concentration, competition, and financial stability: The case of Baltic countries
1. Banking sector concentration,
competition, and financial stability:
The case of Baltic countries
Yannick Lucotte
PSB Paris School of Business, France
(with Juan Carlos Cuestas & Nicolas Reigl, Bank of Estonia)
Open seminar, Eesti Pank
Tallinn, June 19, 2017
2. Presentation Outline
1) Introduction and motivation
2) Data and descriptive statistics
3) Methodology and results
4) Robustness checks
5) Conclusion and policy implications
2
3. Introduction & motivation
๏ง The vital role of banks makes the issue of banking competition
extremely important
๏ง In particular, the recent financial crisis demonstrates the urgent need to
address the effect of bank competition on the risk-taking behavior of
financial institutions, and then on financial stability
๏ง A large theoretical and empirical literature investigated the impact of
bank competition on financial soundness: bank competition-stability
trade-off?
โ No consensusโฆ
โ โcompetition-fragilityโ vs. โcompetition-stabilityโ view
3
6. Introduction & motivation
๏ง 3 different views in the literature:
1) In the traditional view, bank competition is seen as detrimental to financial
stability:
- competition erodes bank profits and thus the banks' franchise value โ banksโ
incentives to take risk increase because the opportunity costs of bankruptcy for
shareholders decrease
- trade-off between competition and stability can also be explained by higher ability
to monitor borrowers when banks earn rents, greater diversification and better
regulators' monitoring in concentrated markets
2) โCompetition-stabilityโ view:
- market power increases bank portfolio risks โ low competition increases loan
rates, borrowers tend to shift to riskier projects
- โToo Big To Failโ subsidies as a result of implicit or explicit government bailout
insurances
- lack of diversity of bank portfolios
3) The third view reconciles the two strands of the literature by theoretically and
empirically demonstrating the existence of a nonlinear relationship between
competition and risk 6
7. Introduction & motivation
๏ง According to Martinez-Miera and Repullo (2010), the U-shaped
relationship between competition and financial stability is explained by
two effects:
1) โRisk-shifting effectโ: Competition reduces risk โ negative correlation between
loan interest rates and competition, which reduces the risk of loan defaults
2) โMargin effectโ: Competition increases risk โ greater bank competition reduces
interest payments, reducing then the buffer in cases of losses
๏ง In less competitive banking markets the risk-shifting effect dominates,
so the marginal effect of a new bank entry is negative for financial
stability, whereas in more competitive markets the margin effect
overwhelms the risk-shifting effect, and hence a new entry increases
financial risk
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9. Introduction & motivation
๏ง The conflicting results in the literature make difficult to know whether
modification of competition policy and effective competition between
financial intermediaries could constitute an alternative means of
improving financial stability, complementary to capital requirement
๏ง Against this background, the main purpose of our analysis is to re-
addresses this traditional debate on the effects of bank competition on
financial instability by focusing on Baltic countries
๏ง Baltic countries are a textbook example of a concentrated banking
sector, with a few large (foreign) banks
โ consequently, understanding whether this characteristic of the banking
sector in Baltic countries impacts the risk-taking behaviour of banks, and
then the stability of the banking sector, is crucial for implementing
regulation and competition policies 9
11. Introduction & motivation
๏ง Our study empirically re-investigates at the bank-level the relationship
between competition and risk for a sample of 40 commercial banks
located in Baltic countries from 2000 to 2014
๏ง In particular, we study a potential nonlinear relationship between
competition/concentration and bank risk
๏ง Using balance-sheet data taken from the Bankscope database, a large
set of banking competition/concentration proxies is computed, and two
types of bank risk are considered: bank-individual risk (Z-score) and
bank credit risk (non-performing loans)
๏ง Empirical findings consistent with the theoretical predictions of Martinez-
Miera and Repullo (2010): U-shaped relationship between competition
and bank risk
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12. Data & descriptive statistics
๏ง Commercial banks located in Baltic countries over the period 2000-
2014: 40 banks (Latvia 21, Lithuania 10, Estonia 9)
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13. Data & descriptive statistics
๏ง Competition measure: Lerner index (Lerner, 1934):
๏ Inverse proxy for competition: measure the market power of banks
๏ A low index indicates a high (low) degree of competition (market power), and
conversely
๏ Efficiency-adjusted Lerner index (Koetter, 2012): takes into account banks' cost
inefficiency, defined as the distance of a bank from a cost frontier accepted as the
benchmark
๏ง Concentration measure: bank market share (% of total assets)
๏ inverse proxy for competition
๏ a concentrated market structure is associated with higher prices and profits,
reflecting an uncompetitive behavior
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14. Data & descriptive statistics
Measures of risk:
๏ง Bank-individual risk: Z-score
๏ Accounting-based risk measure
๏ Measures the distance from insolvency (inverse proxy for risk)
๏ Generally viewed in the banking literature as a measure of bank soundness
๏ Calculated as follows:
๐ โ ๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ก =
๐ธ ๐๐ก ๐ด ๐๐ก+๐ ๐๐ด ๐๐ก
๐๐ ๐๐ด ๐๐ก
with ๐ธ๐๐ก ๐ด๐๐ก the equity to total assets ratio, ๐ ๐๐ด๐๐ก the return on assets, and ๐๐ ๐๐ด๐๐ก the
standard deviation of return on assets (computed by considering a 3-year rolling time
window, see, e.g., Beck et al., 2013)
๏ง Bank credit risk: Loan loss reserves (% gross loans)
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18. Methodology & results
๏ง The following regression specification is considered:
๐ ๐๐ ๐๐๐ก = ๐ผ + ๐ฝ1 ๐ถ๐๐๐๐๐กโ1 + ๐ฝ2 ๐ถ๐๐๐๐๐กโ1
2
+ ๐ฝ3 ๐ถ๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐ก +
๐=4
๐
๐ฝ ๐ ๐๐๐กโ1 + ๐๐ + ๐พ๐ก + ๐๐๐ก
๏ง Control variables:
๏ Economic environment: annual inflation rate, annual GDP growth
๏ Bank-specific factors: bank size (log of total assets), ratio of non-interest income on
total income, ratio of fixed assets to total assets, share of loans in total assets,
liquidity ratio
๏ง Estimators: Fixed effects (FE) + 2SLS: three instrumental variables (1st lag market
power proxy, and two variables proxying cost inefficiency, the ratio of overhead
expenses to total assets and the cost-to-income ratio)
๏ง U-shape test and conf. interval for the turning point (Lind and Mehlum, 2010) 18
23. Robustness checks
๏ง Two additional proxies for bank risk:
๏ Z-score measure based on the return on equity (Soedarmono et al., 2011)
๏ Impaired loans (% gross loans)
๏ง Three alternative measures of the Lerner index:
๏ 3-year moving average to smooth cyclical fluctuations of the Lerner index: market
power not expected to change dramatically at the short-run
๏ Funding costs not included in the translog cost function (two-input cost function)
to estimate the marginal cost: โcleanโ proxy for pricing power that is not distorted
by deposit market power (Maudos & de Guevara, 2007; Turk-Ariss, 2010)
๏ Left-censored Lerner index
๏ง Robust regression approach
๏ง Lerner index and market share included in the same regression
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24. Conclusion and policy implications
๏ง Our study aims to empirically investigate the potential nonlinear
relationship between bank competition and financial (in)stability in the
case of Baltic countries
๏ง Alternative proxies for banking competition considered, and two
different measures of bank โrisk-takingโ
โ in line with the traditional view, we find a positive relationship between
competition and bank risk
โ butโฆ this relationship is non-linear
๏ง In particular, we observe that bank market power significantly
influences bank soundness (i.e. Z-score), while bank market share is a
significant driver of bank risk-taking in terms of credit activity
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