Search results for "capital adequacy"

showing 10 items of 11 documents

SOCIAL CAPITAL AND BANK PERFORMANCE: AN INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON FOR OECD COUNTRIES

2008

Over the last few years the literature on social capital and bank efficiency analysis has expanded rapidly. We merge them by analysing how social capital affects bank efficiency in OECD countries. We use activity analysis techniques to measure efficiency, and social capital, which is related to the concept of generalized trust, is considered an environmental variable. Results suggest that the effect of social capital is more relevant for those financial institutions operating in low-social-capital environments. In these cases, inefficiencies are biased upwards, and controlling for social capital enables these banks to move up in the efficiency rankings.

ComputingMilieux_GENERALMacroeconomicsEconomics and EconometricsCapital adequacy ratioFinancial capitalCost of capitalEconomic capitalCapital employedCapital requirementEconomicsMonetary economicsFixed capitalCapital formationThe Manchester School
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Challenges and trends of debt capital raising by SME: experience of the Baltic States

2012

The paper analyses topical issue of debt capital raising by small and medium-sized enterprises in the Baltic States under changing economic conditions. Raise of debt capital is crucial for SME, as financing and its availability is a critical precondition for the survival and development of enterprises. The paper gives an assessment of recent developments in debt capital raising in the Baltic States, identifies the most important challenges and problems, as well as the mistakes made. Based on the analysis made, authors provide solutions for debt capital raising challenges and possible changes in corporate finance of enterprises.

Corporate financeFinanceCapital adequacy ratioFinancial capitalbusiness.industryFinancial systemGeneral MedicineBusinessInternal debtDebt levels and flowsRaising (linguistics)Debt capitalAmerican J. of Finance and Accounting
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Market risk reporting in banking overcoming the limits of IAS/IFRS and Basel regulation

2017

Market risk in banking activity is becoming a more severe issue day by day for several reasons. Analysing it from a regulatory point of view is fundamental for assessing whether or not banks are in the conditions of disclosing a satisfactory degree of information about their market risk exposure. The two regulatory constraints to consider are International Accounting Standards (IAS/IFRS) and the Basel regulation. Both of them seem to put too many constraints on banks. They turn out to be over-over-regulated. Even if regulators put many efforts in trying to provide a useful regulation for banks' risk reporting and capital adequacy, we are still far from a good regulation. The regulatory proc…

MarketingPharmacologyOrganizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementMarket risk reporting Basel regulation IAS/IFRS International Accounting Standards risk management in banking pillars Basel regulation supervisory review process capital requirements market discipline risk disclosure capital buffer financial instruments disclosureSettore SECS-P/11 - Economia Degli Intermediari FinanziariProcess (engineering)business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectStrategy and ManagementPharmaceutical ScienceAccountingMarket disciplineDiscount pointsCapital adequacy ratioMarket riskRisk-weighted assetDrug DiscoveryCapital requirementFunction (engineering)businessmedia_commonInternational Journal of Financial Innovation in Banking
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Basel II and bank lending to emerging markets: Evidence from the German banking sector

2007

Abstract This paper investigates whether the new Basel Accord will induce a change in bank lending to emerging markets using a comprehensive new data set on German banks’ foreign exposure. We test two interlinked hypotheses on the conditions under which the change in the regulatory capital would leave lending flows unaffected. This would be the case if (i) the new regulatory capital requirement remains below the economic capital and (ii) banks’ economic capital to emerging markets already adequately reflects risk. On both accounts the evidence indicates that the new Basel Accord should have a limited effect on lending to emerging markets.

Economics and EconometricsCapital adequacy ratioBasel IFinancial capitalEconomic policyEconomic capitalRisk-adjusted return on capitalRisk-weighted assetEconomicsCapital requirementFinancial systemBasel IIFinanceJournal of Banking & Finance
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Capital Regulation and Italian Banking System: Theory and Empirical Evidence

2012

This paper aims to investigate the role of capital for banking institutions and provide an empirical analysis on large Italian banks’ capital adequacy. The paper is organized as follows. The first section introduces to the issue of the paper. The second section explains why the capital is important in the economics of banking firm. The paper reviews the theoretical literature on bank capital regulation. Empirical results on large Italian banks are reported on the third section. The final section contains summary and concluding comments.

Capital adequacy ratioSettore SECS-P/11 - Economia Degli Intermediari FinanziariBank capitalSection (archaeology)Capital (economics)EconomicsFinancial systemBank capital Financial regulation Basel Accord Capital adequacy Financial stability.Empirical evidenceInternational Journal of Economics and Finance
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Transition aux normes comptables IAS/IFRS, discipline de marché et adéquation des fonds propres aux risques dans l'industrie bancaire européenne

2011

This study tests the hypothesis that the mandatory IAS/IFRS adoption leads banks to operate with a higher capital buffer, due to a strengthening of the efficacy of market discipline. For a sample of European banks, we find evidence consistent with the formulated hypothesis. The results contribute to extend to banks the flourishing empirical literature dealing with the economic consequences of the IAS/IFRS mandatory adoption and tend to dampen the recent critics expressed against the use of the IAS/IFRS accounting standards in the banking industry.

capital adequacyeconomic consequencesbanques[SHS.GESTION]Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationIAS/IFRS transitionIAS/IFRS transitioneconomic consequencesbankscapital adequacyTransition aux normes IAS/IFRSeffets économiquesbanquesadéquation des fonds propres[ SHS.GESTION ] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administration[SHS.GESTION] Humanities and Social Sciences/Business administrationbankseffets économiquesTransition aux normes IAS/IFRSadéquation des fonds propres
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Predicting failure in the U.S. banking sector: An extreme gradient boosting approach

2019

Abstract Banks play a central role in developed economies. Consequently, systemic banking crises destabilize financial markets and hamper global economic growth. In this study, extreme gradient boosting was used to predict bank failure in the U.S. banking sector. Key variables were identified to anticipate and prevent bank defaults. The data, which spanned the period 2001 to 2015, consisted of annual series of 30 financial ratios for 156 U.S. national commercial banks. Identifying leading indicators of bank failure is vital to help regulators and bank managers act swiftly before distressed financial institutions reach the point of no return. The findings indicate that lower values for retai…

Economics and Econometrics050208 financeReturn on assetsRetained earnings05 social sciencesFinancial marketEquity (finance)Financial ratioFinancial systemCapital adequacy ratio0502 economics and businessDefaultBusiness050207 economicsBank failurehealth care economics and organizationsFinanceInternational Review of Economics & Finance
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Entrepreneurship insolvency risk management: a case of Latvia

2011

Financial crisis and its consequences are visible in the capital adequacy of many commercial banks, which indicates that the approach banks took to assess credit risk was not sufficiently sophisticated. This article discusses practical methods of insolvency risk modelling for enterprises. In this paper, the authors analysed the accuracy of ten models developed by foreign authors to assess insolvency risk, which were validated on the database of Latvian companies. The authors have shown that models developed on historical data for foreign companies are less accurate than the model developed on the basis of financial indicators of Latvian companies. The authors developed a three-factor model …

Economics and EconometricsEntrepreneurshipInsolvencyActuarial sciencebusiness.industryLatvianlanguage.human_languageProbability of defaultCapital adequacy ratioAccountingFinancial crisislanguageBusinessFinanceRisk managementCredit riskInternational Journal of Banking, Accounting and Finance
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The Risk-Relevance of Accounting Data: Evidence from the Spanish Stock Market

2006

This paper analyses the relevance of accounting fundamentals to inform about equity risk as measured by the cost of equity capital. Assuming the latter is a summary measure of how investors make decisions regarding the allocation of resources, the strength of the association between the cost of capital and the accounting-based measures of risk indicates how important these measures are for market participants when making economic decisions. To infer the cost of equity capital, we use the O'Hanlon and Steele's method, which is based on the residual income valuation model. Moreover, we use the insights from this model to provide a theoretical underpinning for the choice of the accounting vari…

Equity riskActuarial scienceFinancial economicsbusiness.industryEconomic capitalFinancial risk managementAccountingCapital adequacy ratioCost of capitalAccountingEconomicsBusiness Management and Accounting (miscellaneous)businessReturn on capitalFinanceEquity capital marketsResidual income valuationJournal of International Financial Management and Accounting
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The impact of quantitative easing on UK bank lending: Why banks do not lend to businesses?

2021

Abstract The growing proportion of UK bank lending to the financial sector reached a peak in 2007 just before the onset of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). This marks a trend in the dwindling amount of bank lending to private sector non-financial corporations (PNFCs), which was exacerbated with the Great Recession. Many central banks aimed to revive bank lending with quantitative easing (QE) and unconventional monetary policy. We propose an agent based computational economics (ACE) model which combines the main factors in the economic environment of QE and Basel regulatory framework to analyse why UK banks do not prioritize lending to non-financial businesses. The lower bond yields caused…

/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2000/2002Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementEconomics and EconometricsRisk weighted assetsFinancial systemBasel IIGilt yieldsCapital adequacy requirementsMonetary policyQuantitative easing0502 economics and businessRisk-weighted assetCapital requirementbank lending [Quantitative easing]050207 economics/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/industry_innovation_and_infrastructure050208 financeBond05 social sciencesMonetary policySDG 8 - Decent Work and Economic GrowthQuantitative easing: bank lending/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/decent_work_and_economic_growthAgent-based modellingFinancial crisisSDG 9 - Industry Innovation and InfrastructureSmall and medium-sized enterprisesBusiness/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/1400/1407Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization
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