A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Have Too-Big-to-Fail Expectations Diminished? Evidence from the European Overnight Interbank Market




AuthorsTölö Eero, Jokivuolle Esa, Viren Matti

PublisherSpringer

Publication year2021

JournalJournal of Financial Services Research

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF FINANCIAL SERVICES RESEARCH

Journal acronymJ FINANC SERV RES

Volume60

First page 25

Last page54

Number of pages30

ISSN0920-8550

eISSN1573-0735

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s10693-021-00351-2


Abstract
Using the Eurosystem's proprietary interbank loan data from June 2008-June 2020, we show that larger European banks have had a lower cost of overnight borrowing than smaller banks. The size premium remains significant after controlling for a large set of other factors but has decreased over time, especially in countries that were stricken by the Sovereign Debt Crisis. A difference-in-differences analysis suggests that the decline in the size premium is related to the actual bail-in events, not to the implementation dates of the Bank Recovery and Resolution Directive as such. This finding is robust to controlling for the effect of the ECB's long-term refinancing operations. Overall, the results suggest that the regulatory move towards bail-in rather than bailout policies to deal with financially distressed banks has reduced the too-big-to-fail expectations concerning large banks.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 12:15