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Hilton Atlanta, 212-213-214
Hosted By:
American Finance Association
Role of Regulators and Supervisors in Regulation
Paper Session
Sunday, Jan. 6, 2019 10:15 AM - 12:15 PM
- Chair: Amit Seru, Stanford University
Seeking My Supervisor: Evidence from the Centralization of Banking Supervision in Europe
Abstract
We study the behavior of banks around the announcement of the centralization of banking supervision in Europe. On December 2012, European authorities announced that within a year the supervisory responsibilities for mid-size and large banks would be transferred to the European Central Bank. We document that following the announcement banks around the size threshold shrank their assets by contracting their credit book and liquid assets. Then, we use the size threshold to measure the effects of central supervision on banks. After accounting for banks’ strategic behavior, the effects of central supervision are materially larger than previously-thought.The Value of Regulators as Monitors: Evidence from Banking
Abstract
While conventional wisdom suggests that regulation is costly for shareholders, agency theory predicts a positive role of regulation in reducing shareholder monitoring costs. I study this trade-off by exploiting an unexpected decrease in small-bank reporting requirements to the Federal Reserve using a regression discontinuity design. Using the reporting change as a negative shock to regulatory monitoring by the Fed, I find that reduced Fed monitoring leads to a 1% loss in Tobin's q and a 7% loss in equity market-to-book. I show that these losses come from increased internal monitoring expenditures, managerial rents, and monitoring conflicts between shareholders. My results are among the first to quantify the shareholder value of monitoring.Discussant(s)
David Lucca
,
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Laura Blattner
,
Harvard University
Mark Egan
,
Harvard University
JEL Classifications
- G2 - Financial Institutions and Services