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Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

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Page 1: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department

Croatian National Bank

Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis

Transmission

Page 2: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Goal of the paper

Explores the role of cross-border lending in crisis transmission.

Observes the impact of different forms and intensities of financial integration on the stability of capital flows during the crisis:

How did the bank involvement with the country impact on change in it’s lending during the crisis.

Page 3: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Main findings and conclusions

It’s important to build a relationship. The extent of cooperation with local banks positively

correlated with stability of lending. Having a subsidiary also helps.

IF YOU’RE GOING TO GLOBALIZE, DO IT TO THE FULL EXTENT!!! More integration is better than less integration.

Page 4: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Overall paper assessment

Topic hugely important in today’s world. Product of a long lasting research effort in

international banking. Quite an enjoyable reading. Impressive presentation:

Provides clear and concise description of research (and there is lot of it!!!).

Paper seems like an experienced conference attendee: Huge section on robustness issues.

Page 5: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Specific issues – data

Available data used close to full: Combines different data sources in a clever way.

However, DEALOGIC dataset not used to the full extent: Data aggregated by host countries.

Authors express reservations regarding BIS dataset: How well the two datasets correspond on a country-pair basis?

Several data definitions used for robustness, but all treat changes in small and large exposures alike: What would results look like if change in exposures is

observed (as % of host country banking assets, GDP, or some other scaling variable)? Change in loan stocks rather than loan flows? What if change in flows is scaled?

Page 6: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Fundamental issues (I)

Paper concentrates on cross-border lending as a major channel of influence in a globalized financial setting.

What about other possible channels of influence? E.g. reputation risks. Bad news about parent institutions may trigger run on

their subsidiaries.

Page 7: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Fundamental issues (II)

Consensus in macro-finance is getting more tolerant for some forms of capital controls: How to reconcile it with the findings of the paper?

The paper assumes away most of the demand effects: Focus is on the determinants of supply. What was the role of relationships in building macro

imbalances which fed into recessions? What if potential destabilizing effects of excessive

capital inflows due to closer relationship for some countries dominates it’s stabilizing effect during the crisis?

Page 8: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Fundamental issues (III)

Paper claims that information issues are at the center of the cross-border dynamics: Results do not follow thoroughly such approach. Lending to subsidiaries did not act as a buffer – it was

rather lending to the corporate sector! Was is because subsidiaries were able to meet

depressed loan demand, on because parents did not want to stand by their subsidiaries („functional distance“)?

Page 9: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Fundamental issues (IV)

What about the credit risk? Does direct cross-border lending to the corporate sector

magnify or diminish the frequency of default? If probability of default for cross-border loans is higher

than for domestic loans, switch to the corporate sector lending during the crisis may deteriorate overall loan quality.

Page 10: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Some remaining questions

Characteristics of banks in host countries play no role in the model: Admittedly, this is somewhat intertwined with the demand

effects, but not fully. Do the efforts to make banking systems in host countries

more resilient make sense from the standpoint of stabilizing capital inflows?

Or, would more resilient domestic banks make cross-border borrowing unnecessary when loan demand is depressed?

How to facilitate integration of the corporate sector in international banking networks? (know some ways, but would not unconditionally advise

those)

Page 11: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

A note on pricing of loans

Explanatory variables hardly explain any variation in loan pricing. Probably the consequence of omitting host country

specific variables – in this case country risk.

Page 12: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Some political economy

Was it advantageous for the home countries to restrict the volume of cross border lending? If it was advantageous, deeper integration may

eventually backfire. Would geographical proximity in the future be

more important than regulatory regime in home country?

The main lesson of the paper may be “chose your parents wisely”.

But can policymakers really choose between the parents?

Page 13: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

… and some suggestions for robustness check!

In analysis of financial stability (stress tests), it is customary to look at what’s beyond the 97th percentile, not to abstract from it. We may learn important things by looking at the worst

case scenarios – just look at stress testing exercises! Did any of the parent institutions cut loose some

of their subsidiaries during the crisis? To what effect?

What if some of parent banks collapses?

Page 14: Comments by Vedran Šošić Financial Stability Department Croatian National Bank Running for the Exit: International Banks and Crisis Transmission

Thank you!