Le, Chau and Dickinson, David G. (2016) The Systemic Risk of Cross-Border Banking: Evidence from the Sudden Stop and Interbank Stress Contagion in East Asia. Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 52 (1). pp. 237-254. ISSN 1540-496X
Full content URL: http://doi.org/10.1080/1540496X.2015.1021643
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The Systemic Risk of Cross Border Banking Evidence from the Sudden Stop and Interbank Stress Contagion in East Asia.pdf - Whole Document Restricted to Repository staff only 637kB |
Item Type: | Article |
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Item Status: | Live Archive |
Abstract
This article investigates the systemic risk of cross-border banking in East Asia. Using the recursive bivariate probit model, we jointly test the probability of the sudden stop in international lending and its simultaneous effect on the host countries’ interbank markets. The empirical results suggest that the risk of a sudden stop is associated with global liquidity shock; host country productivity shock; and the common lender contagion effect. This facilitates the transmission of interbank stress from advanced economies to emerging markets. However, the tension is mitigated by the “flight-home effect” caused by domestic investors’ repatriation. The sudden stop is more likely to occur in countries with lower financial openness but higher financial risk. Lending flows to the banking sectors are more sensitive to shocks than the flows to the non-bank private sectors.
Keywords: | cross-border banking, international lending, systemic risk, sudden stop, interbank market tension |
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Subjects: | N Business and Administrative studies > N310 Banking N Business and Administrative studies > N341 Financial Risk N Business and Administrative studies > N300 Finance |
Divisions: | Lincoln International Business School |
ID Code: | 36927 |
Deposited On: | 09 Sep 2019 09:21 |
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