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The role of lender country factors in cross border bank lending
Institution:1. The Department of Economics and Finance, Brunel University London, Uxbridge, Middlesex UB8 3PH, UK;2. Centre for Macroeconomics, London School of Economics, London WC2A 2AE, UK;3. School of Business, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK
Abstract:This article considers the cross-border lending stock from 19 advanced countries to European countries using quarterly data for 1999–2016. An extended model based on home and host country characteristics conditioned on distance and mass primarily measured by GDP is used to explain the behaviour of cross-border lending stocks. We focus particularly on the competitive structure of domestic banking markets and on the role of EU integration using indicators from the New Industrial Economics literature. Our results suggest EU integration has had a large effect on cross-border lending, although this has been partly reversed after Euro debt crisis. This reversal probably arises more from the actions of home country bank regulators rather than from the rise in risk premia in host countries. We show that in general lender rather than borrower factors are more important, and that more concentrated or less competitive lender countries do more cross border lending, especially in less concentrated or more competitive borrowers. Our results are robust across a range of specifications.
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