Volume 13, Issue 4 December 2017

Predicting Vulnerabilities in the EU Banking Sector: The Role of Global and Domestic Factors

Abstract

We estimate a multivariate early-warning model to assess the usefulness of private credit and other macrofinancial variables in predicting banking-sector vulnerabilities. Using data for twenty-three European countries, we find that global variables and in particular global credit growth are strong predictors of domestic vulnerabilities. Moreover, domestic credit variables also have high predictive power but should be complemented by other macrofinancial indicators such as house price growth and banking-sector capitalization that play a salient role in predicting vulnerabilities. Our findings can inform decisions on the activation of macroprudential policy measures and suggest that policymakers should take a broad approach in the analytical models that support risk identification and calibration of tools.

Authors

  • Markus Behn
  • Carsten Detken
  • Tuomas Peltonen
  • Willem Schudel

JEL codes

  • G01
  • G21
  • G28

Other papers in this issue

Thais Lærkholm Jensen and David Lando and Mamdouh Medhat

Apostolis Philippopoulos and Petros Varthalitis and Vanghelis Vassilatos

Antonello D'Agostino and Michele Modugno and Chiara Osbat

Klaus Abbink and Ronald Bosman and Ronald Heijmans and Frans van Winden