Volume 13, Supplement 1 June 2017

International Banking and Cross-Border Effects of Regulation: Lessons from Portugal

Abstract

This paper offers a contribution to understand the crossborder effects of bank regulation using data on Portuguese banks. We find that the effect of foreign regulation on domestic credit growth depends on the type of regulation, on the channel of transmission, and on the legal form of the bank. Our results show that a tightening in foreign regulation leads to a decrease in the growth of domestic credit in the case of concentration ratios and capital requirements and has the opposite effect in the case of sector-specific capital buffers and reserve requirements in foreign currencies. We also find significant cross-border effects for the loan-to-value limits. In this case, cross-border spillovers work in different ways for domestic banks with international activity and for foreign banks: after a tightening in this instrument abroad, domestic banks decrease credit growth in Portugal while foreign banks increase it. Finally, we show that the cross-border effects of capital requirements work differently through branches and subsidiaries.

Authors

  • Diana Bonfim
  • Sónia Costa

JEL codes

  • F42
  • G21
  • G28

Other papers in this issue

Robert Hills and Dennis Reinhardt and Rhiannon Sowerbutts and Tomasz Wieladek

Jose M. Berrospide and Ricardo Correa and Linda S. Goldberg and Friederike Niepmann

Eugenio Cerutti and Ricardo Correa and Elisabetta Fiorentino and Esther Segalla

Matthieu Bussière and Julia Schmidt and Frédéric Vinas

Stefan Avdjiev and Cathérine Koch and Patrick McGuire and Goetz von Peter

Marianna Caccavaio and Luisa Carpinelli and Giuseppe Marinelli

Gabriel Levin-Konigsberg and Calixto López and Fabrizio López-Gallo and Serafín Martínez-Jaramillo

Yusuf Soner Başkaya and Mahir Binici and Turalay Kenç