Cross border banking: pull-push effects of parent banks on subsidiaries’ credit extensions

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Series Details No.7, December 2016
Publication Date 04/12/2016
ISSN 1830-3676
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The Economics Department of the European Investment Bank provides economic analysis and studies to support EIB operations and to help define its positioning, strategy and policy. The Economics Department is a team of 25 economists and staff, under the responsibility of the Director Debora Revoltella.

EIB Working papers allow guest authors to explore particular topics in depth, often relating to the annual EIB Economics Conference publication.

This study contributes to the analysis of cross border banking behavior in CESEE (Central Eastern and South Eastern Europe). It detects potential transmission channels from parent to subsidiary banks based on a newly constructed database (323 banks operating in the region and 84 parent banks over the period 2000-2014), which allows for the identification of ultimate ownership over time.

On the whole, we find that subsidiary banks provide an extra boost to credit growth at the domestic level. However we detect that domestic and subsidiary banks contracted credit similarly after the financial crisis. Moreover, subsidiaries’ ability to extend credit is dependent on home country macroeconomic and financial conditions as well as parent banks’ characteristics such as asset quality.

Finally, an excessive credit expansions coupled with reductions of capital ratios at the parent bank level jeopardizes subsidiaries' lending capacity. Our findings call for home and host actors to continue to foster cross-border coordination and dialogue.

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EIB: Publications: Economic Research: Working Papers http://www.eib.org/infocentre/publications/all/economic-research/working-papers.htm
EIB: Publications: Economic Research http://www.eib.org/infocentre/publications/all/economic-research/index.htm

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