| Working
Paper 93-2
by Joe Peek and Eric Rosengren
Revised article published in Journal of Banking
and Finance 19, no. 1 (June 1995) 769-792.
This study investigates the direct link between regulatory
enforcement actions and the shrinkage of bank loans
to sectors likely to be bank dependent. We focus on
New England because that region has experienced both
the widespread application of formal regulatory actions
and substantial reductions in new lending by banks.
Controlling for weakness in loan demand, previous studies
have been able to attribute part of this bank shrinkage
to
loan supply, with the degree of a bank’s shrinkage related to its capital-to-asset
ratio. In this study, we further partition the shrinkage due to loan supply into
the component due to explicit regulatory enforcement actions and that due to
a voluntary response by bank management to low capital-to-asset ratios. We find
that banks with formal actions shrink at a significantly faster rate than those
without, even after controlling for differences in capital-to-asset ratios. Furthermore,
much of the reduced lending has been in loan categories containing primarily
bank-dependent borrowers, indicating that the capital crunch has resulted in
a credit crunch.
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