This article outlines the reasons that banks and other financial institutions engage in regulatory capital arbitrage and the techniques they use to do so. Regulatory capital arbitrage describes transactions and structures that firms use to lower the effective regulatory “tax rate” of regulatory capital requirements. To the extent that these regulations force financial institutions to internalize the externalities created by their potential insolvency (including systemic risk externalities), the incentives to engage in regulatory capital arbitrage will persist. Financial institutions employ a range of complex transactions and structures, including securitization, to engage in regulatory capital arbitrage. The article briefly sketches how cap...
This paper is a contribution to the debate on “how to regulate banks' dividend payout behaviour”, a ...
Banks are subject to capital requirements because their privately optimal leverage is higher than th...
The orthodox assumption in the banking literature is that capital requirements are a binding constra...
This article outlines the reasons that banks and other financial institutions engage in regulatory c...
In proposing a top-down system of capital regulation, this Article shares a precautionary attitude t...
This paper examines the role of capital in financial institutions. As the introductory article to a ...
The motivation of this article is to induce the bank capital management solution for banks and regu...
Improving commercial bank capital requirements has been a top priority on the regulatory agenda sinc...
To calculate regulatory capital ratios, banks have to apply adjustments to book equity. These regula...
This paper studies the link between bank capital regulation, bank loan contracts and the allocation ...
In order to promote financial stability, regulatory authorities pay a lot of attention in setting mi...
We study how banks use "regulatory adjustments" to inflate their regulatory capital ratios and wheth...
This article considers two fundamental issues in the design of bank capital regulation—the choice of...
The capital regulation of financial institutions, the role of ratings and the tension field between ...
The conventional story is that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act broke down the Glass-Steagall Act’s wall s...
This paper is a contribution to the debate on “how to regulate banks' dividend payout behaviour”, a ...
Banks are subject to capital requirements because their privately optimal leverage is higher than th...
The orthodox assumption in the banking literature is that capital requirements are a binding constra...
This article outlines the reasons that banks and other financial institutions engage in regulatory c...
In proposing a top-down system of capital regulation, this Article shares a precautionary attitude t...
This paper examines the role of capital in financial institutions. As the introductory article to a ...
The motivation of this article is to induce the bank capital management solution for banks and regu...
Improving commercial bank capital requirements has been a top priority on the regulatory agenda sinc...
To calculate regulatory capital ratios, banks have to apply adjustments to book equity. These regula...
This paper studies the link between bank capital regulation, bank loan contracts and the allocation ...
In order to promote financial stability, regulatory authorities pay a lot of attention in setting mi...
We study how banks use "regulatory adjustments" to inflate their regulatory capital ratios and wheth...
This article considers two fundamental issues in the design of bank capital regulation—the choice of...
The capital regulation of financial institutions, the role of ratings and the tension field between ...
The conventional story is that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act broke down the Glass-Steagall Act’s wall s...
This paper is a contribution to the debate on “how to regulate banks' dividend payout behaviour”, a ...
Banks are subject to capital requirements because their privately optimal leverage is higher than th...
The orthodox assumption in the banking literature is that capital requirements are a binding constra...