Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 24th Apr 2024, 05:21:15pm CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
FI 04: Financial Intermediation Linkages
Time:
Thursday, 17/Aug/2023:
1:30pm - 3:00pm

Session Chair: Patrick Augustin, McGill University
Location: 2A-00 (floor 2)


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Presentations
ID: 384

Intermediary-Based Loan Pricing

Pierre Mabille1, Olivier Wang2

1INSEAD, France; 2NYU Stern, USA

Discussant: Vadim Elenev (Johns Hopkins University)

How do shocks to banks transmit to loan terms faced by borrowers on different loan markets? In our model of multidimensional contracting between heterogeneous risky borrowers and intermediaries with limited lending capacity, loan terms depend on loan demand elasticities and default elasticities. These two sufficient statistics predict how the cross-section of loan terms and bank risk react to changes in capital and funding costs. Using empirical estimates, they explain the heterogeneous transmission of shocks across loan markets and borrower risk categories. Accounting for non-price loan terms is important for dynamics because their endogenous response can increase the persistence of credit crises.

EFA2023_384_FI 04_1_Intermediary-Based Loan Pricing.pdf


ID: 2141

Trade disruptions and cross-border banking integration

Allen N. Berger4,5,6, Freddy Pinzon-Puerto2,3, Peter Karlström2, Matias Ossandon Busch1,2

1Halle Institute for Economic Research (IWH); 2CEMLA; 3Universidad del Rosario; 4University of South Carolina; 5Wharton Financial Institutions Center; 6European Banking Center

Discussant: Diane Pierret (University of Luxembourg)

Does global financial market integration alleviate or exacerbate the transmission of major disruptions in global trade? Using novel data linking regional banking markets with import flows in Brazil, we document that the presence of globally-active banks at the municipal level is associated with a weakened transmission of trade disruptions to imports. For identification, we exploit municipalities’ exposure to pandemic-related lockdowns in their trade partners abroad, controlling for local imports demand. The supply-driven and robust results suggest that global banks compensate for the effect of lockdowns by providing wider access to US dollar funding as well as by reducing cross-border information frictions. This evidence highlights a strong link between global financial integration and the resilience of real-sector integration.

EFA2023_2141_FI 04_2_Trade disruptions and cross-border banking integration.pdf


ID: 886

Financial Integration through Production Networks

Indraneel Chakraborty2, Saketh Chityala3, Apoorva Javadekar1, Rodney Ramcharan4

1Indian School of Business, India; 2University of Miami; 3University of Colorado Boulder; 4University of Southern California

Discussant: Bernard Herskovic (UCLA Anderson School of Management)

This paper studies how interconnected plants distribute additional liquidity from banks

through the supply chain. Using a spatially segmented bank branch expansion rule in India, we find that direct exposure to additional bank credit allows plants to hold less precautionary cash and increase bank debt. Directly exposed plants pass through liquidity to customer plants as short-term trade credit. This liquidity spillover improves sales, employment, and productivity at customer plants. Structural estimation yields an average credit multiplier of 1.48. Our results underscore the credit multiplier effects of production networks and the importance of financial integration among firms with limited banking services.

EFA2023_886_FI 04_3_Financial Integration through Production Networks.pdf


 
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