Conference Agenda

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 10th May 2025, 01:34:13am CEST

 
 
Session Overview
Session
FI 06: Bank deposits
Time:
Thursday, 22/Aug/2024:
2:00pm - 3:30pm

Session Chair: Richard Stanton, U.C. Berkeley
Location: Reduta | Choir Room (via courtyard, floor 2)


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Presentations
ID: 734

Distortive Effects of Deposit Insurance: Administrative Evidence from Deposit and Loan Accounts

Dominic Cucic1, Rajkamal Iyer2, Sotirios Kokas3, Jose Luis Peydro2, Stefano Pica4

1Danmarks Nationalbank, Denmark; 2Imperial College London, CEPR; 3University of Essex; 4Bank of Italy

Discussant: Anya Kleymenova (Federal Reserve Board of Governors)

We explore how deposit insurance influences the allocation of deposits across banks, and in turn, the supply of credit to non-financial firms. Using administrative datasets from Denmark, including a deposit register covering the universe of retail deposit accounts, we study two reforms of the deposit insurance limit: first, during the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, which lifted the previous insurance limit to unlimited coverage; second, in 2010, when a European Union directive reinstated a limited coverage. We identify the impact of these reforms by analyzing changes in deposits: (1) across multiple banks by the same individual, and (2) at the bank level within a narrow window around the insurance threshold.

Our findings suggest that deposit reallocation resulting from deposit insurance benefits weaker banks that supply credit to less productive and riskier borrowers. This reallocation enables these banks to sustain elevated credit supply to worse borrowers.

EFA2024_734_FI 06_Distortive Effects of Deposit Insurance.pdf


ID: 1489

The Making of an Alert Depositors: How Payment and Interest Drive Deposit Dynamics

Xu Lu1, Yang Song1, Yao Zeng2

1University of Washington; 2University of Pennsylvania

Discussant: Sergey Sarkisyan (Ohio State University)

Are depositors sleepy? We challenge the traditional view of depositor sleepiness by introducing a new notion, depositor alertness, and providing supporting evidence with novel transaction-level data from over a million U.S. depositors. Depositors shift their deposits across bank accounts more actively when the payment technology linked to their accounts is more efficient, and when they face higher interest rate risk, which we define as the payment channel and the interest risk channel, respectively. Furthermore, depositors facing higher payment frictions are also more attuned to interest rate risk and shift their deposits more actively, which we define as the precautionary transfer channel. Depositor alertness is particularly pronounced during periods of rate hikes but diminishes when rates fall. We further provide causal evidence with newly constructed exogenous shocks to payment frictions for depositors. Specifically, the exposure to fast payment technologies reduces transfer frictions, which consequently heightens depositor alertness. Our findings have significant policy implications, highlighting the impact of depositor behavior on bank funding costs and risks, especially amidst rapid developments in new payment technologies and during times of monetary tightening.

EFA2024_1489_FI 06_The Making of an Alert Depositors.pdf


ID: 1817

Depositors and Negative Rates: Evidence from Transaction Data

Giuseppe Floccari1, Aggie Van Huisseling2, Jeannine Van Reeken2

1Banca d'Italia; 2ABN Amro Group Economics

Discussant: Robert L. McDonald (Northwestern University)

We study depositors’ reaction to negative rates on their checking and savings accounts, exploiting the fact that in 2020 most Dutch banks introduced negative rates on depositors’ balances above a time-varying threshold. Using the universe of transactions made by the clients of one of the largest banks, we document that depositors rationally reduced their excess balances between 30 and 60 per cent after the announcement of a new threshold. Initially, depositors mainly split their savings across multiple banks. As thresholds at all banks became lower and lower, depositors had to find other ways to avoid negative rates and increased financial investment through brokers and, partly, expenditure. The role of cash withdrawals is negligible.

EFA2024_1817_FI 06_Depositors and Negative Rates.pdf


 
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