Conference Agenda

Overview and details of the sessions of this conference. Please select a date or location to show only sessions at that day or location. Please select a single session for detailed view (with abstracts and downloads if available).

Please note that all times are shown in the time zone of the conference. The current conference time is: 13th May 2024, 09:35:54pm EDT

 
 
Session Overview
Session
Track M4-3: Monetary Policy and Banking Supervision
Time:
Monday, 20/May/2024:
10:30am - 11:15am

Session Chair: Lu Liu, University of Pennsylvania
Discussant: Naz Koont, Columbia University
Location: Room 548


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Presentations

Diverging Paths in Banks’ Business Models: New Facts and Macro Implications

Jinyuan Zhang, Shohini Kundu, Tyler Muir

UCLA

We document the emergence of two distinct types of banks over the past decade: high rate banks which provide deposit rates in line with market interest rates, and low rate banks whose deposits are now even less sensitive to market rates. While the aggregate sensitivity of deposit rates to market interest rates has remained similar, the distribution in deposit rates among large banks is now bimodal. High rate banks operate primarily online with very few physical branches, hold short maturity assets, and earn a lending spread by taking credit risk. In contrast, low rate banks operate far more physical branches, offer deposit rates that are even less sensitive to interest rates than before, and they primarily engage in maturity transformation in that they hold longer duration interest rate sensitive assets, but take less credit risk. Deposits shift substantially towards high rate banks when interest rates rise and reduce the ability of the banking sector to engage in maturity transformation. Tracking aggregate deposit flows from the banking sector thus misses a substantial amount of flows within the banking sector. We argue that the distribution of deposits across high and low rate banks is important to understand the transmission of monetary policy, beyond tracking aggregate deposits in the banking sector. Our evidence is consistent with technological changes in banking that lead to the emergence of high rate banks. In response, traditional banks lower rates through the retention of “stickier” depositors.


Zhang-Diverging Paths in Banks’ Business Models-1010.pdf


 
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