Discussion paper

DP12011 Monetary Policy at Work: Security and Credit Application Registers Evidence

Monetary policy transmission may be impaired if banks rebalance their portfolios towards securities to e.g. risk-shift or hoard liquidity. We identify the bank lending and risk-taking channels by exploiting – Italian’s unique – credit and security registers. In crisis times, with higher ECB liquidity, less capitalized banks react by increasing securities over credit supply, inducing worse firm-level real effects. However, they buy securities with lower yields and haircuts, thus reaching-for-safety and liquidity. Differently, in pre-crisis time, securities do not crowd-out credit supply. The substitution from lending to securities in crisis times helps less capitalized banks to repair their balance-sheets and then restart credit supply with a one year-lag.

£6.00
Citation

Polo, A, J Peydro and E Sette (2017), ‘DP12011 Monetary Policy at Work: Security and Credit Application Registers Evidence‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 12011. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp12011