Discussion paper

DP9162 Liquidity Coinsurance and Bank Capital

Banks can deal with their liquidity risk by holding liquid assets (self-insurance), by participating in the interbank market (coinsurance), or by using flexible financing instruments, such as bank capital (risk-sharing). We study how the access to an interbank market affects
banks' incentive to hold capital. A general insight is that from a risk-sharing perspective it is optimal to postpone payouts to capital investors when a bank is hit by a liquidity shock that it cannot coinsure on the interbank market. This mechanism produces a negative relationship between interbank activity and bank capital. We provide empirical support for this prediction in a large sample of U.S. commercial banks, as well as in a sample of European and Japanese commercial banks.

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Citation

Lóránth, G (2012), ‘DP9162 Liquidity Coinsurance and Bank Capital‘, CEPR Discussion Paper No. 9162. CEPR Press, Paris & London. https://cepr.org/publications/dp9162