银行信贷风险与流动性之间的关系:新冠肺炎疫情重要吗?银行业寡头垄断的案例

M. R. Magwedere, G. Marozva
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引用次数: 2

摘要

摘要背景:新冠肺炎疫情如何扰乱金融市场环境,影响银行作为信贷渠道的实力,以及市场流动性与信贷风险之间的关系,引发了激烈的争论。在新冠肺炎金融危机中,信贷风险和流动性风险对银行的经营和生存影响很大,不容忽视。目的:在2019冠状病毒病的背景下,研究了银行特定因素和外部因素,以确定南非注册银行的流动性与信用风险之间的关系。研究方法:使用面板数据方法:固定效应和系统GMM检查了2018年至2021年13家南非注册银行的季度面板数据。结果:在对2019Q1至2021Q1期间的分析中,结果表明流动性与信用风险之间存在正相关关系,发现COVID-19大流行对关联有影响,因为COVID-19虚拟变量显着。此外,研究结果显示,在疫情流行期间,流动性随着COVID-19病例的增加而恶化。在2019冠状病毒病前,流动性改善,信贷风险降低。然而,在COVID-19期间,流动性不受信用风险的影响。这一结果与新冠疫情前的情况相反,因为政府支持家庭和非金融企业的干预措施本可以改变流动性和贷款损失的动态。新颖性:大流行带来了一系列新的应对措施,其持久影响尚不确定。这篇文章的独创性在于调查的性质,即在COVID-19冲击/大流行背景下流动性与信贷风险之间的关系。这是一项独特的研究,因为研究表明,政策制定者和研究人员都应特别关注金融体系内外冲击的脆弱性,因为发现COVID-19会严重影响流动性和信贷风险。由于大流行仍然活跃,有必要进一步研究从长远来看的协整和因果关系。
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The Nexus Between Bank Credit Risk and Liquidity: Does the Covid-19 Pandemic Matter? A Case of the Oligopolistic Banking Sector
Abstract Background: There is a raging debate on how the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the financial market environments, affected the banks’ strength as the credit channel, and the nexus between market liquidity and credit risk. During the COVID-19 crisis in the banking sector, credit risk and liquidity risk cannot be ignored as they have a considerable bearing on the performance and survival of banks. Purpose: Within the context of COVID-19, bank-specific and external factors were examined to determine the relationship between liquidity and the credit risk of South African domiciled banks. Research methodology: Quarterly panel data from 13 South African domiciled banks from 2018 to 2021 were examined using panel data methodologies: fixed effects and the system GMM. Results: In an analysis of the period between 2019Q1 to 2021Q1 the results suggest a positive relationship between liquidity and credit risk, the COVID-19 pandemic was found to have an implication on the nexus as the COVID-19 dummy variable was significant. Also, the results show that liquidity deteriorated with an increase in COVID-19 cases during the pandemic period. During the Pre-COVID-19 liquidity improved with a decrease in credit risk. Nevertheless, during COVID-19 liquidity was not influenced by credit risk. The results are contrary to the pre-COVID-19 period as the government interventions to support households and non-financial firms could have changed the dynamics of liquidity and loan losses. Novelty: The pandemic has ushered in a novel set of responses whose lasting impacts are not yet certain. The originality of the article lies in the nature of the investigation, where the nexus between liquidity and credit risk under the COVID-19 shocks/pandemic set-up. This is a unique study as the study revealed that policymakers and researchers alike should pay particular attention to the vulnerabilities to shocks from within and outside of the financial system as COVID-19 was found to significantly affect liquidity and credit risk. Since the pandemic is still active, further research is necessary to examine the cointegrating and causal relationship in the long run.
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