COVID-19与金融机构稳定:东加勒比货币联盟的压力测试

IF 2 Q2 BUSINESS, FINANCE Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance Pub Date : 2023-05-05 DOI:10.1108/jfrc-10-2022-0123
Dalano DaSouza, Kareem Martin, Peter Abraham Jr, Godson Davis
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的本文旨在通过压力测试模拟不良贷款增加对东加勒比货币联盟(ECCU)银行和信用合作社资本充足率、利息收入和公司价值的潜在影响。设计/方法/方法在个人金融中介机构(FI)、部门贷款组合组成、个别成员国和ECCU层面部署了财务压力测试模型,以调查不良贷款冲击对FI稳定性的影响。研究结果作者发现,与信用合作社相比,冲击对银行资本充足率的影响较小,但银行的公司价值更容易受到不良贷款增加的影响。对不良贷款冲击的利息收入反应与旅游业的信贷敞口有关,旅游业也比其他经济部门更能降低资本充足率。调查结果显示,尽管新冠肺炎疫情导致不良贷款有所增加,但包括贷款偿还暂停和重组在内的支持性政策显著减轻了影响的程度,关于2020年前金融机构利润分配和去杠杆化的指导意见原创/价值该论文是首批在加勒比地区使用压力测试应对新冠肺炎疫情的论文之一。过去在该地区使用压力测试模型的研究没有明确调查信贷冲击对风险加权资产或利息收入的影响,也没有将信用合作社纳入模型。研究结果为其他发展中经济体的金融机构,特别是那些拥有可比金融和经济结构的金融机构提供了新的评估和启示。
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COVID-19 and financial institution stability: stress testing the Eastern Caribbean currency union
Purpose This paper aims to simulate the potential impact of increasing non-performing loans (NPLs) on capital adequacy, interest income and firm value of banks and credit unions in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU) using stress tests. Design/methodology/approach A financial stress testing model was deployed at the levels of individual financial intermediary (FI), sectoral loan portfolio composition, individual member country, and the ECCU collectively, to investigate the impact of NPL shocks on FI stability. Findings The authors find that shocks impact the capital adequacy of banks less than that of credit unions, but that firm value of banks is more susceptible to increases in NPLs. Interest income responses to NPL shocks were linked to credit exposure from the tourism sector, which also reduced capital adequacy more than other economic sectors. Findings show that while the COVID-19 pandemic occasioned some increase in NPLs, the magnitude of impact was significantly mitigated by pro-stability policies including loan repayment moratoria and restructuring, guidance on the distribution of profits and deleveraging by financial institutions leading up to 2020. Originality/value The paper is among the first to use stress testing on the Caribbean in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Past studies which have used stress test models in the region have not explicitly investigated the impact of credit shocks on risk-weighted assets or interest income as done herein, nor do they include credit unions in the modeling. The results offer novel evaluations as well as implications for FIs in other developing economies, especially those that share a comparable financial and economic architecture.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Since its inception in 1992, the Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance has provided an authoritative and scholarly platform for international research in financial regulation and compliance. The journal is at the intersection between academic research and the practice of financial regulation, with distinguished past authors including senior regulators, central bankers and even a Prime Minister. Financial crises, predatory practices, internationalization and integration, the increased use of technology and financial innovation are just some of the changes and issues that contemporary financial regulators are grappling with. These challenges and changes hold profound implications for regulation and compliance, ranging from macro-prudential to consumer protection policies. The journal seeks to illuminate these issues, is pluralistic in approach and invites scholarly papers using any appropriate methodology. Accordingly, the journal welcomes submissions from finance, law, economics and interdisciplinary perspectives. A broad spectrum of research styles, sources of information and topics (e.g. banking laws and regulations, stock market and cross border regulation, risk assessment and management, training and competence, competition law, case law, compliance and regulatory updates and guidelines) are appropriate. All submissions are double-blind refereed and judged on academic rigour, originality, quality of exposition and relevance to policy and practice. Once accepted, individual articles are typeset, proofed and published online as the Version of Record within an average of 32 days, so that articles can be downloaded and cited earlier.
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