Bank Lending and Interest- Rate Derivatives

  • Zhao F
  • Moser J
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Abstract

Using data that cover a full business cycle, this paper documents a direct relationship between interest-rate derivative usage by U.S. banks and growth in their commercial and industrial (C&I) loan portfolios. This positive association holds for interest-rate options contracts, forward contracts, and futures contracts. This result is consistent with the implication of Diamond’s model (1984) that predicts that a bank’s use of derivatives permits better management of systematic risk exposure, thereby lowering the cost of delegated monitoring, and generates net benefits of intermediation services. The paper’s sample consists of all FDIC-insured commercial banks between 1996 and 2004 having total assets greater than $300 million and having a portfolio of C&I loans. The main results remain after a robustness check.

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APA

Zhao, F., & Moser, J. (2017). Bank Lending and Interest- Rate Derivatives. International Journal of Financial Research, 8(4), 23. https://doi.org/10.5430/ijfr.v8n4p23

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