Journal of Banking Regulation

</p><p>Turn to this journal for briefings, analyses and updates on all aspects of law and regulation affecting banking institutions. The depth of coverage is as impressive as the range. From a close-up investigation of Canadian financial regulations before and since the global financial crisis, to a profile of New Zealand's regulation and governance of its non-bank financial sector, to insight for international banks on compliance with anti-money-laundering legislation in Malaysia, the journal presents sophisticated analysis, and in-depth, expert advice.</p> <p>Published quarterly, the Journal of Banking Regulation offers detailed, insightful coverage of a wide range of relevant topics. Among the security issues addressed are deposit protection; banking supervision; enforcement decisions in banking regulation; corporate governance in banks; anti-money laundering legislation and regulations. International banking is also examined, with coverage of the Basel Accords, cross-border competition in banking services; international accounting standards; cross-border regulation; and cross-border bank insolvency. Management of funds is another area accorded extensive attention, including harmonization in banking markets; monetary integration; models for banking risk; credit risk supervision; capital adequacy; and systemic risk in banking operations.</p> <p>The Journal is an essential resource, benefiting a global audience of academics and researchers, central bankers, banking supervisors, financial regulators, compliance officers, risk management executives, policy makers, banking associations, attorneys who practice banking law, accountants and bank auditors both internal and external.

List of Papers (Total 112)

COVID-19: boon/disguise for Indian banks?

Non-performing assets (NPAs) have long been one of the most visible and frightening issues that have shaken the whole banking industry around the world. As a result, the study's primary goal is to elucidate the facts surrounding NPAs, which have harmed the Indian banking industry's soundness, profitability, and performance between 1998–1999 and 2019–2020. The future trends NPAs...

The impact of COVID-19 on digital-only banks: are they winners or losers?

The main objective of this paper is to determine the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the operations of digital-only banks. In order to achieve the main objective, two methods have been used. The first method is a strategic analysis, and the second method is a financial analysis of the digital-only banks covering two periods, that is, before the emergence of the COVID-19...

Decoupling VaR and regulatory capital: an examination of practitioners’ experience of market risk regulation

The central role of Value-at-Risk (VaR) within bank market risk regulation received significant criticism from financial media and government investigations into the events of the 2007–2009 financial crisis. Impending reform of bank market risk regulation under the Fundamental Review of the Trading Book (FRTB) demotes VaR, replacing it with a layered framework centred on expected...

The single supervisory mechanism and the European framework for the enforcement of competition law: a comparison between two models for economic governance in the EU

This paper proposes to develop a parallel reading of the banking supervision system and the framework for the enforcement of competition law, with the purpose of setting out points of convergence and divergence between the two, analyzing their institutional architecture and various issues pertaining to the relevant, applicable law. This approach might prove fruitful for a better...

The regulators’ dilemma and the global banking regulation: the case of the dual financial systems

This paper aims to contribute to the literature debate on the regulators’ dilemma affecting international financial regulations focusing on the banking regulation of dual financial systems. In this regard, the paper provides a new taxonomy of Islamic Financial Systems considering the banking regulation as a driver for the classification and a more detailed definition of dual...

The effects of supervisory stress testing on bank lending: examining large UK banks

In this paper, we study the effects of supervisory stress test exercises on 19 UK banks over the 2005–2018 period. The novelty of our approach is that we include two stress testing timelines from two banking supervisory authorities. Using a difference-in-difference methodology, in a first step, we analyse the effects of the Bank of England’s stress tests on the lending behaviour...

Reassessing bank monitoring models: an empirical analysis of the value of market signals in the period 2008–2020

One of the major goals of bank supervisors is to predict bank distress events. As the environment changes, it is crucial to reassess and improve the models used in monitoring banks. The financial soundness of banks is traditionally assessed based on accounting ratios. However, the incorporation of market information in these models may significantly improve its ability to predict...

BOFIA 2020 and financial system stability in Nigeria: Implications for stakeholders in the African largest economy

This paper reviews the Banking and Other Financial Institutions Act (BOFIA) 2020 in Nigeria in the light of regulatory theories and extant empirical evidences, with a view to predicting its potential effects on financial system stability in Nigeria, domestic stakeholders and international investors. Our review shows that the new law attains a higher level of clarity in...

Decoding the rise of Central Bank Digital Currency in China: designs, problems, and prospects

During the Covid-19 pandemic, there has been a rapid shift in global transaction patterns from offline to online digital payment models, along with a growing interest in the development of Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs) in various countries. This article spotlights the unexamined issue of digital currency regulation by examining the practice and related regulatory rules...

Some implications of the new global digital economy for financial regulation and supervision

The digital economy is leading to substantial changes in the financial sector. Not surprisingly, it raises a number of sensitive legal issues. (1) New technologies and big data are expected to increase efficiency in the financial sector. But some limits need to be drawn in order to protect the fundamental rights at stake, such as privacy and non-discrimination. (2) The...

Capital and asset quality implications for bank resilience and performance in the light of NPLs’ regulation: a focus on the Texas ratio

Based on a sample of 63 listed European banks, this paper investigates the relationship of capital and asset quality, in terms of provisioning and coverage policies, with bank risk and performance during the period 2005Q1-2018Q4. Our results point out different relationships between risk-based and non-risk-based measures of capital with bank risk and performance profiles. In...

The case for private administration of deposit guarantee schemes

We make the case that the responsibility for appointing board members in Deposit Guarantee Schemes (DGS) for commercial banks should be entrusted to the industry. In doing so, we challenge the position adopted by the International Monetary Fund, which has proposed public DGSs as the best practice. We lay out the comparative advantages of private over public DGS administration...

Financial regulation in the age of the platform economy

Platform businesses allow for collaboration with nontraditional partners and bring together different categories of customers, in the financial context savers and investors or lenders and borrowers, creating large, scalable networks of users. Their entry into finance promises potential benefits to consumers in the form of new products, lower prices, wider choice, and enhanced...

Basel IV capital requirements and the performance of commercial banks in Africa

Capital adequacy is considered an essential determinant banks' performance. Banks in Africa have revenue growth opportunities, but fragility and vulnerability to bank failures arising from capital inadequacy and non-performing loans affect their performances. The Basel Committee aims to introduce higher capital requirements is to strengthen the resilience of the banking system...

Addressing the challenges of post-pandemic debt management in the consumer and SME sectors: a proposal for the roles of UK financial regulators

Regulatory actions for short-term debt-relief during the Covid-19 pandemic are facilitating a significant level of indebtedness. We argue that regulators, in leaving the banking sector to manage small business and consumer debtors in ‘tailored arrangements’, risk allowing financial welfare goals to be unmet. Financial welfare goals are important to the Financial Conduct Authority...

Governance in the era of Blockchain technology in Qatar: a roadmap and a manual for Trade Finance

Nations worldwide have sought to capitalize on the benefits of distributed ledger technology (DLT) including Blockchain, but struggled to strike a balance between encouraging investment and innovation in the technology while addressing the challenges and uncertainties through regulation. Through its FinTech (Financial Technology) Strategy, Qatar has sought to embrace DLT, but its...

Limiting too-big-to-fail: market reactions to policy announcements and actions

Banks considered too-big-to-fail (TBTF) tend to benefit from funding cost advantages as their debt is considered implicitly guaranteed by public authorities, even if the latter have undertaken substantial effort to limit TBTF. This paper focuses on the changes in related market perceptions in response to bank regulatory and resolution reform announcements as well as actual...

Taxation of the financial sector: Is a bank levy the answer to the financial crisis?

To reduce the probability of financial crises, policymakers have introduced bank levies, whose application differs across countries. The problem in their use lies in identifying the most effective regulatory instruments to reduce risk. Our study might be of interest to various researchers and professionals, as we discuss the significance of research on bank levies with respect to...

National central banks in EMU: time for revision?

The national central banks of the euro area are crucial to the monetary policy of the euro. Their Governors sit (on a personal title) on the Governing Council of the ECB, and they execute most of the monetary policies. Whereas the recent ruling by the German Constitutional Court on the Public Sector Purchases Program highlighted the uncomfortable role of the German Bundesbank in...

State aid after the Banking Union: serious disturbance and public interest

An objective of the European Union’s Banking Union is to prevent Member States from having to subsidise banks. The Single Resolution Mechanism may have limited but has not eliminated state aid to banks. This is shown by the relevant statistics, the number of positive Commission decisions and the provisions of the Single Resolution Mechanism Regulation. State aid is allowed in...

Soft law and multilevel cooperation as sources of (new) constitutional challenges in EU economic and monetary integration: introduction to the special issue

Following the outbreak of the Great Financial Crisis, numerous reforms were conducted in all areas of the European Union (EU)’s Economic and Monetary Union. These reforms aimed at strengthening the resilience of Member States’ economies after they had been put under severe strain by the crisis. They included, among others, the reinforcement of the efforts toward economic...

Multilevel cooperation in the EU resolution of cross-border bank groups: lessons from the non-euro area Member States joining the Single Resolution Mechanism (SRM)

Cross-border banking presents a unique set of challenges in the EU from the perspective of arranging administrative oversight structures. Structuring cooperation between different EU and national authorities in a way which is conducive to trust-building and mutual engagement is an essential condition for overcoming disintegrative tendencies in the internal market. To assess how...

Determinants of mergers and acquisitions among Finnish cooperative and savings banks

This study is the first to examine mergers and acquisitions among small, regional stakeholder banks that belong to the same group. Using data on Finnish unlisted cooperative and savings banks, we investigate the relationship between bank-specific factors and the likelihood of a bank being an acquirer or an acquisition target. We find that large banks tend to acquire small and...

Measuring the restrictiveness of (macro)prudential policy: the case of bank capital regulation in Poland

The heterogeneity of the banking sector is a vital problem both in case of the conduct of macroprudential policy, as well as the assessment of its effectiveness. To address this issue, we construct a new measure of macroprudential policy restrictiveness, the bank’s free lending capacity ratio (the quotient of a new lending a bank can extend given its capital surplus above capital...