2014
How bank business models drive interest margins: evidence from US bank-level data
Publication
Publication
European Journal of Finance , Volume 20 - Issue 10 p. 850- 873
The two decades prior to the credit crisis witnessed a strategic shift from a traditional, relationships-oriented model (ROM) to a transactions-oriented model (TOM) of financial intermediation in developed countries. A concurrent trend has been a persistent decline in average bank interest margins. In the literature, these phenomena are often explained using a causality that runs from increased competition in traditional segments to lower margins to new activities. Using a comprehensive data set with bank-level data on over 16,000 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation-insured US commercial banks for a period ranging from 1992 to 2010, this paper qualifies this chain of causality. We find that a bank's business model, measured using a multi-dimensional proxy of relationship banking activity, exerts a strong, positive effect on interest margins. Our results suggest that the strategic shift from ROM to TOM has transformed banks' balance sheets and reduced interest rate margins as a by-product.
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doi.org/10.1080/1351847X.2013.833532, hdl.handle.net/1765/76770 | |
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European Journal of Finance | |
Organisation | Erasmus Research Institute of Management |
van Ewijk, S., & Arnold, I. (2014). How bank business models drive interest margins: evidence from US bank-level data. European Journal of Finance, 20(10), 850–873. doi:10.1080/1351847X.2013.833532 |