Özlem Dursun-de Neef H, Schandlbauer Alexander
Goethe University Frankfurt, Theodor-W.-Adorno-Platz 3, Frankfurt am Main 60629, Germany.
University of Southern Denmark and Danish Finance Institute, Campusvej 55, Odense 5230, Denmark.
J Bank Financ. 2021 Dec;133:106236. doi: 10.1016/j.jbankfin.2021.106236. Epub 2021 Jul 2.
This paper examines how European banks adjusted lending at the onset of the pandemic depending on their local exposure to the COVID-19 outbreak and capitalization. Using a bank-level COVID-19 exposure measure, we show that higher exposure to COVID-19 led to a relative increase in worse-capitalized banks' loans whereas their better-capitalized peers decreased their lending more. At the same time, only better-capitalized banks experienced a significantly larger increase in their delinquent and restructured loans. These findings are in line with the zombie lending literature that banks with low capital have an incentive to issue more loans during contraction times to help their weaker borrowers so that they can avoid loan loss recognition and write-offs on their capital.
本文研究了欧洲银行在疫情初期如何根据其所在地区对新冠疫情的暴露程度和资本状况来调整贷款。通过使用银行层面的新冠疫情暴露指标,我们发现,对新冠疫情暴露程度较高导致资本状况较差银行的贷款相对增加,而资本状况较好的同行则更多地减少了贷款发放。与此同时,只有资本状况较好的银行的不良贷款和重组贷款出现了显著更大幅度的增加。这些发现与僵尸贷款文献一致,即资本较低的银行有动机在经济收缩时期发放更多贷款,以帮助其较弱的借款人,从而避免贷款损失确认和资本核销。