Bank Lending and Maturity: the Anatomy of the Transmission of Monetary Policy

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Title:

Bank Lending and Maturity: the Anatomy of the Transmission of Monetary Policy

Number:

20/05

Author(s):

Selva Bahar Baziki, Tanju Çapacıoğlu

Language:

English

Date:

March 2020

Abstract:

We study the effects of monetary policy decisions on banks’ loan issuance and maturity decisions using a unique matched firm-bank-loan level granular database. We find that changes in the policy rate impact both credit and maturity channels - an increase of 100 basis points reduces commercial loan volumes by 1.6% and maturities by 1.2%, with tighter monetary policy having a larger effect on both. Small banks, banks with relatively weaker capital and liquidity structures, and with weaker access to foreign funding are more sensitive to policy changes. Bank ownership types and loan currency denomination also create asymmetries in responses. Banks reflect these changes to firms with which they have longer established relationships or which have a healthier past credit performance to a lesser extent. A quasi-experimental analysis adds that the intense use of a collateral guarantee scheme has increased maturities at the time of tight monetary policy stance, reversing their long-run negative relationship. These results highlight the importance of the financial regulatory process on banks’ risk taking behavior, search-for yield appetites, identifying areas of potential systemic risk buildup, and finally policy design and coordination.

Keywords:

Monetary policy, Transmission channel, Credit guarantee fund, Loan maturity, Bank type

JEL Codes:

E51; E58; G20; G21; G28

Bank Lending and Maturity: the Anatomy of the Transmission of Monetary Policy