학술논문

Asia-Pacific banks risk exposures: pre and post the Asian financial crisis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Applied Financial Economics. Apr2008, Vol. 18 Issue 6, p431-449. 19p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*Bank marketing
*Interest rates
*Foreign exchange rates
*Financial crises
*Bank investments
*Economic history
Comparative studies
Language
ISSN
0960-3107
Abstract
In this article, we provide an insight into Asia-Pacific banks' market, interest rate and exchange rate exposures using a market-based model, pre and post the Asian financial crisis. Our study provides a unique comparative analysis across 10 countries, for both short-horizon and long-horizon risk exposures. Overall, our findings reveal that bank portfolios in countries that are harder hit by the Asian crisis have higher market and short-term interest rate exposures post-crisis. With long-horizon returns, there are a larger number of significant interest rate (IR) and exchange rate (ER) exposures, which are consistent with the prior literature that long-horizon return measures economic exposures that are difficult to hedge. When the long-horizon regressions with an error correction model are carried out, the results obtained support the short-horizon results. Among the country groups, the newly industrialized economies display the greatest sensitivity to IR and ER changes during the post-Asian crisis period. Investigating bank regulation effects, we find evidence that bank portfolios that experience lower restrictions on their activities and ownership, and greater private monitoring have lower market risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]