Corporate Governance and Bank Liquidity Providing
Journal Article: International Management Journals 01/2011;
Abstract
The literature on internal and external corporate governance in the money management industry tells us much about corporate governance. However, the massage on the mechanisms is far from complete. This paper examines the relationships among the quality of corporate governance, the capital-to-deposits ratio and the liquidity on demand provision. In the model where loans, loan commitments, and external financing need are the liquidity provision sources, changes in corporate governance or capital regulation have direct effects on bank liquidity. An increase in the high-quality of corporate governance, or in the capital-to-deposits ratio decreases the bank' optimal loan rate, and loan commitment rate with strategic complements when the bank stays in a more risky state of the world. An increase in the low- quality corporate governance or the capital-to-deposits ratio increases the bank’s external financial needs. Our findings provide alternative mechanisms for the evidence concerning the bank liquidity provision with corporate governance and regulation.
Comments on this publication
ResearchGate members can add comments. Sign up now and post your comment!
Data provided are for informational purposes only. Although carefully collected, accuracy cannot be guaranteed. The impact factor represents a rough estimation of the journal's impact factor and does not reflect the actual current impact factor. Publisher conditions are provided by RoMEO. Differing provisions from the publisher's actual policy or licence agreement may be applicable.
Science & Research Jobs
Postdoctoral Fellow - Root Phenotyping
Position: PostDoc Position
Employer: Commonwealth Scientific and Industr...
PRAS-Healthcare-Scientist for MRI Coil Design
Position: Other
Employer: Philips (China) Investment Co.,Ltd

