Bank Asset Quality in Emerging Markets [electronic resource] : Determinants and Spillovers / Reinout De Bock.
Material type: TextSeries: IMF Working Papers; Working Paper ; No. 12/71Publication details: Washington, D.C. : International Monetary Fund, 2012Description: 1 online resource (27 p.)ISBN: 1475502230 :ISSN: 1018-5941Subject(s): Bank Asset Quality in Emerging Markets | Capital Inflows | Exchange Rate | Exchange Rates | Financial Institutions and Services | Financial Markets and the Macroeconomy | Brazil | Bulgaria | China, People's Republic of | Dominican Republic | RomaniaAdditional physical formats: Print Version:: Bank Asset Quality in Emerging Markets : Determinants and SpilloversOnline resources: IMF e-Library | IMF Book Store Abstract: This paper assesses the vulnerability of emerging markets and their banks to aggregate shocks. We find significant links between banks' asset quality, credit and macroeconomic aggregates. Lower economic growth, an exchange rate depreciation, weaker terms of trade and a fall in debt-creating capital inflows reduce credit growth while loan quality deteriorates. Particularly noteworthy is the sharp deterioration of balance sheets following a reversal of portfolio inflows. We also find evidence of feedback effects from the financial sector on the wider economy. GDP growth falls after shocks that drive non-performing loans higher or generate a contraction in credit. This analysis was used in chapter 1 of the Global Financial Stability Report (September 2011) to help evaluate the sensitivity of banks' capital adequacy ratios to macroeconomic and funding cost shocks.This paper assesses the vulnerability of emerging markets and their banks to aggregate shocks. We find significant links between banks' asset quality, credit and macroeconomic aggregates. Lower economic growth, an exchange rate depreciation, weaker terms of trade and a fall in debt-creating capital inflows reduce credit growth while loan quality deteriorates. Particularly noteworthy is the sharp deterioration of balance sheets following a reversal of portfolio inflows. We also find evidence of feedback effects from the financial sector on the wider economy. GDP growth falls after shocks that drive non-performing loans higher or generate a contraction in credit. This analysis was used in chapter 1 of the Global Financial Stability Report (September 2011) to help evaluate the sensitivity of banks' capital adequacy ratios to macroeconomic and funding cost shocks.
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