Description:
This paper examines the implications of
bank activity and short-term funding strategies for bank
risk and returns using an international sample of 1,334
banks in 101 countries leading up to the 2007 financial
crisis. Expansion into non-interest income generating
activities such as trading increases the rate of return on
assets, and it may offer some risk diversification benefits
at very low levels. Non-deposit, wholesale funding, by
contrast, lowers the rate of return on assets, although it
can offer some risk reduction at commonly observed low
levels of non-deposit funding. A sizeable proportion of
banks, however, attract most of their short-term funding in
the form of non-deposits at a cost of enhanced bank
fragility. Overall, banking strategies that rely prominently
on generating non-interest income or attracting non-deposit
funding are very risky, which is consistent with the demise
of the U.S. investment banking sector.