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Erschienen in: Review of Accounting Studies 3/2014

01.09.2014

Do loan loss reserves behave like capital? Evidence from recent bank failures

verfasst von: Jeffrey Ng, Sugata Roychowdhury

Erschienen in: Review of Accounting Studies | Ausgabe 3/2014

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Abstract

Regulatory capital guidelines allow for loan loss reserves to be added back as capital. Our evidence suggests that the influence of loan loss reserves added back as regulatory capital (hereafter referred to as “add-backs”) on bank risk cannot be explained by either economic principles underlying the notion of capital or accounting principles underlying the recording of reserves. Specifically, we observe that, in sharp contrast to the economic notion of capital as a buffer against bank failure risk, add-backs are positively associated with the risk of bank failure during the recent economic crisis. Furthermore, the positive association of add-backs with bank failure risk is concentrated among cases in which the add-backs are highly likely to increase a bank’s total regulatory capital. The evidence cannot thus be fully explained by accounting principles either, since the role of loan loss reserves according to those principles does not depend on whether the reserves generate a regulatory capital increase. Additional analysis suggests that the observed influence of loan loss reserves on bank failure risk may be an unintended consequence of their regulatory treatment as capital.

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Fußnoten
1
For example, at the end of 2007, about 86.2 % of total loan loss reserves were added back to regulatory capital and constituted about 6.5 % of total capital.
 
2
Joe Brennan was delivering a statement to the Domestic Policy Subcommittee of the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform Committee on November 2, 2009. Discover’s comment letter was on bank regulators’ proposed rule-making on risk-based capital guidelines and related issues (Federal Reserve Board 2009).
 
3
For example, in our sample, loan loss reserves on average account for 95 % of Tier 2 capital.
 
4
Gross risk-weighted assets equal risk-weighted assets used in the computation of the capital ratios plus excess allowance for loan and lease losses plus the allocated transfer risk reserve. The limit of 1.25 % of gross risk-weighted assets on the amount of the loan loss reserves that a bank may include in Tier 2 capital is a standard included in the first capital accord of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (Basel Accord). See the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards (1988), paragraph 21.
 
5
We thank the FDIC for confirming that our example correctly represents the effect of the regulations.
 
6
Note that loan charge-offs have a slightly different effect relative to loan loss provisions. A charge-off occurs when a bank identifies a specific account in default and reduces both the loan outstanding and the loan loss reserve by the same amount. Thus a charge-off of $100 would reduce loan loss reserves by $100, ceteris paribus. Since charge-offs do not affect the shareholders’ equity account, the sole effect of a $100 increase in charge-offs would be to decrease Tier 2 capital, and hence total regulatory capital, by $100 (to the extent that loan loss reserves were within the maximum allowable limit).
 
7
A commercial bank can either elect to be either an “S corporation” or a “qualifying subchapter S subsidiary.” To be an S corporation, the bank must have filed a valid election with the Internal Revenue Service and obtained the consent of all of its shareholders. An election for a bank to be a qualifying subchapter S subsidiary must have been made by a bank’s parent holding company, which must also have made a valid election to be an S corporation. In addition, the bank (and its parent holding company) must meet specific criteria, including, for example, having no more than 100 qualifying shareholders and having only one class of stock outstanding.
 
8
With a large percentage of S corporations reporting zero taxes on their call reports, and in general with their book taxes reflecting permanent differences with their tax statements, these banks would not typically experience the tax-effect-driven increase in regulatory capital from add-backs normal for C corporations.
 
9
The chartering authority for state-chartered banks is usually the state banking department; for national banks, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC); and for federal savings institutions, the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS). While it is much more common for the chartering authoring to close a bank, the FDIC has the authority, under the FDIC Improvement Act of 1991, to close any bank that it considers to be critically undercapitalized and that does not have a plan to restore capital to an adequate level.
 
10
See for example, Meyer and Pifer (1970), Koehn and Santomero (1980), Thomson (1991), Wheelock and Wilson (2000), Boyd and De Nicoló (2005), Arena (2008), and Jin et al. (2011), among others. Some studies (e.g., Laeven and Levine 2009) use a continuous measure of bank risk, such as the z-score, which attempts to capture the probability of failure via insolvency.
 
12
The number of banks at the beginning of the year is the number of banks that filed call reports and had positive total assets.
 
14
Add-backs as a percentage of total capital for CAPINC = 0 banks are comparable in magnitude to those of CAPINC = 1 banks probably because the former have already reported a high enough level of loan loss reserves in prior periods to exhaust the possibility of further regulatory capital increases from add-backs.
 
15
We cannot include state dummies because there are several states with no bank failures. Hence it is not possible to examine how within-state variation in loan loss reserve accounting is associated with within-state variation in the risk of bank failure.
 
16
This seems economically significant given that the magnitude of mean loan growth is 9.8 %.
 
17
A bank holding company can own a number of commercial banks. As information about how a bank holding company distributed the capital infusion among its commercial banks is not available, we assume that all the commercial banks within the holding company received capital support when the parent is a CPP participant.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Do loan loss reserves behave like capital? Evidence from recent bank failures
verfasst von
Jeffrey Ng
Sugata Roychowdhury
Publikationsdatum
01.09.2014
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Review of Accounting Studies / Ausgabe 3/2014
Print ISSN: 1380-6653
Elektronische ISSN: 1573-7136
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11142-014-9281-z

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