Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-03T00:23:06.527Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Effects of Large Bank Failures upon Investors' Risk Cognizance in the Commercial Banking Industry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2009

Extract

The U. S. National Bank was declared bankrupt in October of 1973. Just a few days short of a year later the Franklin National Bank failed. These were the largest bank failures ever experienced in the United States and they occurred against a backdrop of extensive bank regulatory operations first to prevent them and then to reduce the effect of these failures upon bank depositors and the banking public. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of these two large bank failures upon the structural relationship of risk and return of equity investments in other large commercial banks. Using historical hindsight, it can be seen that these large bank failures were isolated and noncumulative, but it should be remembered that the investors in bank equities at that time did not know that these failures would not precipitate other bank failures. This worry or apprehension.should have.been reflected in the equity prices of other large bank stocks. Did these failures substantially affect the perceived risk of failure in other large commercial banks? Did these failures result in a substantial increase in the required rate of return on bank equity? Under the efficient markets hypothesis it is assumed that all current prices reflect all knowledge and thus equity prices should adjust quickly to the presence of new information contained in a bank failure. Therefore, in order to determine the influence of these banking failures upon the structural relationships of risk and return of bank equities, the market model was used to relate the weekly holding period returns on 19 large commercial bank common shares to the weekly holding period returns on the S & P 500 index over the past four and one half years.

This study found that there was a lengthy period of structural stability when the realized returns on large bank stocks were compared with the realized returns on the market portfolio. Further, the study found that the U. S. National failure had no structural effect upon the relationships of risk cognizance and required return in that there were no resulting significiant changes in the parameters of the market model before and after the failure. On the other hand, the failure of the Franklin National had a significant structural effect upon risk cognizance. The perceived level of unsystematic risk significantly increased above that of a base period established before the Franklin failure. There was no structural change found in either the intercept term or the measure of systematic risk after the Franklin demise, only a change in unsystematic risk. The most significant change occurred just after the closing of the Franklin and subsided completely during the first and second quarter of 1975.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Business Administration, University of Washington 1976

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

[1]Burns, Arthur F.Maintaining the Soundness of Our Banking System.” Federal Reserve Bank of New York Monthly Review (November 1974), pp. 263267.Google Scholar
[2]Chow, Gregory C.Tests of Equality between Sets of Coefficients in Two Linear Regressions.” Econometrica, vol. 28, no. 3 (July 1960), pp. 591605.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[3]Cochrane, D., and Orcutt, G. H.. “Application of Least Squares Regression to Relationships Containing Autocorrelated Error Terms.” Journal of the American Statistical Association (March 1949), pp. 749809.Google Scholar
[4]Fama, Eugene F.Risk, Return, and Equilibrium: Some Clarifying Comments.” Journal of Finance (1968), pp. 2940.Google Scholar
[5]Hays, William L., and Winkler, Robert L.. Statistics: Probability, Inference, and Decision, vol. 1. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1970.Google Scholar
[6]Lintner, John. “The Valuation of Risk Assets and the Selection of Risky Investments in Stock Portfolios and Capital Budgets.” Review of Economics and Statistics (1968), pp. 2940.Google Scholar
[7]Pettway, Richard H.Market Tests of Capital Adequacy of Large Commercial Banks.” Journal of Finance (June 1976).Google Scholar
[8]Sharpe, William F.A Simplified Model for Portfolio Analysis.” Management Science (January 1963), pp. 2940.Google Scholar
[9]Sharpe, William F.Capital Asset Prices: A Theory of Market Equilibrium under Conditions of Risk.” Journal of Finance (1964), pp. 425442.Google Scholar