1st Bristol Workshop on Banking and Financial Intermediation

Date: May 30th, 2017

Venue: University of Bristol

Registration: We welcome academics and practitioners to attend the workshop. In case of interest please send an email to Balint.Horvath@bristol.ac.uk.


Program:

8.40 Opening remarks

8.45 “Who Consumes the Credit Union Tax Subsidy?”

Presenter: Bob DeYoung (University of Kansas)

Discussion by Piotr Danisewicz (University of Bristol)


9.25 “Lobbying and the Resolution of Failed Banks”

Presenter: Thomas Lambert (Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Discussion by Louis Nguyen (University of St Andrews)


10.05 “Heterogenous Regulation of Financial Institutions”

Presenter: Wolf Wagner (Erasmus University Rotterdam)

Discussion by Rhiannon Sowerbutts (Bank of England)


10.45 Coffee break


11.15 “Crowded trades, market clustering and price instability”

Presenter: Iman van Lelyveld (De Nederlandsche Bank)

Discussion by Matthijs Lof (Aalto University)


11.55 “A Theory of Endogenous Asset Fire Sales, Bank Runs, and Contagion”

Presenter: Kebin Ma (University of Warwick)

Discussion by Tobias Dieler (University of Bristol)


12.35 Lunch break


14.00 “Bank Capital (Requirements) and Credit Supply: evidence from Pillar 2 decisions”

Presenter: Olivier de Jonghe (Tilburg University)

Discussion by Ibolya Schindele (Central European University)


14.40 “The international transmission of monetary policy: evidence from UK bank lending”

Presenter: Dennis Reinhardt (Bank of England)

Discussion by Lena Tonzer (Halle Institute for Economic Research)


15.20 “A positive analysis of bank behaviour under capital requirements”

Presenter: Frederic Malherbe (London Business School)

Discussion by Paul Grout (University of Bristol)


16.00 Coffee break


16.30 “Underwriting as Certification of Bank Bonds”

Presenter: Francisco Rodríguez Fernández (University of Granada)

Discussion by Enrico Onali (Aston University)


17.10 “Securitisation and Optimal Foreclosure”

Presenter: John Kuong (INSEAD)

Discussion by Sonny Biswas (University of Bristol)


17.50 Closing remarks