Francesca Barbiero

Welcome to my personal website. I am a Senior Economist in the Monetary Analysis Division in the Directorate General Monetary Policy of the European Central Bank (ECB). On this site, you can find a list of my current research projects and publications, and my CV.

Research interests: Monetary policy and its transmission mechanism, empirical banking, financial economics. 

Disclaimer: This is my personal website and the views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the European Central Bank or the Eurosystem.  

Contact Information

Francesca Barbiero

Senior Economist

Monetary Analysis Division, DG Monetary Policy

European Central Bank

Sonnemannstrasse 20, 60314 - Frankfurt am Main (Germany)

Email:  francesca.barbiero [at] ecb.europa.eu 

https://sites.google.com/view/francescabarbiero/home-page 

SSRN

Twitter

LinkedIn

Journal Publications

Journal of Finance (forthcoming)

This paper shows that the liquidation value of collateral depends on the interdependency between borrower and collateral risk. Using transaction-level data on short-term repurchase agreements, we show that borrowers pay a 1.1 to 2.6 basis points premium when their default risk is positively correlated with the risk of the collateral that they pledge. Moreover, we show that borrowers internalize this premium when making their collateral choices. Loan-level credit registry data suggest that the results extend to the corporate loan market as well.

This study analyses the effects of monetary and prudential policies taken in response to the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic to support bank lending conditions. More precisely, we focus on the effects of targeted longer-term refinancing operations (TLTROs) and their interaction with supervisory measures taken in the euro area. For identification, we use proprietary data on participation in central bank liquidity operations, high-frequency reactions to monetary policy announcements, and confidential supervisory information on bank capital requirements. We show that, in the absence of the funding cost relief associated with the pandemic response measures, banks’ ability to supply credit would have been severely affected. The results are robust to controlling for other concomitant policy measures such as government guarantees or quantitative easing. Our findings also indicate that the coordinated intervention by monetary and prudential authorities amplified the effects of the individual measures in supporting liquidity conditions and helping to sustain the flow of credit to the private sector. Finally, we find that, while monetary and prudential policies did not promote “zombie” lending and “zombie” firms, in absence of these measures the pandemic would have led to a significantly larger decline in firms’ employment.

Journal of Banking & Finance, Volume 120, 2020, 105950

Using a pan-European data set of 8.5 million firms, we find that firms with high debt financing invest relatively more, than otherwise similar firms, if they are operating in sectors facing good global growth opportunities. The positive impact of a marginal increase in debt on investment in good-global-growth-opportunities sectors disappears if firm debt is already excessive, if it is dominated by short maturities, and during systemic banking crises. Our results are consistent with theories of the disciplining role of debt, as well as with models highlighting the negative link between firm- and bank-related agency problems and corporate investment.

Working papers

ECB working paper, 2682, 2022, VoxEU Column, SUERF policy brief

Other publications

→ Speeches: Philip Lane (ECB. October 2022)