Revenue diversification and insolvency risk: evidence from banks in emerging economies
Revenue diversification and insolvency risk: evidence from banks in emerging economies
Are there significant benefits of revenue diversification for banks in emerging economies? This paper investigates the impact of revenue diversification on insolvency risk in emerging economies as measured by the distance to default. Using a panel dataset of 322 listed banks across 22 countries and a new methodological approach (Systems' Generalized Method of Moments estimator), we provide the first empirical evidence of the impact of (i) the observed shift towards non-interest income and (ii) diversification within interest and non-interest generating activities on insolvency risk. Our core finding is that diversification across and within both interest and non-interest income generating activities decreases insolvency risk. Moreover, we find diversification gains remain even though increased reliance on non-interest income lowers risk adjusted profits. By extension, our results have significant strategic implications for bank managers and supervisors in emerging economies.
emerging economies, revenue diversification, banks, insolvency risk
University of Southampton
Odesamni, Sarah
6ce83add-b732-4049-b824-9c087167f8b5
Wolfe, Simon
9a2367fc-36cc-496a-bbd2-e7346bcbb19e
17 December 2007
Odesamni, Sarah
6ce83add-b732-4049-b824-9c087167f8b5
Wolfe, Simon
9a2367fc-36cc-496a-bbd2-e7346bcbb19e
Odesamni, Sarah and Wolfe, Simon
(2007)
Revenue diversification and insolvency risk: evidence from banks in emerging economies
(Working Paper Series: Discussion Papers in Accounting & Finance)
Southampton, UK.
University of Southampton
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Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
Are there significant benefits of revenue diversification for banks in emerging economies? This paper investigates the impact of revenue diversification on insolvency risk in emerging economies as measured by the distance to default. Using a panel dataset of 322 listed banks across 22 countries and a new methodological approach (Systems' Generalized Method of Moments estimator), we provide the first empirical evidence of the impact of (i) the observed shift towards non-interest income and (ii) diversification within interest and non-interest generating activities on insolvency risk. Our core finding is that diversification across and within both interest and non-interest income generating activities decreases insolvency risk. Moreover, we find diversification gains remain even though increased reliance on non-interest income lowers risk adjusted profits. By extension, our results have significant strategic implications for bank managers and supervisors in emerging economies.
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Published date: 17 December 2007
Keywords:
emerging economies, revenue diversification, banks, insolvency risk
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Local EPrints ID: 63002
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/63002
PURE UUID: ae0d7cfb-d0b3-4dab-9893-c11c459a62b2
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Date deposited: 13 Oct 2008
Last modified: 12 Dec 2021 02:46
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Contributors
Author:
Sarah Odesamni
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