Overview of Financial Contagion Channels in the Banking Sector of Baltic States

<p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>This article aims to determine and analyse the main features of channels of financial contagion in the banking sector of Baltic States. The most relevant channels seem to be the risk of common lender, the channel of real estate prices...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Laura Gudelytė
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mykolas Romeris University 2014-10-01
Series:Social Technologies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www3.mruni.eu/ojs/social-technologies/article/view/2046
Description
Summary:<p><strong>Abstract</strong></p><p>This article aims to determine and analyse the main features of channels of financial contagion in the banking sector of Baltic States. The most relevant channels seem to be the risk of common lender, the channel of real estate prices the channel of other macroeconomic shocks and the channel of volatility. This paper contributes to the further analysis of internal and external causes of financial crisis and its transmission channels in banking sector in Baltic States.<strong></strong></p><p><strong>Purpose</strong> To indicate and explain main problems related to the systemic risk and the channels of financial contagion in the banking sector of Baltic States.</p><p><strong>Design/methodology/approach –</strong> general overview of research papers presenting concepts and methodologies of assessment of systemic risk of the banking sector, statistical analysis of financial data.</p><p><strong>Findings </strong>determination of the main channels and extent of financial contagion that are relevant to banking sector of Baltic States.</p><p><strong>Research limitations/implications</strong> – the lack of information concerning the liquidity and asset structure of banking sector of Baltic States and the real estate prices in Baltic States. The most common problem analysing the financial contagion and systemic risk is the lack of information (especially about the structure of liabilities and assets of financial institutions, its maturity) and the changing new banking regulatory conditions. Due the lack of data it is impossible to create stable and reliable statistical models describing the stochastic behaviour of financial contagion. We do not take into account the political factors concerning the reforms of financial market supervision that have also the impact on financial contagion and systemic risk ant the point of view to Baltic States of foreign investors. The findings of this article should ground the macro-prudential policy in the small countries of supervising institutions focussing on the external factors.</p><p><strong>Practical implications</strong> – identification of the channels of external and internal negative shocks to the banking sector of Baltic States; useful not only for the banking executives providing business trends and officers of supervising institutions that should use not only Basel III requirements, identifying potential sources of risk in the near future, but for the rest part of society, both ordinary citizens and entrepreneurs having current accounts and deposits in banks.</p><p><strong>Originality/Value </strong>– modelling of systemic risk and analysis of instability causes of the banking sector applying reliable quantitative methods in Lithuania are not sufficiently developed and is impossible without knowing the mechanisms of transitions of external and internal shocks on banking sector. Researchers have provided an exhaustive analysis of contagion and channels of contagion in global extent or in another cases and regions. The banking sectors of the Baltic States are essentially controlled by the same foreign banking groups, so the international financial groups' liquidity problems could spill over to other banks in the Baltic States. This case is not exhaustively analysed by other researchers. This paper is one of the first attempts to describe and assess quantitatively the financial contagion in Baltic Stats. The deep dependence of banking institutions in the Baltic States on their investors means not only the simple attraction of capital flows but additional risk that can arise due to the lack of liquidity or panics of patronizing financial institutions. The findings of this article should ground the macro-prudential policy focussing on the external factors.</p><p><strong>Research type: </strong>literature review, general review.<strong></strong></p>
ISSN:2029-7564