On the Impact of Leveraged Buyouts on Bank Systemic Risk
Abstract
Although banks are at the center of systemic risk, there are other institutions that contribute to it. With the publication of the leveraged lending guideline in March 2013, the U.S. regulators show that they are especially worried about the private equity firms with their high-risk deals. Given these risks and the interconnectedness of the banks through the LBO loan syndicates, I shed light on the impact of a bank’s LBO loan exposure on its systemic risk. By using 3,538 observations between 2000 and 2013 from 165 global banks, I show that banks with higher LBO exposure also have a higher level of systemic risk. Other loan purposes do not show this positive relationship. The main drivers influencing this relationship positively are the bank’s interconnectedness to other LBO financing banks and its size. Lending experience with a specific PE sponsor, experience with leading LBO syndicates or a bank’s credit rating, however, lead to a lower impact of the LBO loan exposure on systemic risk.
Research Area
Corporate Finance
Keywords
leveraged buyouts, syndicated loans, systemic risk
JEL Classification
G21, G23, G28
Topic
Stability and Regulation
Corporate Finance
Systematic Risk
Corporate Finance
Systematic Risk
Relations
1
Publication Type
Working Paper
Link to Publication
Collections
- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]