Title: | Market Competition, Efficiency, Shareholder Value and Risk-Taking in the Australian Banking Sector |
Contributor(s): | Hoang, Van Hong Thi (author); Yarram, Subba Reddy (supervisor) ; Morales, Luis Emilio (supervisor) |
Conferred Date: | 2018-10-26 |
Copyright Date: | 2018-06 |
Handle Link: | https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/57463 |
Related DOI: | 10.1111/1475-4932.12508 |
Abstract: | | The banking sector is the most significant part of the financial system in Australia. It
currently includes 148 depository institutions, called authorised deposit-taking
institutions (ADIs), which hold approximately 55 per cent of the assets of Australian
financial institutions. The well-functioning banking sector has contributed substantially
to the country’s economic growth and stability1.
Since 1990, the Australian banking sector has been characterised by high market
concentration resulting from the “Four Pillars policy. Four major banks hold roughly three-quarters of the total assets held by the whole sector, while high market
concentration is an indicator of the likelihood of less competition and greater market
power. Competition in the banking sector impacts on the functioning of depository
institutions (Maudos & de Guevara, 2007). In the Financial System Inquiry of 2014,
some smaller ADIs and non-bank lenders highlighted that the increasing concentration
and integration of the major banks had harmed competition. They contended that the
market power of the major banks was oligopolistic, stifling competition and ensuring
higher prices for consumers. The mission of the current banking royal commission
isto scrutinise the financial system, especially banking, to maintain stability,
competitiveness, transparency, and accountability, critical factors of a well-functioning
banking sector.
Accordingly, this study aims to provide insights into the factors affecting the
functioning of the Australian banking sector for the period 2000–2015, by a
comprehensive analysis of market competition, performance, efficiency, and risktaking, to emphasise their interlinkages. This period included the global financial crisis
(GFC) of 2007–2009, which has had a profound impact on global financial systems,
especially banking. All types of Australian depository institutions are considered in this
study, including banks, building societies, credit unions and other ADIs.
Using an unbalanced panel data of 73 Australian depository institutions for the study
period, this thesis addresses three main research questions. (1) How have efficiency and
productivity growth been improved in the banking sector? (2) How have the
competition and efficiency of depository institutions impacted on their performance in
terms of shareholder value? (3) How are risk–taking incentives of Australian depository
institutions affected by their market power and government regulations promoting
competition?
Using the intermediation approach described in banking efficiency literature, the
analysis of the first research question employs the stochastic frontier analysis (SFA)
technique to estimate banking efficiency and productivity growth. The empirical
findings suggest that the Australian banking sector lacked technical efficiency,
especially during and after the GFC. Although the sector demonstrates gain from
economies of scale, the four dominant banks exhibit diseconomies of scale. Therefore,
despite significant technical progress, banking sector productivity growth has decreased
over the observed period.
The analyses of the second and third study questions are based on banking competition
literature and employ a two-step system generalised method of moments
(GMM) estimation for dynamic panel data models, to investigate the performance and
risk-taking of Australian depository institutions.
In the second analysis, examining bank performance in terms of shareholder value, the
structure – conduct – performance (SCP) and efficient structure (EFS) hypotheses are
tested in the Australian banking context. The SCP hypothesis is a theory of collusion, which posits that the more concentrated the market, the easier it is for big banks to
collude in earning superior profits (Casu, Girardone, & Molyneux, 2015). Conversely,
the EFS hypothesis asserts that big banks tend to make higher profits due to their greater
efficiency, rather than oligopolistic behaviour (Demsetz, 1973). Four alternative proxies
of shareholder value: net interest margin (NIM), return on equity (ROE), Tobin’s q ratio
and the economic-value-added ratio (EVAR) are used in the models. All empirical
results support the EFS hypothesis, implying that Australian depository institutions earn
higher profits and create higher value for shareholders due to their superior technical
efficiency. Thus, these outcomes also confirm that the oligopolistic nature inferred from
the high market concentration may not harm smaller competitors.
The third analysis examines the risk-taking incentives by testing two opposing emergent
views on banking stability, “competition–fragility” and “competition–stability”. The
competition–fragility view argues that competition makes banks more likely to take
excessive risks, thereby leading to fragility, while the competition-stability view
suggests that competition can enhance the stability of a depository institution,
promoting efficiency and market power. Market-based and accounting-based risk
indicators, namely loan loss provision to gross loans, Z-score, and distance to default
were used to measure the credit and insolvency risk exposures of the individual
depository institution. Both market concentration and pricing power were included in
the models to determine their impacts on risk-taking incentives in the Australian
banking sector. The empirical findings suggest a neutral view; market concentration
promotes the “competition-fragility” view, while market power promotes the
“competition-stability” hypothesis. These results imply that in the highly concentrated
Australia banking market, depository institutions face less competitive pressures and,
hence, have less motivation to take credit and insolvency risks. Alternatively, the
empirical results also imply that an Australian depository institution with more pricing
power exploits its advantage to render the market less competitive and has greater
incentive to take these risks. These findings also demonstrate that measures of bank
competitiveness include the market concentration, as well as the market power, of
individual depository institutions.
The significant contribution of this thesis is the empirical evidence that advances the
understanding of the relationships between competition, shareholder value, efficiency,
and risk-taking, to support the development of new regulations. Key results suggest that
no simple relationship exists between competition, shareholder value, efficiency, and
risk-taking; therefore, policymakers should account for such differences, whether
through bank-specific, industry-specific, or macroeconomic factors.
Publication Type: | Thesis Doctoral |
Fields of Research (FoR) 2008: | 150203 Financial Institutions (incl. Banking) 150202 Financial Econometrics 150201 Finance |
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: | 350204 Financial institutions (incl. banking) 350203 Financial econometrics 350202 Finance |
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2008: | 910203 Industrial Organisations 900101 Finance Services 910499 Management and Productivity not elsewhere classified |
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: | 150503 Industrial organisations 110201 Finance services |
HERDC Category Description: | T2 Thesis - Doctorate by Research |
Description: | | Please contact rune@une.edu.au if you require access to this thesis for the purpose of research or study.
Appears in Collections: | Thesis Doctoral UNE Business School
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