Systemically important bank bond funding: Implications for financial stability

Bell, Christopher (2024) Systemically important bank bond funding: Implications for financial stability. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Description

This thesis explores bond funding activities of Systemically Important Banks (SIBs). Following the GFC, large banks were identified as SIBs by regulators. If one of these large banks fail it would pose a systemic risk to the stability of the economy. This is the first study to focus on bond funding for SIBs and the potential impacts to financial stability. Using cross-sectional data, the thesis analyses bond funding in primary markets, including Australia, across three studies. The empirical findings make original contributions to existing literature and provide insights to regulators setting local and global financial stability policy.

Impact and interest:

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ID Code: 246084
Item Type: QUT Thesis (PhD)
Supervisor: Clements, Adam & Uylangco, Katherine
Keywords: financial stability, agency costs, bond markets, issue spreads, market discipline, financial innovation, public debt, private debt, structured notes, systemically important bank
DOI: 10.5204/thesis.eprints.246084
Pure ID: 156603059
Divisions: Current > QUT Faculties and Divisions > Faculty of Business & Law
Current > Schools > School of Economics & Finance
Institution: Queensland University of Technology
Deposited On: 02 Feb 2024 04:25
Last Modified: 30 Jun 2024 22:58