What Drives Bank Funding Spreads?

37 Pages Posted: 19 Dec 2014

See all articles by Thomas B. King

Thomas B. King

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Kurt F. Lewis

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Date Written: November 2014

Abstract

We use matched, bank-level panel data on Libor submissions and credit default swaps to decompose bank-funding spreads at several maturities into components reflecting counterparty credit risk and funding-market liquidity. To account for the possibility that banks may strategically misreport their funding rates in the Libor survey, we nest our decomposition within a model of the costs and benefits of lying. We find that Libor spreads typically consist mostly of a liquidity premium and that this premium declined at short maturities following Federal Reserve interventions in bank funding markets. At longer maturities, credit risk explains much of the time variation in Libor, reflecting in part fluctuations in the degree to which default risk is priced in the interbank market. Our results are consistent with banks both under- and over-reporting their funding costs during the crisis but suggest that the incidence of this behavior may have subsequently declined.

Keywords: LIBOR, Liquidity, Credit Risk, Misreporting

JEL Classification: E43, E58, G21

Suggested Citation

King, Thomas B. and Lewis, Kurt F., What Drives Bank Funding Spreads? (November 2014). FRB of Chicago Working Paper No. 2014-23, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2539711 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2539711

Thomas B. King (Contact Author)

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago ( email )

230 South LaSalle Street
Chicago, IL 60604
United States

Kurt F. Lewis

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System ( email )

20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20551
United States

HOME PAGE: http://kurtflewis.com

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