Abstract

This paper analyses the determinants of net interest margin during the period 2008–2014 in the Euro Area. The starting point of the analysis is the premise that this variable is a gauge of financial institutions’ health and stability. In particular, since the outbreak of the global financial crisis, difficulties in achieving sustainable levels of profitability, mainly due to the vulnerable margins from the banks’ traditional activity, have significantly increased the fragility of the European banking system. Besides considering the main bank-level drivers affecting the net interest margin such as market power, capitalization, interest risk and the level of efficiency, we explicitly account for the effects of regulatory and institutional settings. The results show a persistence in the vulnerability of the banks’ sustainable profitability, even though this negative trend has been partly mitigated by the European Central Bank (ECB)’s recent monetary policies. The increase in non-traditional activities as well as the heterogeneous efficiency levels characterizing banking systems across the Euro Area, where operating costs remain generally high, have significantly contributed to the slowdown in bank margins from traditional activity. Finally, the regulatory environment is an important driver of the net interest margin, which remained lower in countries with higher capital requirements and greater supervisory power.

Highlights

  • The financial system has the function of favouring economic growth through an efficient intermediation between savings of depositors and investments of borrowers

  • Bank profitability is a key concern for the financial stability across the Euro Area

  • This study focused on the main drivers of the banks’ net interest margins, whose higher vulnerability has been in the spotlight since the crisis

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Summary

Introduction

The financial system has the function of favouring economic growth through an efficient intermediation between savings of depositors and investments of borrowers. Banks operate as a financial accelerator of primary importance for supporting firms’ investments [1,2]. The recent global financial crisis has shown that banks, depending on their health, can either mitigate or amplify the impact of financial shocks on the real economy [3]. A sustainable level of bank profitability underlies both financial stability and economic growth. Financial stability is pursued by adequately capitalized financial intermediaries and retained earnings, which represent an important component of bank capital, depending on a bank’s ability to set aside profits. Bank profitability has implications for the real economy, because a sustainably profitable banking sector is necessary to support access to credit for firms and households, stimulating economic activity in the long-term [4]

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