Abstract

Abstract I use loan-level data from the syndicated loan market in the U.S. to investigate how monetary policy affects banks’ sensitivity to risk. Using loan-level data and banks’ sensitivity to risk enables me to identify the risk-taking channel and disentangle it from other monetary channels. I show that banks change their behavior toward risk following changes in monetary policy where loose monetary policy reduces banks’ sensitivity to risk. I then provide evidence for the significant contribution of risk-taking shocks and changes in banks’ risk-taking behavior to economic outcomes and business cycle fluctuations. The paper’s primary contribution is in providing new loan-level evidence for the existence of the risk-taking channel in the U.S., as well as a possible link between the risk-taking channel and business cycle fluctuations.

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