Abstract
Existing regulatory capital requirements are often criticized for being only loosely linked to the economic risk of the banks' assets. In view of the attempts of international regulators to introduce more risk sensitivene capital requirements, we theoretically examine the effect of specific regulatory capital requirements on the risk taking behavior of banks. More precisely, we develop a continuous time framework where the banks' choice of asset risk is endogenously determined. We compare regulation based on the Basel I Building Block approach to Value-at-Risk or 'internal model' based capital requirements with respect to risk taking behavior, deposit insurance liability, and shareholder value. The main findings are (i) Value-at-Risk based capital regulation creates a stronger incentive to reduce asset risk when banks are solvent, (ii) solvent banks that reduce their asset risk reduce the current value of the deposit insurance liability significantly, (iii) under Value-at-Risk regulation the risk reduction behavior of banks is less sensitive to changes in their investment opportunity set, and (iv) banks' equityholders can benefit from risk based capital requirements.
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