2017
DOI: 10.1111/fire.12135
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Bank‐Owned Life Insurance and Bank Risk

Abstract: The use of bank‐owned life insurance (BOLI) has more than tripled since 2001 and has caught the attention of the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. I find increases in BOLI lead to higher levels of liquidity risk, credit risk, and interest rate risk. Robustness tests confirm these results and suggest over‐ and underinvestment in BOLI and use of BOLI as a tax shelter contribute to risk increases. Results indicate that the concerns expressed by regulators are warranted, and suggest insurance may not alwa… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…We use return on assets (ROAs) and return on equity (ROE) as proxies for bank performance. Following Davidson (2017) and Gupta and Prakash (2018), we construct proxy variables for bank risk, including liquidity risk, credit risk and leverage. Liquidity risk is measured by the amount of cash and securities, scaled by total assets (CASH).…”
Section: Effect Of State-level Corruptionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We use return on assets (ROAs) and return on equity (ROE) as proxies for bank performance. Following Davidson (2017) and Gupta and Prakash (2018), we construct proxy variables for bank risk, including liquidity risk, credit risk and leverage. Liquidity risk is measured by the amount of cash and securities, scaled by total assets (CASH).…”
Section: Effect Of State-level Corruptionmentioning
confidence: 99%