Vives, Xavier, (2016), “The Promise of Bank Mergers”, Project Syndicate, 23 September
The banking business has fallen on hard times. The combination of persistent low interest rates, increasing regulatory compliance costs, and the rise of new competitors taking advantage of financial technologies (fintech for short) has produced, in Europe in particular, excess capacity and low profitability – and a strong temptation to merge. In a difficult market, mergers – by enabling banks to cut costs, share information-technology platforms, and increase market power, thereby relieving pressure on margins and rebuilding capital – make sense. And the banks know it. Witness the recent merger talks between Deutsche Bank and Commerzbank, both of which have faced huge declines in market capitalization. So a wave of mergers may be on the way. The question is whether that approach really can solve banks’ problems and benefit society.
Relevant Posts
- De Groen, Willem Pieter, Gros, Daniel, (2016), “European banks under stress (tests): Which remain the most resilient?”, CEPS, 11 August
- Christoffer Kok, Csaba Móré, Monica Petrescu, (2016), “Recent trends in euro area banks’ business models and implications for banking sector stability”, ECB Financial Stability Review, May