Published 2003
by National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, MA .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | Kenneth A. Carow, Edward J. Kane, Rajesh Narayanan. |
Series | NBER working paper series ;, working paper 10623, Working paper series (National Bureau of Economic Research : Online) ;, working paper no. 10623. |
Contributions | Kane, Edward J. 1935-, Narayanan, Rajesh, 1968-, National Bureau of Economic Research. |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | HB1 |
The Physical Object | |
Format | Electronic resource |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL3476058M |
LC Control Number | 2005615515 |
How Have Borrowers Fared in Banking Mega-Mergers? low-tech companies with low credit ratings and low market to book ratios. Carow, Kane, and Narayanan () show that borrowers have lost. Kenneth A. Carow & Edward J. Kane & Rajesh P. Narayanan, "How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers?," Working Paper Series , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, revised Handle: RePEc:fip:fedfwp Get this from a library! How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers?. [Kenneth A Carow; Edward J Kane; Rajesh Narayanan; National Bureau of Economic Research.] -- "Previous studies of event returns surrounding bank mergers show that banks gain value in megamergers and additional value when they absorb in-market competitors. A portion of these gains has been. "How Have Borrowers Fared in Banking Mega-Mergers?" (With Kenneth A. Carow and Rajesh Narayanan), Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, 38, – "The Role of Watchdog Institutions in Corporate Governance" "Financial Regulation and Bank Safety Nets: An International Comparison".
Market Power, Bank Megamergers, And the Welfare of Bank Borrowers Article in Journal of Financial Research 34(4) October with Reads How we measure 'reads'. I am currently working on a book about the comings and goings of monetary-policy instruments and targets over the life of the Federal Reserve System. . This paper provides a review of the recent financial institution mergers and acquisition (M&A) literature covering over studies. Several robust themes emerge in the post literature. North American bank mergers are (or can be) efficiency improving, although the event-study literature presents a mixed picture regarding stockholder wealth by: They estimate a percent real contraction in loans to borrowers with bank credit of less than $1 million during the first half of the s, a substantial decline in lending to large borrowers Author: Steven Drucker.
Kenneth A. Carow & Edward J. Kane & Rajesh Narayanan, "How Have Borrowers Fared in Banking Mega-Mergers?," NBER Working Papers , National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc. Kenneth A. Carow & Edward J. Kane & Rajesh P. Narayanan, "How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers? "How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers?," Working Paper Series , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, revised Berger, Allen N. & Demsetz, Rebecca S. & Strahan, Philip E., Author: Henri Fraisse, J. Hombert, M. Le. "How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers?," Working Paper Series , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, revised Brickley, James A. . "How have borrowers fared in banking mega-mergers?," Working Paper Series , Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, revised Schmid, Markus M. & Walter, Ingo,