The impact of the Countercyclical Capital Buffer on credit: Evidence from its accumulation and release before and during COVID-19

The impact of the Countercyclical Capital Buffer on credit: Evidence from its accumulation and release before and during COVID-19

Series: Working Papers. 2411.

Author: Mikel Bedayo and Jorge E. Galán.

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The impact of the Countercyclical Capital Buffer on credit: Evidence from its accumulation and release before and during COVID-19 (1 MB)

Summary

The countercyclical capital buffer (CCyB) has become a very important macroprudential tool to strengthen banks’ resilience. However, there is still limited evidence of its impact on lending over the cycle. Using data of 170 banks in 25 European Union countries, we provide a comprehensive assessment of how the CCyB release during the pandemic and its earlier accumulation impacted lending activity. We find that the CCyB has significant effects on lending, but that these effects are highly dependent on banks’ capitalization levels and, more importantly, on their headroom over regulatory requirements. We show that the release of the CCyB in response to the pandemic had a positive impact on lending, especially for banks with the lowest headroom over requirements, and that this effect was larger than the negative impact of its previous accumulation. While the CCyB accumulation had a short-term negative impact on lending for the most capital-constrained banks, this effect quickly diluted due to their enhanced solvency position, potentially allowing them to lower their cost of equity. Our results provide evidence of the benefits of the CCyB, especially in supporting lending during adverse events, while emphasising the need for policymakers to consider the heterogeneous effects across banks when deploying this tool.

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