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The 24th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition
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The 24th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition

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  • Speakers
  • Agenda
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Since the early 1960s, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Conference on Bank Structure and Competition has served as a forum for academics, regulators and industry participants to debate current issues affecting the financial services industry. Each year the purpose of the conference is to continue that tradition. This retrospective on the history and evolution of the conference reviews the past four decades of conferences.

 

The primary motivating factor for the conference was the passage of the 1960 Bank Merger Act and the U.S. versus Philadelphia National Bank Supreme Court decision. Suddenly, bank regulatory agencies were required to consider competitive factors in addition to banking factors when evaluating bank merger applications. Each of the Federal Reserve Banks was encouraged to survey the existing literature on bank structure and develop its own research agendas on these issues.

05/11/88
 
I. Special Addresses
  • An Overview of Financial Restructuring

Alan Greenspan,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • The First Law of Restructuring

Barry F. Sullivan,  First National Bank of Chicago

  • A Bank by Any Other Name ...

Thomas G. Labrecque ,  Chase Manhattan Corporation

 
II. Systemic Risk and Financial Restructuring
  • The Effects of Regulation on Systemic Risks

Anna J. Schwartz,  National Bureau of Economic Research

  • Systemic Risk and Financial Restructuring

William Taylor,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

 
III. Lessons from October 19, 1987
  • Remarks for the Panel "Lessons from October 19, 1987"

Martha R. Seger ,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • Lessons from The Crash of '87: Systemic Issues

Gillian Garcia,  U.S. Senate Banking Committee

  • Lessons from October 19th

Robert R. Glauber,  Harvard University

  • The Fact and the Fiction of October 19

Joseph A. Grundfest,  Securities and Exchange Commission

  • Margins and the Future of the Markets

Merton H. Miller,  University of Chicago

 
IV. Risk-Based Capital and Deposit Insurance
  • Risk-Based Capital Adequacy Standards for a Sample of 43 Major Banks

Ehud I. Ronn,  University of Chicago

Avinash K. Verma,  University of Massachusetts

  • Bank Capital Regulation in the 1980s: Effective or Ineffective?

Michael C. Keeley,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

  • Capital Requirements and Optimal Bank Portfolios: A Reexamination

William P. Osterberg,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

James B. Thomson,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

 
V. Historical Studies of Bank Failure and Crises
  • A Reexamination of the History of Bank Failures, Contagion and Banking P

R. Alton Gilbert,  Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

  • Contagion Effects and Banks Closed in the Free Banking Period

Iftekhar Hasan,  University of Wisconsin

Gerald P. Dwyer, Jr.,  University of Houston

 
VI. Bank Risk-Taking
  • Parameter Variability, Event Studies and the Two-Index Model

Edward J. Kane,  Ohio State University

Haluk Ünal,  Ohio State University

  • The Market's Evaluation of Bank Risk: A Methodological Approach

Gary Gorton,  University of Pennsylvania

Anthony M. Santomero,  University of Pennsylvania

  • Ownership Structure, Deregulation and Bank Risk Taking

Anthony Saunders,  New York University

Elizabeth Strock,  Boston College

Nickolaos G. Travlos,  Boston College

 
VII. Off-Balance-Sheet Activities
  • Off-Balance-Sheet Activities and the Underinvestment Problem in Banking

Christopher James,  University of Oregon

Paul A. Spindt ,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • An Analysis of Bank Hedging in Futures Markets

G. D. Koppenhaver,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Roger Craine,  University of California at Berkeley

  • Risk-Based Capital and Off-Balance-Sheet Activities

Robert B. Avery,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Allen N. Berger,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

 
VIII. Corporate Separateness
  • Corporate Separateness

Roger D. Rutz,  Board of Trade Clearing Corporation

  • Insulating Banks from Risks Run by Nonbank Affiliates

Samuel B. Chase,  Chase, Laub & Company

  • Insulation of Banking from Nonbanking: An Empirical Investigation

George E. French,  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Eric Hirschhorn,  Federal Home Loan Bank Board

  • Implementing a Fail-Proof Banking System

Robert J. Lawrence,  University of Missouri

Samuel H. Talley,  Banking Consultant

 
IX. New Powers—Strategic Issues
  • Bank Securities Activities: Current Position and Future Prospects

George G. Kaufman ,  Loyola University Chicago and Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Larry R. Mote,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

  • Economies of Scale and Scope in the Securities Industry: A Model Using Survey Data from New York Securities Firms

Lawrence G. Goldberg,  University of Miami

Gerald A. Hanweck,  George Mason University

Michael Keenan,  New York University

Allan Young,  Syracuse University

  • Relatedness in Financial Services

Eileen M. Friars,  The MAC Group

 
X. Bank Risk—Recent Experience
  • Bank Failure: An Evaluation of the Factors Contributing to the Failure of National Banks

Fred C. Graham,  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

James E. Horner,  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

  • The International Debt Crisis and Bank Security Returns Surrounding Citicorp's Loan-Loss Reserve Decision of May 19, 1987

James J. Musumeci,  University of Georgia

Joseph F. Sinkey, Jr.,  University of Georgia

  • Loan Loss Reserves and Stock Market Valuations of Financial Institutions

S. Wayne Passmore,  Federal Home Loan Bank Board

 
XI. New Powers—Impact on Risk
  • The Profitability and Risk Effects of Allowing Bank Holding Companies to Merge with Other Financial Firms: A Simulation Study

John H. Boyd,  Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

Stanley L. Graham,  Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis

  • Bank Securities Powers: Are There Diversification Gains?

Myron L. Kwast ,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

 
XII. Bank Risk—Regulatory Responses
  • Lessons of the Past and Prospects for the Future in Lender of Last Resort Theory

Walker F. Todd,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

  • Technology, Regulation and the Financial Services Industry in the Year 2000

Bert Ely,  Ely & Company, Inc.

Robert A. Eisenbeis,  University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

  • Prudential Supervision to Manage Systemic Vulnerability

Jack Guttentag,  University of Pennsylvania

Richard Herring,  University of Pennsylvania

 
XIII. Financial Restructuring—Risk and Efficiency
  • Is Securities Brokerage the Future of Banking?

Donald J. Crawford,  Securities Industry Association

  • The Future of Banking: Are "Narrow" Banks the Answer?

Robert E. Litan,  Brookings Institution

  • Will Firewalls Reduce Risk?

S. Waite Rawls,  Continental Illinois Corporation

  • Financial Restructuring—Where Do We Go from Here?

Kenneth E. Scott,  Stanford University

 

A Brief History of the Conference


Since the early 1960s the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Conference on Bank Structure and Competition has served as a forum for academics, regulators and industry participants to debate current issues affecting the financial services industry. Each year the purpose of the conference is to continue that tradition. This retrospective on the history and evolution of the conference reviews the past four decades of conferences.

Event Information
Date
05/11/88 - 05/13/88
Location
The Fairmont Chicago Hotel
200 N Columbus Dr
Chicago, Illinois 60601

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