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The 26th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition
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The 26th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition

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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

05/08/91
 
I. Special Addresses
  • Banking in the 21st Century

Alan Greenspan,  Chairman,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • Strategies for Revitalizing the Banking Industry

A. W. Clausen,  BankAmerica Corporation

  • The Future of the Banking Industry

George M. Salem,  Prudential-Bache Capital Funding

  • The Future of Banking: A Joint Venture

John P. LaWare,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • The Three "R's" of Banking

Eugene A. Miller,  Comerica Incorporated

  • Challenges to Banks for the Nineties and Beyond

Barry F. Sullivan,  First Chicago Corporation

 
II. The Condition of the FDIC
  • The Condition of the Bank Insurance Fund: A View from Washington

Gillian Garcia,  U.S. Senate, Banking Committee

  • Short and Long Snapshots of the U.S. Banking Industry

Robert E. Litan,  Brookings Institution

  • Assessing the Condition of the Bank Insurance Fund

Philip F. Bartholomew,  Congressional Budget Office

Thomas L. Lutton,  Congressional Budget Office

  • BIF: Still Solvent after All These Years?

John F. Bovenzi,  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

 
III. Assessing Current Legislative Proposals for Deposit Insurance Reform
  • Comments on Deposit Insurance Reform

Thomas C. Theobald,  Continental Bank Corporation

  • ssecting Current Legislative Proposals for Deposit Insurance Reform

Edward J. Kane,  Ohio State University

  • Assessing the Current Legislative Proposals for Deposit Insurance

John C. Dugan,  U.S. Department of the Treasury

  • The Impact of Reform on Community Banks

Kenneth A. Guenther,  Independent Bankers Association of America

 
IV. Moral Hazard and Franchise Value: Theory and Evidence
  • The Asset Flexibility Option and the Value of Deposit Insurance

Peter Ritchken,  Case Western Reserve University

James Thomson,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

Ramon DeGennaro,  University of Tennessee

Anlong Li,  Case Western Reserve University

  • Risk-Taking Behavior of Banking Firms

Simon H. Kwan,  University of Arizona

  • Empirically Assessing the Role of Moral Hazard in Increasing the Risk Exposure of Texas Banks

Jeffrey W. Gunther,  Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Kenneth J. Robinson,  Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

  • Moral Hazard and Franchise Value: Theory and Evidence

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

 
V. Managerial Incentives and Bank Performance
  • Executive Compensation and Corporate Performance: Evidence from Thrift Institutions

Rebel A. Cole,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Hamid Mehran,  Boston College

  • The Management Reward Structure and Risk-Taking Behavior of U.S. Commercial Banks

Helena M. Mullins,  University of Oregon

 
VI. Behavior of Poorly Capitalized Banks
  • What Happens if Banks Are Closed "Early?"

Mark E. Levonian,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

  • Risk and Capitalization in Banking

Douglas McManus,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Richard Rosen,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • Moral Hazard, Equity Issuance and Recoveries of Undercapitalized Banks

Drew Dahl,  Utah State University

Michael F. Spivey,  Clemson University

  • Supervision of Undercapitalized Banks: Is There a Case for Change?

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

  • Dealing with Poorly Capitalized Banks from the Perspective of the Deposit Insurance Agency

George J. Benston,  Emory University

 
VII. Creditor Discipline
  • Standby Letters of Credit and Bank Capital: Evidence of Market Discipline

G. D. Koppenhaver,  Iowa State University

Roger D. Stover,  Iowa State University

  • Subordinated Debt Market Information and the Pricing of Deposit Insurance

Carolin D. Schellhorn,  Northeastern University

Lewis J. Spellman,  University of Texas at Austin

  • Market Discipline in Banking

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

 
VIII. Bank Closure Policy: The Case for Early Intervention
  • Implementing Early Intervention

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

  • Current Proposals for Early Intervention

Raymond Natter,  U.S. Senate Committee on Banking

  • Early Intervention in the Securities Industry

Michael A. Macchiaroli,  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

  • Reforming Deposit Insurance: The Danish Case

Randall J. Pozdena,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

  • Early Intervention Practices in Canada

Ronald A. McKinlay,  Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation

 
IX. FDIC Premiums
  • The Impact of Premium Rates and Rebates on the Solvency of the FDIC Reserve Fund: An Empirical Approach

Sherrill Shaffer,  Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia

  • A Simple Approach to Better Deposit Insurance Pricing

Sarah B. Kendall,  Loyola University

Mark E. Levonian,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

 
X. Market Value Accounting
  • How Market Value Accounting Would Affect Banks

David L. Mengle,  Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

John R. Walter,  Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond

  • Market Value Accounting and Bank Income Volatility: Some evidence from the Investment Account

Jonathan Jones,  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

Robert Nachtmann,  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

Fred Phillips-Patrick,  U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission

  • Deposit Premiums of Failed Banks: Implications for the Values of Deposits and Bank Franchises

James A. Berkovec,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

J. Nellie Liang,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

 
XI. Future Bank Profitability
  • The Link between Merger Premiums and Subsequent Target Bank Risk

J. Amanda Adkisson,  Sam Houston State University

Donald R. Fraser,  Texas A&M University

  • Interstate Banking and Competition

Elizabeth S. Laderman,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

Randall J. Pozdena,  Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco

  • Can Banks Profitably Fund Mortgages?

Wayne Passmore,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • Deregulation and Profitability

Philip F. Bartholomew,  Congressional Budget Office

Larry R. Mote,  Congressional Budget Office

  • Remarks on Future Bank Profitability

Jonathan P. Moynihan,  First Manhattan Consulting Group

 

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
05/09/90 - 05/11/90
Location
Westin Hotel Michigan Avenue
909 N Michigan Ave
Chicago, Illinois 60611

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