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The 29th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition
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The 29th 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 on these issues. This year's theme was FDICIA: An Appraisal—Renaissance, Requiem or Just Another Acronym?

05/05/93
 
I. Special Addresses
  • FDICIA and the Future of Banking Law and Regulation

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

  • Back to the Basics

John G. Heimann,  Merrill Lynch Capital Markets

  • Dangers of a Bifurcating Bank System

Edward J. Kane,  Boston College

  • The Outlook for Banking: Is the Crisis Over?

George M. Salem,  Prudential-Bache Securities

  • The Banking Crisis in Perspective

L. William Seidman,  CNBC

 
II. Systemic Risk
  • Comments on Systemic Risk

Malcolm P. Basing,  Swiss Bank Corporation, Canada

  • The Role of Regulation in System Stability

Wendy L. Gramm,  Commodity Futures Trading Commission

  • Swaps and Systemic Risk in Interbank Markets

Merton H. Miller,  University of Chicago

  • Systemic Risk in Interbank Markets
 
III. Estimating BIF Losses
  • Estimating BIF Losses: A Discussion of Various Methods

Philip F. Bartholomew,  Congressional Budget Office

Thomas J. Lutton,  Congressional Budget Office

  • Estimating BIF Losses: Secrets to Accurate Forecasting

Bert Ely,  Ely & Company, Inc.

  • BIF Loss Exposure: A Simple Actuarial Approach

George E. French,  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

 
IV. The Response of Banks to Capital Shocks
  • Risk-Based Capital and Bank Growth

Herbert L. Baer,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

John N. McElravey,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

  • Domestic and International Capital Standards and Bank Assets

Diana Hancock,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

James A. Wilcox,  University of California, Berkeley

  • Impact of Capital Requirements on the Behavior of Banks and Its Macroeconomic Implications: Japan's Experience

Ryoichi Shinagawa,  Bank of Japan

05/06/93
 
V. Risk-Taking by Banks
  • The Effect of Capital on Portfolio Risk at Life Insurance Companies

Elijah Brewer III,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Thomas H. Mondschean,  DePaul University

Philip E. Strahan,  University of Chicago

  • Increased Risk-Taking versus Local Economic Conditions as Causes of Bank Failures

William R. Emmons,  Dartmouth College

  • Project Choice, Moral Hazard and Optimal Subsidiary Structure for Intermediaries

Charles M. Kahn,  University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

  • Rents, Regulation and Risk-Taking in the Banking Industry

Thomas H. Noe,  Georgia State University

Michael J. Rebello,  Georgia State University

Larry D. Wall,  Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

 
VI. Bank Accounting Issues
  • The Importance of Accurate Bank Accounting under FDICIA

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

  • Partial Market Value Accounting, Bank Capital Volatility and Bank Risk

Mark Carey,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

  • Managerial Turnover and Discretionary Accounting Decisions in Banks with Concentrated Ownership

Drew Dahl,  Utah State University

 
VII. Bank Lending Practices
  • Bridge Financing, Delegated Monitoring and Corporate Policy

Andrew H. Chen,  Southern Methodist University

Mao-Wei Hung,  McGill University

Sumon C. Mazumdar,  McGill University

  • Pricing Bank Loans

Gary Gorton,  Wharton School of Business

James Kahn,  University of Rochester

  • Loan Sales, Implicit Contracts and Bank Structure

Joseph G. Haubrich,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

James B. Thomson,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

  • Session on Corporate Lending: Discussion

Raghuram G. Rajan,  University of Chicago

  • Lender Consistency in Housing Credit Markets

Robert Avery,  Cornell University

Patricia E. Beeson,  University of Pittsburgh

Mark S. Sniderman,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

  • The Role of Mortgage Banks in the Chicago Metropolitan Area

Constance R. Dunham,  U.S. Agency for International Development

 
VIII. Bank Mergers
  • The Strategy of a Merger: Fleet and Bank of New England

Dwight B. Crane,  Harvard Business School

Jane C. Linder,  Polaroid Corporation

  • The Efficiency Effects of Bank Mergers: Rationale for a Case Study Approach and Preliminary Findings

Stephen A. Rhoades,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

05/07/93
 
IX. Bank Closure Policy
  • Comments on Bank and Thrift Closure Policy

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

  • Capital Forbearance and Thrifts: An Ex Post Examination of Regulatory Gambling

Ramon P. DeGennaro,  University of Tennessee

James B. Thomson,  Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

  • A Moral Hazard Rationale for Early Closure in FDICIA

Raman Kumar,  Virginia Polytechnic Institute

George Emir Morgan,  Virginia Polytechnic Institute

  • A Theory of Optimal Forbearance

S. Nagarajan,  Columbia University

C. W. Sealey,  McGill University

 
X. Banking in the Global Market
  • The Banking Crises in the Scandinavian Countries

Sigbjørn Atle Berg,  Norges Bank

  • Corporate–Finance Benefits from Universal Banking: Germany and the United States, 1870–1914

Charles W. Calomiris,  University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

  • Deposit Guarantees, Nonperforming Loans and the Postal Savings System in Japan

Thomas F. Cargill,  University of Nevada

  • Politics of Deposit Insurance Reform: The Case of Argentina

Geoffrey P. Miller,  University of Chicago

 
XI. FDICIA: Renaissance or Requiem?
  • The Implications of FDICIA for Bank Management

Lawrence Connell,  Society for Savings

  • Remarks on FDICIA

William M. Isaac,  The Secura Group

  • FDICIA: Renaissance or Requiem?

George G. Kaufman,  Loyola University Chicago

  • Remarks on FDICIA

Richard L. Thomas,  First Chicago Corporation

  • The Meaning of FDICIA

Harrison Young,  Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

 
XII. Bank Regulation after FDICIA
  • New Private Sector Deposit Insurance

Warren G. Heller,  VERIBANC, Inc.

  • Remarks on Banking after FDICIA

Karen D. Shaw,  Institute for Strategy Development

  • An Empirical Analysis of Regulatory Compliance

Anjan V. Thakor,  Indiana University

Jess C. Beltz,  Indiana 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
05/05/93 - 05/07/93
Location
The Fairmont Chicago Hotel
200 N Columbus Dr
Chicago, Illinois 60601

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