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Author:White, Lawrence J. 

Conference Paper
Of firewalls and subsidiaries: the right stuff for expanded bank activities

Proceedings , Paper 608

Conference Paper
The reform of Federal Deposit Insurance

Proceedings , Paper 258

Conference Paper
The diffusion of financial innovations: an examination of the adoption of small business credit scoring by large banking organizations

Proceedings , Paper 724

Working Paper
The devil's in the tail: residential mortgage finance and the U.S. Treasury

This paper seeks to contribute to the U.S. housing finance reform conversation by providing a critical assessment of the various types of policy proposals that have been offered. There appears to be a broad consensus to maintain explicit government guarantees for certain narrowly defined borrower populations, such as Federal Housing Administration insurance guarantees for low- and moderate-income and first-time homebuyers. However, the expected role of the federal government in the broader housing finance system is in dispute. The expected role ranges from no role to insuring against only ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 2012-12

Conference Paper
Emerging competition and risk-taking incentives at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac

Proceedings , Paper 922

Journal Article
Regulating housing GSEs: thoughts on institutional structure and authorities

Many of the benefits that the housing government-sponsored enterprises (GSEs) transmit to homebuyers stem from an implied federal guarantee arising from the GSEs? charter benefits and past supervisory forbearance. But this implicit guarantee also represents a risk to taxpayers if one of these GSEs?Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or the Federal Home Loan Bank (FHLB) System?becomes insolvent and the government provides financial assistance. ; In the wake of a $5 billion accounting restatement by Freddie Mac in 2003, concerns about taxpayer liability associated with the housing GSEs have led to various ...
Economic Review , Volume 89 , Issue Q 2 , Pages 87 - 102

Working Paper
The effects of competition from large, multimarket firms on the performance of small, single-market firms: evidence from the banking industry

We offer and test two competing hypotheses for the consolidation trend in banking using U.S. banking industry data over the period 1982-2000. Under the efficiency hypothesis, technological progress improved the performance of large, multimarket firms relative to small, single-market firms, whereas under the hubris hypothesis, consolidation was largely driven by corporate hubris. Our results are consistent with an empirical dominance of the efficiency hypothesis over the hubris hypothesis-on net, technological progress allowed large, multimarket banks to compete more effectively against small, ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2005-15

Working Paper
Empirical studies of financial innovation: lots of talk, little action?

This paper reviews the extant empirical studies of financial innovation. Adopting broad criteria, the authors found just two dozen studies, over half of which (fourteen) had been conducted since 2000. Since some financial innovations are examined by more than one study, only fourteen distinct phenomena have been covered. Especially striking is the fact that only two studies are directed at the hypotheses advanced in many broad descriptive articles concerning the environmental conditions (e.g., regulation, taxes, unstable macroeconomic conditions, and ripe technologies) spurring financial ...
FRB Atlanta Working Paper , Paper 2002-12

Conference Paper
The dynamics of market entry: the effects of mergers and acquisitions on de novo entry in banking

Proceedings , Paper 612

Working Paper
The dynamics of market entry: the effects of mergers and acquisitions on do novo entry and small business lending in the banking industry

We study the dynamics of market entry following mergers and acquisitions (M&As) and the behavior of recent entrants in supplying output that might be withdrawn by the consolidating firms. The data, drawn from the banking industry, suggest that M&As are associated with subsequent increases in the probability of entry. The estimates suggest that M&As explain more than 20% of entry in metropolitan markets and more than 10% of entry in rural markets. Additional results suggest that bank age has a strong negative effect on the small business lending of small banks but that M&As have little ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 1999-41

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