This paper studies the determinants of bank net interest margins (NIMs) in
six selected European countries and the US during the period 1988-1995 for
a sample of 614 banks. We apply the Ho and Saunders model (Ho, T., Saunders
, A., 1981. The determinants of bank interest margins: theory and empirical
evidence. Journal of Financial and Quantitative Analyses 16, 581-600) to a
multicountry setting and decompose bank margins into a regulatory componen
t, a market structure component and a risk premium component. The regulator
y components in the form of interest-rate restrictions on deposits, reserve
requirements and capital-to-asset ratios have a significant impact on bank
s NIMs. The empirical results suggest an important policy trade-off between
assuring bank solvency-high capital-to-asset ratios-and lowering the cost
of financial services to consumers-low NIMs. The mon segmented or restricte
d the banking system-both geographically and by activity-the larger appears
to be the monopoly power of existing banks, and the higher their spreads.
Macro interest-rate volatility was found to have a significant impact on ba
nk NIMs; this suggests that macro policies consistent with reduced interest
-rate volatility could have a positive effect in reducing bank margins. (C)
2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. JEL classification: D21; G
15; G21.