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COVID-19 and financial institution stability: stress testing the Eastern Caribbean currency union

Dalano DaSouza (Department of Economics, The University of the West Indies, Cave Hill, Barbados)
Kareem Martin (Research Department, Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, Basseterre, Saint Kitts And Nevis)
Peter Abraham Jr (Research Department, Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, Basseterre, Saint Kitts And Nevis)
Godson Davis (Monetary Operations Department, Eastern Caribbean Central Bank, Basseterre, Saint Kitts And Nevis)

Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance

ISSN: 1358-1988

Article publication date: 5 May 2023

Issue publication date: 27 October 2023

119

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to simulate the potential impact of increasing non-performing loans (NPLs) on capital adequacy, interest income and firm value of banks and credit unions in the Eastern Caribbean Currency Union (ECCU) using stress tests.

Design/methodology/approach

A financial stress testing model was deployed at the levels of individual financial intermediary (FI), sectoral loan portfolio composition, individual member country, and the ECCU collectively, to investigate the impact of NPL shocks on FI stability.

Findings

The authors find that shocks impact the capital adequacy of banks less than that of credit unions, but that firm value of banks is more susceptible to increases in NPLs. Interest income responses to NPL shocks were linked to credit exposure from the tourism sector, which also reduced capital adequacy more than other economic sectors. Findings show that while the COVID-19 pandemic occasioned some increase in NPLs, the magnitude of impact was significantly mitigated by pro-stability policies including loan repayment moratoria and restructuring, guidance on the distribution of profits and deleveraging by financial institutions leading up to 2020.

Originality/value

The paper is among the first to use stress testing on the Caribbean in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Past studies which have used stress test models in the region have not explicitly investigated the impact of credit shocks on risk-weighted assets or interest income as done herein, nor do they include credit unions in the modeling. The results offer novel evaluations as well as implications for FIs in other developing economies, especially those that share a comparable financial and economic architecture.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Allister Hodge of the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank Research Department for their useful comments on an earlier version of the paper.

Citation

DaSouza, D., Martin, K., Abraham Jr, P. and Davis, G. (2023), "COVID-19 and financial institution stability: stress testing the Eastern Caribbean currency union", Journal of Financial Regulation and Compliance, Vol. 31 No. 5, pp. 525-545. https://doi.org/10.1108/JFRC-10-2022-0123

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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