A large share of dollar-denominated lending is done by
non-U.S. banks, particularly European banks. We present a model in which such
banks cut dollar lending more than euro lending in response to a shock to their
credit quality. Because these banks rely on wholesale dollar funding, while
raising more of their euro funding through insured retail deposits, the shock
leads to a greater withdrawal of dollar funding. Banks can borrow in euros and
swap into dollars to make up for the dollar shortfall, but this may lead to
violations of covered interest parity (CIP) when there is limited capital to
take the other side of the swap trade. In this case, synthetic dollar borrowing
becomes expensive, which causes cuts in dollar lending. We test the model in
the context of the Eurozone sovereign crisis, which escalated in the second
half of 2011 and resulted in U.S. money-market funds sharply reducing their
funding to European banks. Coincident with the contraction in dollar funding,
there were significant violations of euro-dollar CIP. Moreover, dollar lending
by Eurozone banks fell relative to their euro lending in both the U.S. and
Europe; this was not the case for U.S. global banks. Finally, European banks
that were more reliant on money funds experienced bigger declines in dollar
lending.
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