RDP 2022-01: MARTIN Gets a Bank Account: Adding a Banking Sector to the RBA's Macroeconometric Model Online Appendix
This appendix provides additional information to accompany Research Discussion Paper No 2022-01. All references to the MARTIN parameters in Ballantyne et al (2019) should be understood as being the current estimation of these parameters.
1. Debt Funding Costs
The following equation for debt (including deposits) funding costs incorporates the funding sources without a lower bound ( sD,t + rC,t ), the funding sources that will progressively hit the deposit lower bound as the cash rate falls, and an endogenous response to capital shortfalls reflecting the higher credit risk of banks with capital shortfalls:
where the shares of deposits at each deposit-spread level are calibrated (in Table A1) such that the sum matches the the information in Garner and Suthakar (2021) and is consistent with information garnered from discussions with RBA staff. The exogenous component of the debt funding spread ( sD,t ) is treated as a random walk. rC,t is the cash rate. And (because while a debt funding cost of 1 per cent aligns with rD,t =1).
i | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.02 | 0.02 | 0.06 | 0.07 | 0.03 | 0.04 | 0.06 | 0.06 | 0.07 | 0.07 | |
0.02 | 0.04 | 0.10 | 0.17 | 0.20 | 0.24 | 0.30 | 0.36 | 0.43 | 0.50 |
2. Loan Losses
The losses equations are:
where is calibrated using banks' average ‘quarterly charge for bad and doubtful debts as a share of assets’ over the five years to December 2019 (APRA 2020), and is the household share of banks' outstanding loans (estimated from APRA data).
Adding a constant to and then dividing by the exponential of that constant, will lead to the same equation for total losses (Equation (A1)). Therefore, to calibrate and , we normalise and calibrate so that the sum of quarterly losses matches the total loan losses in APRA's 2017 stress testing exercise (APRA 2018);[1] the resulting calibration is .
2.1 Micro-simulation model
The parameter calibrations for the f (⋅) approximation are provided in Table A2.[2]
Variable combination | Calibration | Variable combination | Calibration |
---|---|---|---|
6.4921 | −0.15181 | ||
0.12899 | 0.0041623 | ||
0.031718 | 0.00019305 | ||
−14.264 | 0.044 | ||
0.11112 | 0.00095606 | ||
−0.0057204 | 7.7577e–05 | ||
−0.036611 | 0.00072769 | ||
−0.00282522 | −3.6678e–05 | ||
0.0021333 | −0.0001718 | ||
6.1094 | Intercept | −4.4007 |
2.2 Gap variables
The gap variables used in the losses equations are defined as:
where and are the neutral real interest rate and inflation expectations variables in MARTIN, the exogenous component of the mortgage spread to funding costs ( sM,t ) is treated as a random walk, and the (0.675sD,t – 0.0585) term is the long-run debt funding spread to the cash rate (this implicitly assumes that the long-run cash rate is above 1.5).
Constructing the log housing price gap is more involved because we need to construct a slow-moving stochastic trend for log housing prices :
Equation (A2) produces a variable that slowly converges to MARTIN's log housing price cointegrating relationship and has a long-run growth rate equal to the long-run growth rate of housing prices . Setting sets the speed of adjustment parameter equal to the speed of adjustment parameter in MARTIN's log housing price equation ( in Equation (27) in Ballantyne et al (2019)). Defining as the long-run value of the log housing price cointegrating relationship:
where and come from Equation (27) in Ballantyne et al (2019), and is the inflation target.
3. Risk Weights
were and
4. Return on Assets
where and is calibrated to be one minus the corporate tax rate.
While we calibrate the model such that the sum of quarterly losses matches the total loan losses in APRA's 2017 stress testing exercise (APRA 2018), the exact path of losses is different. This leads to a different path for banks' capital adequacy ratios. But while the path is different, once losses return to typical levels, banks' capital adequacy ratios in the model should be similar to the stress testing exercise (holding risk weights fixed). So we calibrate such that banks' capital adequacy shortfall five years after the onset of the downturn is consistent between the model and APRA's 2017 stress testing exercise.
5. Capital Adequacy Ratio
In the ‘stressed’ state , in the ‘unconstrained’ state with capital still below target
where St = 1 is the ‘stressed’ state and St = 0 is the ‘unconstrained’ state.
Given that we are using MARTIN's household credit growth equation as a proxy for total credit growth, for the purposes of determining we assume the relevant interest rate for credit growth is rA,t (i.e. in Equation (A5) we replace rM,t with rA,t before substituting into Equations (A3) and (A4)).
When zt = 0, dividends are set so that the capital adequacy ratio remains constant .
5.1 Switching states
If banks are not in the ‘stressed’ state in period t, we assume they enter this state in period t +1iff zt >0 (i.e. if there is a capital shortfall). If banks entered the stressed state in period t, then we allow the modeller to define the number of quarters for which the stressed state lasts. Defining this number as can be defined using the following three functions:[3]
We allow the modeller to exogenously set T because the rarity of stress events in Australia's recent history would make this variable difficult to model accurately. Allowing T to be set by the modeller allows the modeller to test the sensitivity of their results to their T assumption. Our baseline assumption is T = 4.
5.2 MARTIN's credit growth equation
where the parameters and variables on the right-hand sides of Equations (A6) and (A7) are from Equation (19) in Ballantyne et al (2019).
6. Credit Supply
where and .
6.1 Credit supply adjusted on new loans only
References
APRA (Australian Prudential Regulation Authority) (2018), ‘Testing Resilience: The 2017 Banking Industry Stress Test’, APRA Insight, 3.
APRA (2020), ‘Quarterly Authorised Deposit-Taking Institution Performance Statistics: September 2004 to September 2020’, excel file, 8 December.
Ballantyne A, T Cusbert, R Evans, R Guttmann, J Hambur, A Hamilton, E Kendall, R McCririck, G Nodari and D Rees (2019), ‘Online Appendix – MARTIN Has Its Place: A Macroeconometric Model of the Australian Economy’, Online Appendix for RBA Research Discussion Paper No 2019-07.
Garner M and A Suthakar (2021), ‘Developments in Banks' Funding Costs and Lending Rates’, RBA Bulletin, March.
Footnotes
We set and when matching APRA's 2017 stress testing exercise because this exercise did not explicitly incorporate financial accelerator mechanisms (the exercise was based on an exogenous macroeconomic scenario). [1]
Although OLS is used to determine each , we use OLS only to produce an equation that approximates the micro-simulation model output. Therefore, this is a calibration process not an estimation process; this is why standard errors and t-statistics are not reported (as they do not have meaningful interpretations). [2]
We define St using the basic mathematical functions in EViews, as this is the programming language used for MARTIN. The sign function returns a value of 1 if the sign of the variable is positive, -1 if the sign is negative, and zero if the variable equals zero. [3]