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Author:Hannan, Timothy H. 

Working Paper
Acquisition targets and motives in the banking industry

This paper uses a large sample of individual banking organizations, observed from 1996 to 2003, to investigate the characteristics that made them more likely to be acquired. We use a definition of acquisition that we consider preferable to that used in much of the previous literature, and we employ a competing-risk hazard model that reveals important differences that depend on the type of acquirer. Since interstate acquisitions became more numerous during this period, we also investigate differences in the determinants of acquisition between in-state and out-of-state acquirers. The hypothesis ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2006-40

Working Paper
Bank insolvency risk and the market for large certificates of deposit

Working Papers in Banking, Finance and Microeconomics , Paper 86-1

Working Paper
Returns to bidders and targets in the acquisition process: evidence from the banking industry

Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 64

Journal Article
Measuring income distribution in the United States

Business Review , Issue Mar , Pages 3-11

Journal Article
Lack of competition: where it's found and how much it costs

Business Review , Issue May , Pages 5-11

Working Paper
Inferring market power from time-series data: the case of the banking firm

Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 147

Working Paper
Price rigidity and market structure: theory and evidence from the banking industry

Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 59

Working Paper
Multimarket bank pricing: an empirical investigation of deposit interest rates

In recent years, the number of large, geographically diversified banking organizations operating in the U.S. has grown. Empirical studies have found that, at least in the case of deposit interest rates, many of these banks offer the same rate for a given type of account throughout a state, or, in some cases, a broader geographical area. This phenomenon of uniform pricing raises questions as to what competitive factors are relevant in explaining the deposit interest rates offered by large multimarket banks. In this paper, we provide empirical evidence regarding the determinants of the deposit ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2004-38

Working Paper
The competitive implications of multimarket bank branching

Regulators and research economists typically view retail banking markets as locally limited, spanning an area that can often be approximated by a metropolitan area or a rural county. Banks are assumed to set retail prices based on the conditions of supply and demand prevailing within these local market areas. However, recent studies have found evidence that large, multimarket banking organizations tend to offer uniform interest rates for retail deposit accounts of a particular type throughout the area that they serve, at least within a given state. This uniform pricing phenomenon raises ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2001-43

Working Paper
Will the proposed application of Basel II in the United States encourage increased bank merger activity? evidence from past merger activity

This paper presents two tests of the hypothesis that adoption of the internal ratings-based approach to determining minimum capital requirements, as proposed in applying the Basel II capital accord in the United States, will cause adopting banking organizations to increase acquisition activity. The first test estimates the relationship between excess regulatory capital and subsequent merger activity, including organization and time fixed effects, while the second test employs a "difference in difference" analysis of the change in merger activity that occurred the last time regulatory ...
Finance and Economics Discussion Series , Paper 2004-13

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