This paper examines the impact of off-balance sheet derivatives usage by banks combined with financial statement items on their capital market risk measures. Financial markets liberalization policies in the 1990s, led to a surge in investment in Indian banks' stocks, and therefore, understanding capital market risk is of critical interest to domestic and foreign investors in bank stocks, as well as to bank managers. Using panel data analysis of publicly listed private and public sector banks, our findings indicate that bank size, core capital-to-risk adjusted asset ratio, and interest spread of banks are significantly related to the total return risk of bank stocks. The market risk of bank stocks is significantly positively related to the amount of derivatives usage and to the return on asset ratio of banks. Also, the firm-specific risk component of bank stocks is significantly affected by the volume of total assets, interest spread, and their core capital-to-asset ratio. The interest rate risk exposure of bank stocks is significantly related to the core capital-to-asset ratio, and the interest spread. The off-balance sheet derivatives exposure, bank size, and the core capital to risk adjusted asset ratios are seen to have a significant effect on the overall systematic risk J Econ Finan component of the bank stocks. The bank ownership structure, i.e., private versus public sector banks do not have any significant effect on the capital market risk measures.
There has been disagreement over the value of purchasing space in the metaverse, but many businesses including Nike, The Wendy's Company, and McDonald's have jumped in headfirst. While the metaverse land rush has been called an "illusion" given underdeveloped infrastructure, including inadequate software and servers, and the potential opportunities for economic and legal abuse, the "real estate of the future" shows no signs of slowing. While the current virtual space of the metaverse is worth $6.30 billion, that is expected to grow to $84.09 billion by the end of 2028. But the long-term legal and regulatory considerations of capitalizing on the investment, as well as the manner in which blockchain technology can secure users' data and digital assets, has yet to be properly investigated. With the metaverse still in a conceptual phase, building a new 3D social environment capable of digital transactions will represent most of the initial investment in time in human capital. Digital twin technologies, already well-established in industry, will be ported to support the need to architect and furnish the new digital world. The return on and viability of investing in the "real estate of the future" raises questions fundamental to the success or failure of the enterprise. As such this paper proposes a novel framing of the issue and looks at the intersection where finance, technology, and law are converging to prevent another Dot-com bubble of the late 1990s in metaverse-based virtual real estate transactions. Furthermore, the paper will argue that these domains are technologically feasible, but the main challenges for commercial users remain in the legal and How to cite this paper:
This paper aims to analyse the effects of financial statement indicators and off-balance sheet items affecting risk measures among Indian banks employing both panel data regression and a non-parametric decision tree approach. We explore the effects of bank size, leverage, exposure to contingent liabilities including off-balance sheet derivatives usage and macroeconomic factors on risk measures for banks. In this paper, it is also aimed to examine the effects of the major financial liberalization policy period in the domestic market in India that started in the mid-1990s and ended around 2004 as well as impacts of the 2008 global financial crisis on the risk measures of banks operating in India. As risk measures, we present a comparative analysis of liquidity, solvency, and interest rate risk measures of Indian banks across public (government) and private ownership categories. Main findings from our study demonstrate (i) significant impact of capital adequacy and the bank size on all the risk measures, (ii) contingent liabilities (including derivatives usage) at banks is observed to significantly impact the asset management measure of liquidity risk and the solvency risk of banks, (iii) GDP growth is observed to impact the asset management and liability management measure of liquidity risk, (iv) the global financial crisis is found to have a significant impact on the liquidity risk measures and interest rate risk, but a weak effect on solvency risk of Indian banks, (v) bank ownership category (government owned versus private sector banks) is observed to have a significant impact on all the risk measures, and finally (vi) financial liberalization reforms had a highly significant effect on the liquidity risk at banks.
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