1976
DOI: 10.2307/2326428
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Predictability of Reserve Demand, Information Costs, and Portfolio Behavior of Commercial Banks

Abstract: Suggested Citation: Baltensperger, Ernst; Milde, Hellmuth (1975)

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Cited by 15 publications
(16 citation statements)
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“…It is argued, then, that these limits restrict the individual bank's lending operations, thereby warranting a finite bank size. Stanhouse (1986) has extended a model by Baltensperger and Milde (1976) to a Bayesian approach, which endogenizes the bank's demand for information about deposit withdrawals without relying on an arbitrary information function.…”
Section: Reserve Management Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is argued, then, that these limits restrict the individual bank's lending operations, thereby warranting a finite bank size. Stanhouse (1986) has extended a model by Baltensperger and Milde (1976) to a Bayesian approach, which endogenizes the bank's demand for information about deposit withdrawals without relying on an arbitrary information function.…”
Section: Reserve Management Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Thakor and Callaway, 1983;Greenbaum and Thakor, 1987;Diamond, 1991;Morgan, 1994;Gorton and Pennacchi, 1995), the information production functions contained in these models are very simple in that they effectively identify information with expenses on its acquisition instead of linking it to the bank's real inputs. This criticism also applies to the reserve management models by Baltensperger and Milde (1976) and Stanhouse (1986), focusing on the tradeoff between withdrawal risk and information costs. Hence, there is scope for further research here, although expectations should not be too high, given the complexities already involved in existing models.…”
Section: Real Resource Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aigner and Sprenkle [1], Baltensperger [3], and Baltensperger and Milde [5] were the first to develop models of the banking firm in the context of variable information, an objective this paper shares. Aigner and Sprenkle presented a very simple model of information acquisition and then examined the impact of information upon default risk and commercial bank lending behavior.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Aigner and Sprenkle [1], Baltensperger [3], and Baltensperger and Milde [5] were the first to develop models of the banking firm in the context of variable information, an objective this paper shares. Aigner and Sprenkle presented a very simple model of information acquisition and then examined the impact of information upon default risk and commercial bank lending behavior.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%