Professors Qi Chen and Rahul Vashishtha say some disclosure requirements might increase the risk of bank runs
Until recently, the only bank run many had ever experienced was in the movie “It’s a Wonderful Life.†But when the depositors of Silicon Valley Bank withdrew $42 billion in a single day—the largest bank run in U.S. history –the modern world discovered that even a regional bank default can tip the whole financial system onto the brink of a crisis.
Qi Chen and Rahul Vashishtha, professors of accounting at Duke University’s Fuqua School of Business, have long studied the role information plays in panic-induced bank runs. From their research, they argue that the fragility of the U.S. banking system is a feature inherent to a bank’s business model, and some transparency rules can increase the chance of panic-based deposit withdrawals (bank runs).
“We have known forever that banks are prone to runs,†Vashishtha said. “Runs are very natural in the banking system and connect to their very business model.â€
Banks receive deposits and use them to make loans, transforming something liquid (cash) into something illiquid (loans), Vashishtha said. This is inherently risky, because if all the depositors were to withdraw the money at any point in time, banks wouldn’t have enough cash to meet their requests, he said.
But why do depositors decide to run to the bank—as happened with Silicon Valley Bank? Is it more because they have information about the bank’s bad fundamentals, or more because of panic?
[This article has been reproduced with permission from Duke University's Fuqua School of Business. This piece originally appeared on Duke Fuqua Insights]