Determinants of bank customers' demand for liquidity: the effect of bank capital and customers' characteristics Online publication date: Fri, 09-Oct-2015
by Cláudia D. Bernardo; Sérgio C. Lagoa; Emanuel R. Leão
International Journal of Monetary Economics and Finance (IJMEF), Vol. 8, No. 3, 2015
Abstract: In contexts of economic instability, investors show an increase in risk aversion and prefer high liquidity and low-risk financial products. In this paper, we study the reasons behind bank customers holding wealth in the form of immediate liquidity. Using micro data on clients' portfolios of a Portuguese bank, we ask whether there is a relationship between bank's capital ratio and the proportion of wealth that clients allocate to demand deposits, which is a relatively unexplored topic in the literature. Special attention is also paid to the impact of investors' financial knowledge regarding portfolio decisions by looking at university education, professional group and age. Results indicate that when banks' capital ratio decreases, savers put a larger fraction of their investment into demand deposits, especially savers with greater risk aversion and knowledge. Finally, we find evidence that investors with a university education or belonging to professional groups with higher skills follow more sophisticated investment strategies.
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