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The 14th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition
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The 14th Annual Conference on Bank Structure & Competition

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Since the early 1960s, the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Conference on Bank Structure and Competition has served as a forum for academics, regulators and industry participants to debate current issues affecting the financial services industry. Each year the purpose of the conference is to continue that tradition. This retrospective on the history and evolution of the conference reviews the past four decades of conferences.

 

The primary motivating factor for the conference was the passage of the 1960 Bank Merger Act and the U.S. versus Philadelphia National Bank Supreme Court decision. Suddenly, bank regulatory agencies were required to consider competitive factors in addition to banking factors when evaluating bank merger applications. Each of the Federal Reserve Banks was encouraged to survey the existing literature on bank structure and develop its own research agendas on these issues.

04/12/82
 
I. Deregulation of the Financial Sector

Implications of Deregulation for Product Lines and Geographical Markets of Financial Institutions

George Kaufman,  Loyola University of Chicago and Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Larry R. Mote,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

Harvey Rosenblum,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

 
II. The Future Competitive Environment: Strategic Planning for the 1990s

The Future Competitive Environment: Strategic Planning for the 1990s

Sanford Rose,  American Banker

The Future of Banking: A Community Banker's Perspective

Lee E. Gunderson,  Bank of Osceola

The Future of Banking: A National Market and Its Implications

Alex J. Pollock,  Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company

Planning for the 1990s from the Perspective of a Large, Diversified Financial Services Company

Herbert M. Allison,  Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith

What a Savings and Loan Can Learn from General George Armstrong Custer

Glenn Hansen,  First Federal Savings and Loan Association

Bank Structure and Competition: A General Perspective

Vergil V. Miller,  American General Capital Companies

 
III. Deregulation of Product Lines and Geographic Markets

The Impact of the Financial Center Development Act

Donald Puglisi,  University of Delaware

Robert Schweitzer,  University of Delaware

Activities of International Banking Facilities: The Early Experience

Sydney Key,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Risk, Economic Activity and Deposit Insurance

Paul Burik,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Commercial Bank Market Share of the Financial Services Industry: A Value Added Approach

Robert Edmister,  University of Maryland

 
IV. Impact of Deregulation on Community Banks

Impact of Deregulation on Community Banks

Richard Francis,  Kelly, Francis, Galbraith & Lindahl

High Performance Patterns among U.S. Community Banks

Curtis E. Skinner,  Northern Trust Company

Satisfying the Needs of Consumers and Small Business in a Deregulated Environment

Charlotte Scott,  University of Virginia

A Community Banker's View of Deregulation

O. J. Tomson,  The Citizens National Bank of Charles City, Iowa

 
V. Impact of Financial Deregulation on Small Business: Survey Results and Implications

The Impact of the Bank Regulatory Environment on Small Business Financing

Cynthia Glassman,  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

A Sixth District Survey of Small Business Credit: Empirical Evidence on the "Line of Commerce" Controversy

David Whitehead,  Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta

Impact of Financial Deregulation on Small Business: Evidence from April 1980

Lewis Mandell,  University of Connecticut

Peter L. Struck,  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Bank Structure and Small Business Loan Markets

William Dunkelberg,  Purdue University

John Scott,  Edwin L. Cox School of Business

The Financing Problems of Small Business: Survey and Research Design

Helen Mohrmann,  Council for Northeast Economic Action

James M. Howell,  First National Bank of Boston

 
VI. Deregulation

A Non-Structural Test of Competition in Financial Services

Sherrill Shaffer,  Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Economies of Scale in Correspondent Banking

R. Alton Gilbert,  Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Multiproduct Cost Structures in Commercial Banking

Thomas W. Gilligan,  Washington University

Michael Smirlock,  University of Pennsylvania, The Wharton School of Business

William Marshall,  Washington University

 
VII. Interest Rate Risk

S&Ls and Interest Rate Reregulation: The FSLIC as an In-Place Bailout Program

Edward J. Kane,  Ohio State University

Interest Rate Risk in Financial Intermediaries: Prospect for Immunization

Charles Haley,  University of Washington

Immunization of Interest Rate Risk for Financial Institutions

Gerald O. Bierwag,  University of Arizona

Alden L. Toevs,  University of Oregon

Bank Immunization with Interest Rate Futures

Robert Kolb,  Emory University

Gerald D. Gay,  Georgia State University

Variability of Commercial Bank Income: The Reduction of Risk through Variations in Debt Financing

Paul Cretien,  University of Colorado

Kenneth Boles,  University of Colorado

The Response of the Banking System to Unanticipated Inflation: A Cross-Country Comparison

Laurie Goodman,  Federal Reserve Bank of New York

 
VIII. Managing Interest Rate Risk: Theory and Evidence

Comparing Effective Yields of Fixed Rate Mortgages and Adjustable Rate Mortgage Loans

Catherine Baird,  Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco

Arden Hall,  Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco

Hedging with Financial Futures

Jess B. Yawitz,  Washington University

Bank Portfolio Management: The Role of Financial Futures

Dwight Grant,  Southern Methodist University

George Hempel,  Southern Methodist University

 
IX. Measuring and Monitoring Interest Rate Risk

Managing Interest Rate Risk: The Basic Concepts

Richard Aspinwall,  Chase Manhattan Bank

Monitoring and Measuring Interest Rate Risks

Mark Biderman,  Oppenheimer and Company, Inc.

Measuring and Monitoring Interest Rate Risk: A Regulator's Viewpoint

Robert R. Klinzing,  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Ronald A. Lindhart,  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Interest Rate Risk Management: Maximizing Earnings at Minimum Risk

James Kurt Dew,  Chicago Mercantile Exchange

 
X. The Effectiveness of Financial Futures: Users' Experience

The Effectiveness of Financial Futures: Continental Bank's Experience

Paul Boltz,  Continental Illinois National Bank and Trust Company

The Effectiveness of Financial Futures: Chemical Bank's Experience

Jeffrey Leeds,  Chemical Bank

 
XI. Research in Progress

The Impact of Market Interest Rates on Intermediary Stock Prices

Mark Flannery,  University of Pennsylvania

Christopher M. James,  University of Oregon

NOW Accounts: Analysis of a Survey and Implications of Recent Bank Experience

Peter Rose,  Texas A&M University

James W. Kolari,  Texas A&M University

A Research Note on the Utilization of Formal Financial Techniques by Domestic Corporations

Alan K. Reichert,  Indiana University–Purdue University at Fort Wayne

James S. Moore,  Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

 

A Brief History of the Conference


Since the early 1960s the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Conference on Bank Structure and Competition has served as a forum for academics, regulators and industry participants to debate current issues affecting the financial services industry. Each year the purpose of the conference is to continue that tradition. This retrospective on the history and evolution of the conference reviews the past four decades of conferences.

Event Information
Date
04/12/82 - 04/14/82
Location
The Fairmont Chicago Hotel
200 N Columbus Dr
Chicago, Illinois 60601

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