Liquidity Creation, Bank Funding, and Risk-Taking: The Role of ESG
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Date
2025-05
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University of New Orleans
Abstract
This dissertation explores two critical types of risks faced by banks that include liquidity
risk and credit risk. Furthermore, it tests whether bank regulations such as adopting the
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) standards in addition to diversifying funding
resources play crucial roles in mitigating them. Also, this dissertation aims to provide evidence of
whether these risks vary depending on banks sizes. The final sample consists of 136 U.S.
commercial banks covering the period from 2005 to 2022. Furthermore, a variety of econometric
methods are applied that include OLS regression, random effects (RE), two-step system
Generalized Method of Moments (GMM), regression discontinuity (RD), the bias-corrected Least-
Squares with Dummy Variables (LSDVC), and the Two-Stage Least Squares regression (2SLS).
The first chapter investigates whether ESG performance plays a mediating role in the effect
of funding costs on bank liquidity creation. The findings of this chapter reveal that funding costs
significantly reduce liquidity creation, implying that higher funding costs decrease banks’ ability
to create liquidity. Additionally, adopting ESG principles increases banks’ ability to create more
liquidity. Moreover, ESG performance of the sampling banks plays a significant role in mediating
the relationship between funding costs and liquidity creation, which implies that depositors accept
low interest payments due to the good ESG performance of the sampling banks, which suggests
increasing the ability of the sampling banks to create liquidity.
The second chapter examines the effect of bank liquidity creation and bank funding
diversification on bank risk-taking, as represented by non-performing loans (NPLs). Moreover, the
chapter aims to explore the mediating role of bank size in these relationships. The findings of this
chapter show that NPLs increase significantly as the sampling banks create more liquidity.
Furthermore, funding diversification significantly reduces NPLs and enhances the stability of the
sampling banks. Finally, bank size significantly moderate the impact of bank liquidity creation and
bank funding diversification on NPLs, which is more evident for the case of large banks.
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Keywords
Financial intermediation, ESG, bank funding, NPLs, liquidity creation, U.S. commercial banks
Citation
Bin Kowibeen, Sattam Ibrahim R, "Liquidity Creation, Bank Funding, and Risk-Taking: The Role of ESG" (2025). University of New Orleans Theses and Dissertations.