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Article

Are Foreign Banks Disadvantaged Vis-À-Vis Domestic Banks in China?

1
College of Business, Law and Governance, James Cook University, Douglas, QLD 4811, Australia
2
School of Management, RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC 3000, Australia
3
Faculty of Business, Government and Law, University of Canberra, Bruce, ACT 2617, Australia
4
Innovation and Development Institute, Anhui University, Hefei 230039, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14(9), 404; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090404
Submission received: 4 August 2021 / Revised: 19 August 2021 / Accepted: 22 August 2021 / Published: 26 August 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Banking and the Economy)

Abstract

:
Do foreign banks enjoy a competitive edge in the Chinese banking market or are they disadvantaged vis-à-vis domestic banks? This is the question that the present paper seeks to answer. The issue is important since on the one hand, these banks face the challenges the liability of foreignness brings, but at the same time, they have bank-specific advantages. We examine this issue in light of the literature of the liability of foreignness. In our path-breaking study, we found that due to the cost of foreignness, foreign banks’ performance was not as good as that of the local banks. Furthermore, despite the same amount of location- and bank-specific advantages, they performed badly as compared to their local counterparts. It was found that the cost of location-based disadvantages outweighed the cost of bank-specific disadvantages for foreign banks, and recent policy changes may help them overcome some of the cost of foreignness.

1. Introduction

Nearly four decades ago, China opened its banking market for foreign banks. It was envisaged that with their superior efficiency and institution-specific advantages, these foreign banks would be able to make successful in-roads in the local banking market. Yet their performance has been far from satisfactory. These banks had to battle with the capital, liquidity, and administrative requirements, along with other regulatory hurdles unique to the Chinese market. Given the different institutional settings of China’s financial system, would these banks be able to improve their performance and embrace the challenges and opportunities in the current millennium? We use the liability of foreignness literature to examine this issue.
Liability of foreignness (LOF) refers to “all additional costs a firm operating in a market overseas incurs that a local firm would not incur” (Zaheer 1995, pp. 342–43). The literature on the liability of foreignness is largely confined to product and consumer markets. In recent years, attempts have been made to apply the LOF to financial markets, such as asset management industry (Yu and Kim 2013), international venture capital (Lu and Hwang 2010), private equity (Taussig 2017), capital market (Baik et al. 2013; Bell et al. 2012), financial services (Zaheer and Mosakowski 1997; Nachum 2003, 2010), and foreign currency trading (Zaheer 1995). Despite this, its application to the banking sector has received limited attention. For example, Miller and Parkhe (2002) examined the liability of foreignness in a global banking setting. They found that X-efficiency of a foreign-owned bank was influenced by its competitiveness in the home country. The study included 13 host countries, but China was excluded from the study. Claessens and Van Horen (2012) found that foreign banks with a bigger market share in the home market tend to perform better in the host country, where regulation is relatively weak.
Banks are different from product manufacturers in many ways. For example, product manufacturers produce and sell physical or tangible products, while banks deal in financial services—mainly borrowing and lending money. Furthermore, banks are the heart of any economic system. They facilitate the flow of funds, and promote investment and growth. The monetary policy transmission takes place through banks. Therefore, for any country, opening the banking sector to foreign participants requires serious consideration. We have seen that over the last four decades, the Chinese banking sector has undergone significant changes, but at a slow pace.
Prior studies have revealed that foreign banks possess some superior competitive advantages over local domestic banks in emerging and transitional markets, such as large asset base from the parent company, an international branch network, easy access to euro-currencies market, modern banking technology, credit management practice, highly qualified human capital, and a better global platform (Elyasiani and Rezvanian 2002; Okuda and Rungsomboon 2006). However, unlike the product markets where foreign firms outperform local Chinese firms (Jiang et al. 2014), for years, the performance of foreign banks has been less than satisfactory. Therefore, despite the superior firm-specific advantages, foreign banks continue to face various strategic challenges that may be resulting from the heavy influence of policy constraints and local idiosyncrasies in China. These challenges may not only come from barriers such as language and culture, but more so from the market environment and regulatory structure. Consequently, foreign banks incur additional costs which outweigh the advantages.
The arguments elaborated above depict a rather complex operating context in which the foreign banks have to perform. In a way, it could be consistent or contrary to the liability of foreignness in general. This leads to our primary research question formally stated as: “To what extent does the liability of foreignness impact foreign bank performance in the Chinese banking market? More specifically, how do foreign banks’ interactions with the host country’s institutional environment affect the foreign banks’ performance in the Chinese market?” To address these research questions, we proceed as follows. First, we examine the fundamental question of whether foreign banks outperform local Chinese banks. Second, we examine the institutional dynamics that may affect the competitiveness of foreign banks in the context of the Chinese business environment. Lastly, we examine a dynamic model of liability of foreignness in the host country banking sector given the rapid economic development, changes in business environment, and changes in banking regulation in China.
Our study provides a new insight to the current literature. First, we extend the literature on the LOF beyond the product market to a more specific yet vital banking sector in an emerging market. Second, we elaborate LOF from the perspective of a firm–location interaction dynamic approach. Third, we examine the dynamics of LOF, suggesting that cost of foreignness can be reduced by exploiting bank-specific advantages.

2. Theory and Hypotheses Development

2.1. Conceptual Framework

Just like any other multinational enterprises, multinational banks will face the LOF and will have higher additional costs to conduct business in a foreign country such as China.
One of the most important features of China’s banking sector is the government’s involvement. Not only does the government hold assets of banks, but it also interferes in the business of the banks. For example, many state-owned enterprises with low productivity receive extra corporate credit and low cost of credit from banks, which is a reflection of the government’s intervention to spur investment-led economic growth and employment. Private firms have been highly discriminated against and cannot access bank credit, even though the government acknowledged the private sector as an integral part of the economy. Further, years of directed lending and administered interest rates result in large non-performing loans and poor profitability for Chinese banks, especially for the four largest state-owned commercial banks, which results in low efficiency of their financial operations (Leung and Young 2002). To respond to these institutional constraints and to promote trade and foreign direct investment in the country, the Chinese government has gradually opened its doors to foreign banks, but with great caution.
Overall, foreign banks’ entry has promoted efficiency in China’s banking sector. For example, foreign banks have improved access to local financial services in China and further diversified competition in the financial markets (Leung 1997). It has been shown that large, financially sound foreign banks have helped to stimulate trade and investment in China. Claessens et al. (2001) conducted a study using cross-sectional data from 80 countries, and the results show that the efficiency of the foreign banks is usually lower than that of domestic banks, while in developing countries, the results were reversed. Demirgüç-Kunt et al. (1998) show that foreign bank participation lowers the possibility that a country will experience a banking crisis. Foreign banks also increase overall economic growth by raising the efficiency of domestic banks. Lin’s (2011) study suggests that less-opaque banking firms and non-state-owned firms benefit more from foreign bank entry. Berger (2007) and Kumbhakar and Wang (2007) found that the participation of minority foreign ownership contributes significantly to improving the efficiency of Chinese banks.
Therefore, the competitive effects brought by foreign banks will reduce the local banking market shares and profits. The increasing number and degree of foreign banks’ entry will break the monopoly of local banks through competition. However, the asset share of foreign banks in China remains low. As of December 2015, foreign bank assets in China were 2.68 trillion Yuan, accounting for 1.38% of the total banking assets in China. Despite the small size, foreign banks’ profits in China kept growing. The expansion of foreign banks is limited by the relevant laws and regulations of the supervisory and regulatory institutions of China. There is still a high barrier to entry given the regulations on minimum registered capital and administrative requirements that constrain foreign banks from growing their network and profitability. For example, in late 2013, China proposed to more than triple the minimum registered capital for newly incorporated foreign banks from RMB 300 million ($48 million) to RMB 1 billion. Additionally, new international rules under Basel III make it expensive to hold significant stakes in other lenders. Banks have to face severe competition, and coupled with the increased capital requirements and liquidity constraints, some banks have chosen to focus on other opportunities.
However, new regulations are continuously coming out, which have lowered the threshold for foreign banks to access certain business areas. For example, the Shanghai Free Trade Zone (SFTA) established at the end of November 2014 has attracted 23 foreign banks to settle down inside its perimeter. The SFTA has decreed many policies, including RMB internationalization, capital account convertibility, interest rate liberalization, etc. The exchange of RMB is liberal and there is no limit of maximum deposit rate of the foreign currency below 3 million USD in the territory of SFTA, which is a huge convenience for the banks and enterprises. These policies enhance the competitiveness and profitability of foreign banks in the Chinese market, and provide new opportunities. Therefore, the opening of the Chinese banking sector will provide high potential to enhance the overall operational quality of foreign banks.
In synergizing the discussion above, we propose a bank-specific advantage and location-based advantage framework to understand the extent of LOF on foreign banks’ performance. Though the downsides of LOF may exist, its negative impact on foreign banks’ performance may be offset by the superior firm-specific and global-outreach advantages that foreign banks enjoy over local Chinese banks.
Figure 1 depicts the main factors that may affect bank performance and the moderating roles of liability of foreignness.

2.2. Hypothesis Development

2.2.1. Foreign Bank-Specific Advantage Hypothesis

While domestic banks and foreign banks are both engaged in financial intermediation, business practices of foreign banks may differ from those of domestic banks. It could be because of differences in management strategies, clientele, and knowledge of the local market, international regulatory arbitrage, and international business platform. They have an edge of competitiveness and business operations in the host banking market (Elyasiani and Rezvanian 2002). Specifically, compared to emerging and transitional markets, foreign banks have a competitive advantage in terms of management processes, quality support, qualified human capital, advanced technology, and a better global platform (Okuda and Rungsomboon 2006). For example, foreign banks in China are not only involved in deposit and lending business with a strong position in foreign currency lending and trade financing, but are also active in high value-added investment banking business such as derivatives trading, M&A advisory, and asset management. Chinese local banks bear the risk of the loss of business opportunities in cross-sector services offered by foreign banks.
Apparently, the then rapid and now steady economic growth in China has been fostered by the expansion of trade and direct investment, which results in plenty of business opportunities for foreign banks who provide trade financing and loans to investors from home countries (Leung 1997). Overall, the competitive effects brought by foreign banks will reduce the local banking market shares and profits. Furthermore, it would result in improving the banking market functions and enhancing the overall social-economic benefits. Therefore, the first hypothesis is proposed as follows:
Hypothesis 1.
Foreign banks outperform local Chinese banks in terms of bank-specific advantages.

2.2.2. Location-Based Advantage Hypothesis

Although local Chinese banks lack technology on par with the foreign banks, as well as their corporate governance structure and management skills which are needed to assess risk management and competition (Foo and Witkowska 2014), the local banks possess some unique advantages compared to their foreign counterparts.
First, local Chinese banks enjoy familiarity with the language, culture, and the economic system. Moreover, foreign banks’ parent companies’ lack of familiarity with the local market knowledge and difficulties in applying home country strategies to emerging market economies hinder their efforts to penetrate markets and earn profits. Therefore, foreign and domestic banks are likely to share different market roles rather than intensively competing.
Second, in response to foreign banks’ entry as well as the phasing-in of market liberalizations under the WTO agreement and China’s efforts to have RMB internationalism, not only the Chinese banks but also the Chinese government have taken various measures. For the Chinese banks, the measures included having foreign ownership, improving the quality of the assets, having strategic partners or alliances in deposit-taking and settlement, credit management, and product innovations, and the like. While competing and cooperating with foreign banks, systems of risk assessment and customer credit evaluation in Chinese banks further improved. Improvement of customer credit evaluation systems is expected to improve the credit assessment and credit provision to the private sector. The changing banking environment, such as competition from foreign banks, forced local Chinese banks to improve efficiency, reduce operating costs, enhance the domestic financial service quality, accelerate the establishment of the legal framework and the banking supervision, increase the host country’s capability to procure capital from the international capital market, lower the possibility that a country will experience a banking crisis, and promote efficiency and fairness of the entire banking industry (Claessens et al. 2001; Demirgüç-Kunt et al. 1998), leading to increased profitability in China’s bank sector (Levine 1996). Claessens et al. (2001) conducted a study using cross-sectional data from 80 countries (a total number of 5 banks from China was included in the study), and the results show that the efficiency of foreign banks is usually lower than domestic banks.
Third, the host country’s heavy government intervention and even discriminatory treatment will add to the cost of foreign banks. For example, China allowed only limited foreign bank expansion, and consequently, their retail presence was trivial. Foreign banks are forced to build their networks from scratch. Further, the Chinese government imposed high entry costs on foreign banks—RMB 100 million capital to obtain a branch license, with an additional RMB 100 million if the branch office desired to conduct RMB business. With RMB 300 million capital, foreign banks could conduct RMB business for Chinese enterprises after December 2003. With RMB 500 million capital, foreign banks could engage in conducting business with individual Chinese clients as well. Meanwhile, Chinese capital control also prevented banks from exploiting their expertise in cross-border services when serving high net-worth individuals. The global financial crisis in 2008 worsened the situation, while foreign banks were busy downsizing and rebuilding their balance sheet. Furthermore, many state-owned enterprises (SOEs), despite low productivity, receive extra corporate credit and low-cost credit from banks, reflecting the government’s intervention to spur investment-led economic growth and employment. It results in better local bank performance compared to foreign banks.
Therefore, the second hypothesis is:
Hypothesis 2.
Local Chinese banks outperform foreign banks in terms of location-based advantages.

2.2.3. Mediating Effects of Liability of Foreignness

In their conceptual study of capital market LOF (CMLOF), Bell et al. (2012) identify the possible factors that may be particularly important sources of CMLOF, namely: institutional distance, difficulties in information gathering, unfamiliarity, and cultural distance. In line with the LOF, the institutional and cultural differences as well as the degree of economic freedom in China and other developed countries may create significant challenges or barriers for the foreign banks to take advantage of their more advanced bank management skills. At the same time, foreign firms have to depend on the host country’s environment, which makes the LOF an important moderator of the foreign firms’ competitive strategies (Yu and Kim 2013). Subsequent empirical and conceptual work on LOF assumed the costs of LOF to be dynamic in nature, but amenable to mitigation by various firm- and environment-specific factors (Gaur et al. 2011).

Foreignness

Previous literature on the LOF suggests that multinational enterprises (MNEs) can overcome disadvantages resulting from “foreignness”, substantially through strategic and managerial efforts to increase their familiarity with the local environment and to strengthen their local embeddedness. Luo et al. (2002, p. 283) report that in China, MNEs actively develop local business networks (i.e., guanxi) to mitigate LOF effectively by “increasing indigenous adaptability, improving organizational legitimacy and heightening cooperation with the local business community”. Mitigating LOF can also be ensured from cost-sharing with parent firms, economy of scale and scope, and diversification. However, Tschoegl (1983) found no evidence for such economies among international banks. Benston et al. (1982) did find evidence for branch-level economies of scale in US banking. Shaffer (1989), using US data, argued that banks of different sizes could coexist through specialization in different activities, each of which might exhibit some economies of scale. These factors would permit foreign banks to survive as small entrants relative to larger domestic banks, but it is unclear how important these factors are. Goldberg’s (1983) comparative study of the costs of US banks and foreign-owned banks in the US found that the foreign banks had higher costs because of their tendency to be more dependent than their US competitors on interbank funding instead of low-cost deposits. Walker (1983) found no differences in the growth of any balance sheet category for foreign-owned subsidiary banks and domestically owned banks in the US, and that foreign-owned banks did not appear to operate differently from domestically owned banks. Further, Nachum (2003) found that foreign MNEs in London’s financial markets offset their “foreignness” disadvantages through their advantages, such as superior intangible assets and economies of scale and scope, which leads to the following hypothesis:
Hypothesis 3.1.
Foreign banks’ competitive advantage is associated with foreignness for improved performance.

Institutional Distance

Institutionally, since 1978 when China opened its economy and began the process of economic reforms, foreign banks witnessed a major wave of deregulation. By making the market more open and competitive, the deregulation may have levelled the playing field to some extent for foreign banks compared to their local counterparts. The legal framework for foreign investment, for instance, has gone from a virtual void to one of the most complete legal systems in any transitional economy, and the economy has gradually been converted from one that was centrally planned to a market system (Walder 1996), albeit with Chinese characteristics. In recent years, the regulatory treatment of foreign and local firms has progressively converged, and many entries and operational barriers to foreign direct investment (FDI) have been removed or significantly reduced. Some industries that were previously closed to foreign investors, especially in the service sector, such as retailing, insurance, and banking, have now been opened (Luo 2007), largely as a consequence of China’s admission to the World Trade Organization in 2001. Such market liberalization can be expected to decrease the negative effects of the LOF (Nachum 2003; Zaheer and Mosakowski 1997).
Nevertheless, foreign banks operate under local institutional environments. The Chinese government is determined towards more market reforms rather than less. However, these policies seem to be a bit controversial. For example, unlike some emerging markets, the restriction on foreign investors on bank ownership in China is very severe. China limits the share of a single foreign investor in a Chinese bank to 20 percent and will treat the entire bank as foreign if more than 25 percent is in non-Chinese hands (Liu and Sathye 2019). Further, the expansion of foreign banks is limited by relevant laws and regulations of the supervisory and regulatory institutions of China. Foreign banks are not always the winner in post-WTO China (Leung and Chan 2006). Although the geography, clients, and currency restrictions were all removed completely by 11 December 2006, foreign banks still face difficulties in establishing branches in China (Evans 2008). For example, in late 2013, China proposed to more than triple the minimum registered capital for newly incorporated foreign banks from RMB 300 million ($48 million) to RMB 1 billion. This high entry barrier, along with administrative constraints, act as barriers for foreign banks from growing their network and profitability. Meanwhile, new international rules under Basel III make it expensive to hold significant stakes in other lenders (Saluja 2015). As foreign banks need to face severe competition, coupled with increased capital requirements and liquidity constraints, some banks have chosen to focus on other opportunities. We developed our hypothesis as follows:
Hypothesis 3.2.
Institutional distance moderates the relationship between bank- and location-based advantage and banks’ performance.
A priori, it is expected to have a negative effect on foreign banks’ relative performance.

Economic Freedom Distance

In recent years, foreign banks are losing the edge they had in banking technology and innovations in the Chinese banking market. In China, the rise of Fintech has been underpinned by China’s e-commerce sector. It is commonly accepted that 2013 is the Year One of China’s Internet finance era, with the blockbuster launch of Yu’eBao and WeChat payment. The other sectors adopting the innovative Fintech are the third-party payment, wealth management, and personal financing. China’s Fintech is dominated by Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Baidu, JD, and Tencent Holdings Limited. By the end of 2015, the market size for the country’s Internet Finance Sector was more than 12 trillion RMB ($1.8 trillion), largely dominated by the payment sector (Ngai et al. 2016). Therefore, credit card payment as one of the targeted businesses for foreign banks in China became stranded before it could really take off, as more and more Chinese consumers are using local third-party payments without even experiencing credit card payment, especially for rural areas. We developed our sub-hypothesis as follows:
Hypothesis 3.3.
Economy freedom distance moderates the relationship between bank- and location-based advantages and banks’ performance.
A priori, it is expected to have a negative effect on foreign banks’ relative performance.

Cultural Distance

Culture is defined as a system of shared values, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors that influences individual decisions (Bell et al. 2012). The cost of the LOF also arises from the unfamiliarity of the environment encountered by foreign firms (Hymer [1960] 1976). Furthermore, cultural distance impedes the information flow between foreign firms and the new market, which gives the local firms a significant advantage compared to well-established and well-refined routines of organizational practices (Eden and Miller 2004). However, Miller and Parkhe (2002) and Zaheer and Mosakowski (1997) suggested that the LOF will diminish over time once the foreign firms become more familiar with the host country culture and environment.
Therefore, we develop our sub-hypothesis as:
Hypothesis 3.4.
Cultural distance moderates the relationship between bank- and location-based advantages and banks’ performance.
A priori, it is expected to have a negative effect on foreign banks’ relative performance.

Dynamics of the LOF

The original theory of MNE assumed a state of static equilibrium, and did not discuss how the costs of conducting business abroad might change over time. However, when we examine the factors that contribute to the LOF, some of these factors are changing over time, while others may not.
Foreign banks’ operation in China started in the early 1980s. These banks were permitted to engage in liaison services by setting up representative offices in Beijing. Starting from 1985, foreign banks were allowed to engage in foreign currency business. The Asian financial crisis in 1997 held back foreign banks’ development pace in China due to its sluggish trade and the financial crisis fallout. China’s entry to the World Trade Organization in 2001 allowed foreign banks to gradually access the vast local currency market, resulting in substantial bank ownership changes (Berger et al. 2009), and more than 400 foreign financial institutions have established their offices in China since then. Since December 2003, the China Regulatory Commission has allowed foreign banks to own up to 25% of a Chinese financial institution, but if their equity participation exceeds 25%, they are considered as foreign/joint-venture banks (CBRC 2003). After 2006, foreign banks were granted the right to offer services both in RMB and foreign currencies to local retail clients throughout China. On 22 December 2014, the State Council announced the modification of the Regulation of the People’s Republic of China on the Administration of Foreign-funded Banks, which came into effect on 1 January 2015, to further open up the domestic banking sector and ease market access for foreign banks. With the establishment of the Shanghai Pilot Free-Trade Zone (SFTA) in September 2013, 23 foreign banks have already opened subsidiaries in the Shanghai free-trade zone.
At the same time, foreign banks have been progressively and effectively developing their location-based advantage in China. This is reflected in the increased level of their resource commitments to China-based operations (for example, the increased total assets of foreign affiliates, the number and value of mergers and acquisitions by foreign affiliates, and the level of research and development (R&D) of foreign firms) and the impressive performance of foreign firms in China in recent years (UNCTAD 2005–2010). Similarly, the level of a foreign firm’s pool of local knowledge and operational experience is positively related to the level of its resource commitment in FDI (Johanson and Vahlne 1977).
We, therefore, argue that the dramatic improvement in the overall banking business environment in China over the past four decades, along with the continuous changing policy scheme, will keep lowering the threshold for foreign banks to access certain businesses. It may have significantly reduced the cost of the LOF but may still persist relatively longer. Formally, the fourth hypothesis is proposed as follows:
Hypothesis 4.
Over a longer timeframe, though foreign banks may demonstrate lower performance compared to local banks, the trend of the cost of the LOF would show a decline.

3. Data and Methodology, Variables

3.1. Data and Methodology

A panel dataset was used in this study. The study contains annual data for 190 banks over the period 1988–2015. It includes 5 large state-owned banks (SOBs), 32 joint-stock commercial banks, 80 urban commercial banks, 32 rural commercial banks, and 41 foreign banks.
The main data source is Bankscope from Bureau van Dijk, which compiles data mostly from the balance sheets and income statements. Industry and macroeconomic variables are obtained from the websites of the China Banking Regulatory Commission and the World Bank database.

3.2. Variables

Performance measurements (dependent variable)
To determine the performance or the profitability of banks, simply looking at the earnings is not quite enough. It is also important to know how efficiently a bank is using its assets and equity to generate profits. Following relevant literature, we used the following three key profitability ratios to assess the performance of banks.
Net interest margin: It is an indicator of operational performance. It is the ratio of net interest income as a percentage of total assets. The higher the margin the bank is generating, the better its asset utilization.
Return on assets (ROA): It is the single most important ratio and commonly used measure for the assessment of the performance of financial institutions, in both financial and strategic management research (Mehra 1996; Miller and Eden 2006). However, it could be misleading due to off-balance sheet activities conducted by banks.
Return on equity (ROE): It is a measure of the return on shareholders’ funds.
Independent variables
Independent variables include control variables, bank-specific advantage-related variables, location-based advantage-related variables, the variables of the cost of the LOF, and interaction terms.
Control variables
Bank size: We control for the effect of bank size measured by a bank’s total assets. It is computed as the log of total assets.
Bank age: We also control the effect of the tenure of a bank in the host country market by measuring the difference between the current year and the year when the bank started to operate in China, as suggested by Yu and Kim (2013).
Other independent variables
Bank-specific advantage-related variables
Financial strength: The indicators of financial strength used are as follows:
Capital strength: This is the primary yardstick employed by regulators to measure a bank’s strength or soundness. It is measured by the Tier 1 Capital ratio.
Liquidity risk: It is measured by the ratio of loans to assets. A high ratio indicates that the bank is loaned up and its liquidity is low.
Credit risk: Loan loss provisions/total loans. A higher ratio indicates higher risk.
Solvency risk: Measured by the ratio of equities to assets. A higher ratio indicates greater solvency.
Impaired loan ratio: Measured by the ratio of impaired loans to gross loans, which again measures credit risk exposure.
Non-traditional activity: Non-interest income/gross revenues indicates economies of scope.
The intensity of international activity: Other business activities rather than traditional borrowing and lending. It is measured either by the derivatives and asset management business or by the number of services offered by banks (Nachum 2010). It is measured as the ratio of off-balance-sheet activities to total assets in the present study.
Scale and productivity benefits: It is believed that foreign banks operating abroad may have more diversified funding bases, including access to liquidity from their parent banks, which may lower their funding costs. Further, being larger, they may also achieve other scale advantages. They may be able to afford more sophisticated risk management models, giving them superior risk management skills, and by spreading best-practice policies and procedures over more than one country, they may achieve productivity benefits (Claessens and Van Horen 2012). This variable is measured by the ratio of overhead expenses to total assets.
Location-Based Advantages (or Home-Based Advantages)
Access to local information and preference of local customers: Zaheer and Mosakowski (1997) argue that the main type of home-based advantages for financial service firms are those related to local customers, other firms in the industry, and national central banks. Shukla and van Inwegen (1995) believe that foreign firms are likely to face considerable disadvantage vis-à-vis local banks on this front. Hymer ([1960] 1976) highlights the importance of the preference of local customers as one of the sources of the LOF. Typically, local customers would have a long-established trustful relationship with local banks. This variable is proxied by the total number of branches of the bank in the host country, that is, China.
Market share: Market share represents monopolistic behavior in the industry. It is measured as the assets of that particular bank in relation to the total assets of all banks in the country. Higher market share means higher monopolistic power in the industry.
Market concentration: Competition is measured by the Hirschmann–Herfindhal Index HHI), an indicator of the degree of concentration in the banking industry. The market concentration indices exhibit the general form as below:
H H I i = i = 1 n s i w i
where H H I i is the market concentration index for bank i, s i is the market share of bank i, w i is the weight attached to the market share, and n is the number of banks in the market in question.
Variables of the Cost of the LOF Characteristics (Moderators)
Foreignness: Just like the other governments, the Chinese government does have concerns about foreign ownership of banks. Therefore, we define foreignness by reference to the controlling ownership. If the majority of the controlling shareholding of the bank is held by entities other than those from the country of location, then that bank is a foreign bank. Local bank equals 0, otherwise 1 for a foreign bank. Foreignness is the proxy measure of the LOF.
Cultural distance: Kogut and Singh’s (1988) index of cultural distance. The index is based on the differences in scores along each of Hofstede’s (2001) four cultural dimensions: power distance, uncertainty avoidance, individualism, and masculinity. Specifically,
C D j = i = 1 4 [ ( l i j l C h i n a ) 2 V i ] 4
where C D j is the cultural distance between country j and China, l i j is country j’s score on the i-th cultural dimension, l C h i n a is the score of China on this dimension, and V i is the variance of the score on the dimension.
By using the same method, we calculate the other distances as below.
Institutional distance: Institutional distance is derived from the Worldwide Governance Indicators. The Worldwide Governance Indicators report aggregates the individual governance indicators from six dimensions of governance: voice and accountability, political stability and absence of violence, government effectiveness, regulatory quality, rule of law, and control of corruption. This composite Worldwide Governance Indicator is useful for broad cross-country comparisons. The six aggregate indicators are reported in percentile rank terms from 0 to 100, with higher values corresponding to better outcomes.
Economic freedom distance: Economic freedom is used as a composite variable and measured by the Index of Economic Freedom (Heritage Foundation 2013). This data source provides information about a broad range of economic regulatory regimes, focusing on the freedom of individuals and companies in a country to pursue business interests, and is extensively used in the literature (Meyer et al. 2009). The economic freedom measurement is based on 10 quantitative and qualitative factors, grouped into 4 broad categories which include rule of law, limited government, regulatory efficiency, and open markets. Each of the 10 economic freedoms within these categories is graded on a scale of 0 to 100.
Interaction Terms:
To test these hypotheses, we created eight sets of interaction terms between bank-specific advantages variables with the cost of LOF variables, and the location-based advantage variables with the cost of LOF variables.
The three distance variables (institutional distance, economic freedom distance, cultural distance) along with the foreignness are the moderators. We adopted this approach as Nachum (2010, p. 729) stated that this is the “most common way to compare two groups in terms of some relationships of interest”.
  • Bank-specific advantage × Foreignness
  • Location-based advantage × Foreignness
  • Bank-specific advantage × Cultural Distance
  • Location-based advantage × Cultural Distance
  • Bank-specific advantage × Institutional distance
  • Location-based advantage × Institutional distance
  • Bank-specific advantage × Economic freedom distance
  • Location-based advantage × Economic freedom distance
Two approaches are employed in order to test the fourth hypothesis of persistence and additional costs of conducting banking business in China. The first approach is to test this hypothesis by using interaction terms with the LOF variables. The second approach is that we divide the dataset into two groups: the group with data from the years 2000 to 2009, and the group with data from the years 2010 to 2015. The reason to choose 2000 and 2009 as the cut-off points is due to the commitments that China had to meet for accession to WTO at the end of 2001. It required that the geographic and client restrictions on local-currency business of foreign banks should be completely lifted by the end of 2006. After 2009, foreign banks could compete with local banks in a fairer environment.
Table 1 provides a description of all variables.

3.3. Method

The following model was developed for testing the hypotheses:
B a n k   p e r f o r m a n c e i , t       = α 0 + k = 1 2 β   C o n t r o l   V a r i a b l e s k , i t       + l = 1 3 β   L o c a t i o n s p e c i f i c   A d v a n t a g e s l , i t       + m = 1 8 β   B a n k s p e c i f i c   A d v a n t a g e s m , i t + n = 1 1 β   M o d e r a t o r n , i t       + o = 1 11 β   I n t e r a c t i o n   t e r m s o , i t + u i + ε i t
where i = 1, 2, …, n, refers to banks, and t = 1, 2, …, T, refers to the time period in years during the period 1988–2015. Bank performanceit is defined as the net interest margin for bank i at year t, α 0 is the constant term, and u i is the time effects.
Due to the potential endogeneity of regressors, we estimated the above equation using the system GMM estimator of Arellano and Bover (1995). This dynamic model specification accommodates the tendency for bank variables to persist over time and be serially corrected.

4. Empirical Test Results and Discussion

4.1. Summary Statistics

A number of statistical techniques were used for testing the hypotheses. Table 2 shows the descriptive statistics for the full sample (190 banks), large state-controlled commercial banks (5 banks), joint-stock commercial banks (32 banks), urban commercial banks (80 banks), rural commercial banks (32 banks), and foreign-owned banks (41 banks), respectively. The following interesting findings were noticed.
Overall, the mean value of the net interest margin for all the banks was approximately 2.708 percent, and ranged from −1.415 to 8.56 percent. The negative net interest margin was recorded in the group of joint-stock commercial banks. Solvency risk, which is measured by the total equities to total assets, exhibited negative numbers too. The negative equity and net interest margin condition could be traced to banks making losses year after year and borrowed to fund non-performing loans (Liu and Sathye 2019).
Group summary statistics for the five large state-controlled commercial banks imply the dominance of these five banks in China’s bank-based financial system in terms of the bank age, bank size, bank branches, and market share. As of the end of 2015, these five banks accounted for 40.5% of the banking industry in terms of total assets (Allen et al. 2017).
Over the years, the high level of non-performed loans has become a severe problem for the banking sector, and even the entire financial system in China. The mean value of the impaired loan ratio for the five largest state-controlled commercial banks was 9.478, far higher than the other types of banks. As discussed in the literature, some of the banks have even been partially privatized in recent years, though with the government still being the largest shareholder and remaining in control. One of the roles for those state-controlled banks is to provide credit to state-owned enterprises and large government projects, such as infrastructure. However, those large banks normally made poor lending decisions for state-owned enterprises (Allen et al. 2017), which resulted in higher non-performed loans.
Further, an analysis of variance (ANOVA) on the bank-specific and location-based variables yielded significant variation among groups, as indicated in Table 3. A post hoc Tukey test showed that groups between foreign banks and other types of banks differed significantly at p < 0.05 in many areas, except market concentration. For example, the one-way ANOVA results among groups of banks indicate that there is a statistically significant difference in the mean of intensity of international activity between different bank groups, with p = 0.00. However, no difference was found between foreign banks and joint-stock commercial banks. Overall, no difference was found between the “urban commercial banks and rural commercial banks” in most of the areas, except intensity of international activity.
Pairwise correlations between all variables are presented in Table 4. It is noteworthy that foreign banks (Foreignness) are highly correlated with Cultural Distance (0.763), Institutional Distance (0.942), and Economic Freedom Distance (0.804), which is natural as foreign banks enjoy a higher degree of economic freedom, and institutional and cultural distance. Bank Branch is highly correlated with Bank Size (0.816). Lastly, Solvency Risk is highly correlated with Capital Strength (0.797), which indicates that large banks have a better capital reserve.

4.2. Main GMM Analysis Findings

As a next step, we conducted GMM analysis to test the hypotheses. We estimated six models in Table 5: the model containing controls and location-based advantage variables (Model 1), the model containing controls and bank-specific advantage variables (Model 2), and the model containing all independent variables and moderators of the cost of LOF (Models 3, 4, 5, and 6). Model 1 in Table 6, Table 7, Table 8 and Table 9 contains all independent variables, and the main effects of the moderator and interaction terms with location-based advantage variables. Model 2 in Table 6, Table 7, Table 8 and Table 9 contains all independent variables, and the main effects of the moderator and interaction terms with bank-specific advantage variables. Wald Chi-square test statistic, significance of Hansen test, and AR (1) and AR (2) tests results are reported in all tables. In all cases, the Hansen test and AR (2) test results were larger than 0.05, which indicates a failure to reject the null hypothesis of over-identification and second-order serial correlation of error terms.
Results from Models 3, 4, and 5 in Table 5 show a negative and significant relationship between the three cost of LOF variables and bank performance. The negative and significant Foreignness variable alone indicates that foreign banks have underperformed compared to local banks. These results enforce the fact that local banks have better bank performance. The variables institutional distance and economic freedom distance separate foreign banks and local banks in terms of bank performance. Hence, Hypothesis 1 is rejected.
Model 1 in Table 5 shows that Market Concentration is an important location-based factor that influences the bank performance for all types of banks, which is consistent with prior findings of a significant and positive relationship between bank performance and market power (Gischer and Juttner 2003; Williams 2007).
Model 2 in Table 5 shows that bank-specific factors such as Credit risk and Scale and Productivity Benefit have a significant positive association with banks’ performance. However, Non-Traditional Activity has a significantly negative relationship with bank’s performance. This result suggests that banks in China are not performing well from non-traditional banking business. Hypothesis 2 is supported. This is consistent with the current situation faced by foreign banks in China as foreign banks are still restricted to provide trade financing and loans to investors from their own countries. Further growth of foreign banks still depends on other factors, such as liberalization of the foreign exchange market and the interbank market in RMB for foreign banks in order to have the foreign banks compete with local banks for retail business.
When a location-based advantage variable such as Market Share interacts with Foreignness, Institutional Distance, Economic Freedom Distance, and Cultural Distance, the coefficients for these four interaction terms have a positive and significant association with performance. Empirical results from Table 6, Table 7, Table 8 and Table 9 suggest that foreign banks coming from higher levels of institutional and economic freedom environments perform better than local banks with the same market power. Put differently, the cost of doing banking business in China for foreign banks will be reduced compared to local banks and will help improve performance through their location-based advantages.
When Bank Branches interacts with Institutional Distance, Economic Freedom Distance, and Cultural Distance variables (refer to Table 7, Table 8 and Table 9), the coefficients are negative and have a significant association with performance. This result indicates that foreign banks will incur higher costs than local banks given the latter’s market concentration and branch network.
The location-based advantage stated above causes an offsetting effect for foreign banks. Foreign banks can improve their performance through approaches to gaining more market share, however, running local operations such as the establishment of more bank branches would result in higher costs.
To further visualize the implications of the interaction effects and the implications of our hypotheses, we plotted the relationships of location- and bank-specific advantages respectively, and net interest margin as the proxy of bank performance over the local versus foreign banks, with separate regression lines (please refer to Figure 2, Figure 3, Figure 4, Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7 and Figure 8).
When bank-specific advantage variables such as Credit Risk and Solvency Risk interact with Institutional Distance, the coefficients have a significant but negative association with performance. These results from Model 2 in Table 7 suggest that due to the cost involved in transferring bank-specific advantages across borders, foreign banks will have less performance edge over local banks from exploiting these bank-specific advantages. Foreign banks could perform better than local banks with their bank-specific advantages if institutional constraints are few (please refer to Figure 9, Figure 10, Figure 11 and Figure 12).
When another bank-specific advantage variable such as Non-Traditional Activity interacts with Economic Freedom Distance (Model 2, Table 8), and Capital Strength interacts with Cultural Distance (Model 2, Table 9), the coefficients display a significant and positive association with banks’ performance. In this case, foreign banks’ capital strength, their international experience relating to the non-traditional banking business, and their ability to manage risks will help them to offset the cost of foreignness in China. The rationale behind this result finds support as economic freedom captures the impact of components such as business freedom, trade freedom, fiscal freedom, monetary freedom, investment freedom, financial freedom, etc. Therefore, if the host country, such as China, can offer such freedom, foreign banks’ performance would be enhanced.
The results above signal a mixed situation. Foreign banks have their relative firm-specific advantage, which is reflected in international banking activities such as off-balance-sheet activities. However, the expansion of foreign banks is limited by relevant laws and regulations of the supervisory and regulatory institutions presented in the host country. Although the geography, clients, and currency restrictions were all removed completely by 11 December 2006, foreign banks still face hurdles in establishing branches in China, such as branch-level capital reserve, liquidity, deposit requirement, foreign exchange deposit/foreign exchange asset ratio limitations, and lengthy branch application procedures, etc. (Howson and Ross 2003). Therefore, we conclude that Hypothesis 3 is partially supported.
Hypothesis 4 is about the dynamics of LOF for foreign banks operating in China.
Table 10 demonstrates that the interaction terms of the location-based advantage of Market Share with Foreignness, Institutional Distance, Economic Freedom Distance, and Cultural Distance were not significant during the period of 2001–2009, but became positive and significant in the period of 2010–2015 (Table 11), suggesting that the relatively lower performance increase of foreign banks in terms of exploiting location-based advantages gradually changed over time (from 2000 to 2015). When another location-based variable of Bank Branches interacts with the four costs of LOF variables, the coefficients were not significant in the period of 2001–2009 but became negative and significant in the period of 2010–2015 (Table 11), indicating that the cost of doing business in China increased in the later period.
Results from Table 12 and Table 13 reveal that the interaction terms Liquidity Risk and Credit Risk, with Foreignness and Institutional Distance, in the period 2010–2015 were negative and significant compared to the earlier period of 2001–2009, which indicates that foreign banks’ bank-specific advantages in these two areas are disappearing more quickly than those involved in exploiting bank-specific advantages.
The interaction terms of bank-specific advantages such as Non-Traditional Activity with Foreignness, Institutional Distance, and Economic Freedom Distance, and the interaction term of Capital Strength with Economic Freedom Distance, became significant and positive in the period from 2010 to 2015, which indicates the lower performance gain by foreign banks over local banks with respect to developing bank-specific advantages. Based on these results, we conclude that Hypothesis 4 is supported.

4.3. Further Analysis

To test the robustness of our results, we undertook further analysis. We repeated the empirical analysis fully but with different dependent variables, which were Return on Asset and Return on Equity. Overall, the examination of interaction terms or moderating effects with different dependent variables yielded very similar results.
Moreover, due to the sophistication of international banking activities, the 32 Chinese Rural Commercial Banks appear to have a lower mean value (0.065) for the Intensity of International Activity compared to the other four groups. We dropped this group in our further analysis to obtain a more robust outcome. The main results of the relationship between the cost of LOF and bank performance remained the same. The interaction terms between Market Share and Foreignness, Credit Risk and Institutional Distance, Bank Branches and Economic Freedom Distance, Market Share and Economic Freedom Distance, Market Share and Cultural Distance, and Bank Branches and Cultural Distance were very similar.
The robustness test results are available upon request from the authors.

5. Conclusions

This study aimed to answer the research question of whether foreign banks enjoy a competitive edge in the Chinese banking market or are they disadvantaged vis-à-vis domestic banks? The major hypotheses we examined included (a) foreign banks outperform local Chinese banks in terms of bank-specific advantages, (b) local Chinese banks outperform foreign banks in terms of location-based advantages, (c) foreign banks’ competitive advantage is associated with foreignness for improved performance, and institutional distance, economic freedom distance, and cultural distance moderate the relationship between bank- and location-based advantages and banks’ performance, and (d) over a longer timeframe, though foreign banks may demonstrate lower performance compared to local banks, the trend of the cost of the LOF would show a decline.
We found that hypotheses (b) and (d) above were supported, hypothesis (a) was rejected, and hypothesis (c) was partially supported.
In this study, we have examined the cost of foreignness from the perspective of location- and bank-specific advantages in an emerging economy and searched for the environmental characteristics that would affect foreign bank-specific advantages. Empirically, the alleged superior firm-specific advantage possessed by the foreign banks has been tapered down by institutional constraints in the host country. The four moderators as the proxy of cost of LOF clearly showed their mediation effects on different types of location- and firm-specific advantages, though in different directions.
The major findings of the study can be summarized as follows. First, the cost of foreignness does exist in the banking sector in China. Due to these costs, foreign banks’ performance is not as good as that of the local banks. Furthermore, these banks demonstrated lower performance outcomes than their local counterparts despite the same amount of location- and bank-specific advantages. There was one type of advantage for which foreign banks were hypothesized to outperform local banks, which is to gain more market power. However, the cost of location-based disadvantages outlasts the cost of bank-specific disadvantages for foreign banks, which makes it more difficult for foreign banks to overcome the location-based disadvantages. Second, the LOF is persistent in an emerging banking market such as China. It prohibits foreign banks from realizing the benefits of their bank-specific advantages. However, policy changes could enhance the bank-specific advantages possessed by foreign banks and help them to overcome some of the costs of foreignness.
Amid the trade war and the challenges brought by COVID-19, the Chinese government has committed to further opening up the Chinese financial sector, allowing majority foreign ownership in securities, fund management, futures, life insurance, and currency brokerage. Foreign players are allowed to participate in pension fund management, credit rating agencies, and domestic bond underwriting. Limits to ownership or participation in other areas have also been raised, including foreign-invested insurance companies, insurance asset management, wealth management, and pension fund management (China Banking News, July 2020). Further development of China’s capital market will result in losing household wealth away from bank deposits, intensifying competition from foreign financial institutions, and reductions in net interest margin and non-interest incomes for banks.
The banking sector holds a vital position in the Chinese economy. This research provides a complementary strategy for foreign banks. It suggests that foreign banks could keep working on their bank-specific advantages, such as international banking operations, to exploit their advantages in this particular setting. The results contribute to the extant literature by developing our understanding of why foreign banks struggle in emerging economies such as China. A more liberal Chinese banking sector will provide high potential to enhance the overall operational performance of foreign banks. The challenges facing China’s banking system in the future also present opportunities for international banks.

Author Contributions

Equally contributed. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Original data available on request from Li Xian Liu.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Conceptual framework.
Figure 1. Conceptual framework.
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Figure 2. Market Share × Institutional Distance.
Figure 2. Market Share × Institutional Distance.
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Figure 3. Market Share × Economic Freedom Distance.
Figure 3. Market Share × Economic Freedom Distance.
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Figure 4. Market Share × Foreignness.
Figure 4. Market Share × Foreignness.
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Figure 5. Market Share × Cultural Distance.
Figure 5. Market Share × Cultural Distance.
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Figure 6. Bank Branch × Institutional Distance.
Figure 6. Bank Branch × Institutional Distance.
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Figure 7. Bank Branch × Economic Freedom Distance.
Figure 7. Bank Branch × Economic Freedom Distance.
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Figure 8. Bank Branch × Cultural Distance.
Figure 8. Bank Branch × Cultural Distance.
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Figure 9. Credit Risk × Institutional Distance.
Figure 9. Credit Risk × Institutional Distance.
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Figure 10. Solvency Risk × Institutional Distance.
Figure 10. Solvency Risk × Institutional Distance.
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Figure 11. Non-Traditional Activity × Economic Freedom Distance.
Figure 11. Non-Traditional Activity × Economic Freedom Distance.
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Figure 12. Capital Strength × Cultural Distance.
Figure 12. Capital Strength × Cultural Distance.
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Table 1. Summary description of variables.
Table 1. Summary description of variables.
VariablesDescriptions
Dependent Variables:
 Net-interest MarginInterest incomes to total assets
 ROAReturn on assets
 ROEReturn on equity
Control Variables:
 Bank sizeNatural logarithm of total assets
 Bank ageYears of operation since establishment
Location-based advantage (home-based advantage) variables:
 Bank BranchesTotal number of branches of the bank in China.
 Market ConcentrationMeasured by HHI
 Market ShareBank assets to total assets of all banks in the industry
Bank-specific advantage variables:
 Financial strength:
   Capital StrengthTier 1 Capital Ratio
   Liquidity riskTotal loans to Assets
   Credit RiskLoan loss provisions to total loans.
   Solvency RiskTotal equities to total assets
   Impaired Loan RatioImpaired loans to gross loans
 Scale and Productivity BenefitOverhead expenses to total assets
 Non-Traditional ActivityNon-interest income to gross revenues
 Intensity of International ActivityOff-balance-sheet activities to total assets
Liability of foreignness characteristics variable:
 Foreignness:
   Local or Foreign Bank1 for foreign banks, otherwise 0
   Cultural DistanceThe difference between the host country (China) to the other 14 foreign countries and districts
   Institutional DistanceThe difference between the host country’s (China) governance index to the other 14 foreign countries and districts
   Economic Freedom DistanceThe difference between the host country’s (China) economic freedom index and the other 14 foreign countries and districts
Table 2. Group Summary Statistics.
Table 2. Group Summary Statistics.
Net Interest MarginBank AgeBank Size (Million CNY)Bank BranchesMarket ShareMarket ConcentrationCapital StrengthLiquidity RiskCredit RiskSolvency RiskImpaired Loan RatioNon-Traditional ActivityScale and Productivity BenefitIntensity of International Activity
5 Large State-Controlled Commercial Banks
Mean2.39838.3785,665,252.00017,024.5600.1051307.0169.0670.5560.0075.1519.47816.3500.0130.143
Standard Deviation0.68929.5635,326,544.0009000.3790.037382.2472.3320.0680.0032.84510.94114.1560.0110.075
Minimum0.9632.00038,511.500105.0000.034420.6324.7700.4420.001−13.7100.860−19.2200.0040.025
Maximum6.941104.00022,200,000.00036,138.0000.1891794.08113.4800.7320.01610.19039.60056.9200.0700.322
Count11211911952636344119871196611211684
32 Joint-Stock Commercial Banks
Mean2.52214.282716,341.100337.0660.0101341.41721.5150.4960.0067.7103.92814.6420.0140.223
Standard Deviation1.01810.6551,205,403.000349.2350.010358.02261.2450.1290.0418.4129.65648.2860.0130.135
Minimum−1.4150.000476.5141.0000.000420.632−1.4700.091−0.692−1.3200.000−829.5500.0010.000
Maximum8.10261.0006,298,325.0001787.0000.0371794.081446.0000.7930.06964.80099.300124.7200.1051.175
Count382401401168282282204401296401257382384256
80 Urban Commercial Banks
Mean2.96412.135102,896.00087.0450.0011291.62710.5960.4850.0096.2762.76414.4200.0110.185
Standard Deviation1.1255.269176,587.40063.6010.001368.1403.4530.1110.0072.3746.92514.3720.0040.115
Minimum0.3961.00020.2134.0000.000420.6320.7800.168−0.002−6.4200.000−5.6400.0040.000
Maximum8.56030.0001,844,909.000362.0000.0091794.08139.1500.7920.05923.590100.00079.4300.0370.872
Count767786786289717717525786704785557767768530
32 Rural Commercial Banks
Mean3.1077.600135,646.900317.8310.0011189.96211.5440.4990.0097.0213.27615.2060.0110.065
Standard Deviation0.8539.374148,645.100444.8780.001346.2542.3570.0800.0082.1404.58614.4340.0030.085
Minimum1.0980.0002559.94616.0000.000420.6323.1800.235−0.0080.5300.1300.0000.0050.000
Maximum5.59765.000716,805.2001771.0000.0041794.08116.2600.6670.06612.22022.99071.2800.0210.506
Count1661701707117017097170156170112166168104
41 Foreign-Owned Banks
Mean2.21011.26945,137.29023.8660.0001233.32335.8000.4770.00420.9221.79324.7830.0150.200
Standard Deviation0.95910.95262,832.11062.8940.001378.06545.4500.1880.01116.9197.53352.0170.0080.158
Minimum0.0261.00068.9001.0000.000420.63210.5000.000−0.0754.7400.000−85.0900.0000.000
Maximum7.24458.000425,764.000504.0000.0031794.081394.0000.8910.07694.71079.890833.3300.0530.949
Count313316316231303303209315303316212313312257
Total 190 Banks
Mean2.70813.775602,465.1001227.0520.0071278.63717.5650.4920.0079.1773.25716.5320.0130.183
Standard Deviation1.07313.0642,025,150.0004720.1420.022368.92434.7660.1290.0209.9837.94233.6900.0080.131
Minimum−1.4150.00020.2131.0000.000420.632−1.4700.000−0.692−13.7100.000−829.5500.0000.000
Maximum8.560104.00022,200,000.00036,138.0000.1891794.081446.0000.8910.07694.710100.000833.3300.1051.175
Count1740179217928111535153510791791154617911204174017481231
Table 3. Bank groups’ pairwise comparison—Tukey post hoc test results.
Table 3. Bank groups’ pairwise comparison—Tukey post hoc test results.
Pairwise GroupsNet Interest MarginBank Size (Million CNY)Bank BranchesMarket ShareMarket ConcentrationCapital StrengthLiquidity RiskCredit RiskSolvency RiskImpaired Loan RatioNon-Traditional ActivityScale and Productivity BenefitIntensity of International Activity
Joint stock vs. State-controlled1.16−31.48 ***−46.05 ***−78.75 ***0.272.28−4.55 ***−0.543.09 **−5.24 ***−0.410.55.05 ***
Urban vs. State-controlled5.45 ***−38.05 ***−49.39 ***−92.05 ***−0.250.29−5.67 ***1.091.37−6.61 ***−0.56−3.22.9 **
Rural vs. State-controlled5.19 ***−31.98 ***−41.35 ***−83.23 ***−1.570.39−3.86 **0.91.67−5.12 ***−0.45−2.2−4.18 ***
Foreign vs. State-controlled−1.67−35.16 ***−48.71 ***−87.87 ***−1.454.83 ***−5.74 ***−1.3217.56 ***−7 ***2.292.283.63 **
Urban vs. Joint stock6.7 ***−7.04 ***−1.1−14.67 ***−0.98−4.02 **−1.292.71−3.04 **−1.78−0.19−5.86 ***−3.86 **
Rural vs. Joint stock5.51 ***−4.76 ***−0.06−10.92 ***−2.79−2.580.321.9−1.48−0.5−0.11−3.5 **−10.81 ***
Foreign vs. Joint stock−4 **−6.27 ***−1.33−13.36 ***−2.824.25 ***−1.83−1.1620.57 ***−2.81 **3.84 **2.53−2.03
Rural vs. Urban0.830.250.80.28−2.390.231.35−0.060.740.810.030.75−8.95 ***
Foreign vs. Urban−10.95 ***−0.55−0.31−0.98−2.449.22 ***−0.89−4.14 ***26.3 ***−1.574.59 ***8.44 ***1.5
Foreign vs. Rural−8.71 ***−0.62−0.99−0.980.296.13 ***−1.83−2.9118.58 ***−1.843.32 **5.52 ***9.25 ***
*** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05.
Table 4. Correlation coefficients between variables.
Table 4. Correlation coefficients between variables.
(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16)(17)(18)
Net Interest Margin(1)1
Bank Age(2)−0.0461
Bank Size(3)−0.122 *0.480 *1
Bank Branches(4)0.0070.484 *0.816 *1
Market Share(5)−0.060 *0.566 *0.583 *0.673 *1
Market Concentration(6)−0.108 *−0.142 *−0.259 *0.0270.0321
Capital Strength(7)0.018−0.052−0.324 *−0.391 *−0.071 *−0.0311
Liquidity Risk(8)0.177 *0.008−0.062 *0.209 *0.066 *0.364 *−0.370 *1
Credit Risk(9)0.066 *−0.0080.051 *0.106 *−0.008−0.045−0.355 *0.088 *1
Solvency Risk(10)0.029−0.095 *−0.480 *−0.571 *−0.120 *−0.0450.797 *−0.173 *−0.206 *1
Impaired Loan Ratio(11)−0.120 *0.058 *0.0170.193 *0.116 *0.107 *−0.082 *0.142 *0.082 *−0.0371
Scale and Productivity Benefit(12)0.173 *−0.040−0.151 *−0.355 *−0.0370.0290.351 *−0.013−0.0180.262 *0.0181
Intensity of International Activity(13)0.0100.078 *0.043−0.034−0.043−0.018−0.173 *0.094 *0.008−0.071 *−0.096 *−0.0141
Non-traditional Activity(14)−0.226 *0.046−0.054 *−0.132 *0.007−0.068 *0.073 *−0.078 *−0.053 *0.140 *0.0230.241 *0.0171
Cultural Distance(15)−0.157 *−0.084 *−0.298 *−0.561 *−0.1079 *−0.062 *0.294 *−0.182 *−0.081 *0.528 *−0.060 *0.210 *−0.0180.181 *1
Institutional Distance(16)−0.210 *−0.071 *−0.264 *−0.544 *−0.1302 *−0.059 *0.207 *−0.063 *−0.086 *0.410 *−0.116 *0.170 *0.078 *0.132 *0.713 *1
Economic Freedom Distance(17)−0.160 *−0.056 *−0.207 *−0.393 *−0.1096 *−0.0480.115 *0.027−0.060 *0.269 *−0.106 *0.114 *0.115 *0.059 *0.390 *0.887 *1
Foreignness(18)−0.218 *−0.085 *−0.326 *−0.621 *−0.1393 *−0.063 *0.253 *−0.050 *−0.085 *0.520 *−0.085 *0.160 *0.068 *0.115 *0.763 *0.942 *0.804 *1
* Correlation is significant at the 0.05 level (two-tailed).
Table 5. Panel GMM model estimates (H1, H2, H3).
Table 5. Panel GMM model estimates (H1, H2, H3).
(1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)
VariablesModel 1Model 2Model 3Model 4Model 5Model 6
Lag Net Interest Margin0.673 ***0.568 ***0.432 ***0.478 ***0.534 ***0.557 ***
(0.103)(0.0568)(0.0795)(0.0764)(0.0634)(0.0744)
Control Variables
Bank Age−0.003160.004310.001030.00103−0.00129−9.27 × 10−5
(0.00571)(0.00300)(0.00498)(0.00437)(0.00447)(0.00489)
Bank Size−0.0595−0.00115−0.0814 *−0.0753 *−0.0643−0.0246
(0.0436)(0.0349)(0.0463)(0.0403)(0.0477)(0.0354)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches−0.0366 0.04880.0682 **0.0803 **0.0866 **
(0.0782) (0.0468)(0.0300)(0.0403)(0.0356)
Market Share4.323 1.019−0.2030.384−1.856
(3.158) (2.690)(2.596)(2.660)(2.343)
Market Concentration0.00101 *** 0.0005630.000786 **0.0008560.00153
(0.000343) (0.00283)(0.000308)(0.00208)(0.00303)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength −0.00869−0.0241 ***−0.0259 ***−0.0268 ***−0.0306 ***
(0.00811)(0.00629)(0.00660)(0.00636)(0.00674)
Liquidity Risk 0.6740.5050.2660.00105−0.413
(0.486)(0.448)(0.451)(0.457)(0.485)
Credit Risk 24.56 ***15.43 **15.83 **17.65 ***19.88 ***
(8.735)(6.717)(6.463)(5.936)(6.492)
Solvency Risk 0.02540.0638 ***0.0541 ***0.0565 ***0.0720 ***
(0.0163)(0.0155)(0.0165)(0.0164)(0.0193)
Impaired Loan Ratio −0.00906−0.00352−0.00208−0.00459−0.00526
(0.0130)(0.00711)(0.00649)(0.00905)(0.00837)
Non-Traditional Activity −0.0245 ***−0.0217 ***−0.0207 ***−0.0225 ***−0.0227 ***
(0.00405)(0.00389)(0.00432)(0.00377)(0.00348)
Scale and Productivity Benefit 33.09 **55.45 ***53.07 ***49.77 ***44.41 **
(14.24)(19.47)(19.43)(16.96)(17.18)
Intensity of International Activity 0.0929−0.110−0.0508−0.0977−0.169
(0.324)(0.376)(0.246)(0.360)(0.264)
Cost of LOF
Foreignness −0.614 ***
(0.168)
Institutional Distance −0.104 ***
(0.0323)
Economic Freedom Distance −0.0347 **
(0.0135)
Cultural Distance −0.0398
(0.0973)
Constant00.07900.4950−0.4460
(0)(0.630)(5.115)(0)(3.048)(0)
Observations711723433433433433
Number of Banks153140110110110110
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0040.0000.0010.0010.0000.001
p-Value of AR (2) test0.8950.8600.7710.9010.9110.940
p-Value of Hansen test0.0321.0001.0001.0001.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 6. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.1).
Table 6. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.1).
(1)(2)
VariablesModel 1Model 2
Lag Net Interest Margin0.400 ***0.337 ***
(0.0688)(0.0798)
Control Variables
Bank Age−0.002490.00301
(0.00386)(0.00491)
Bank Size−0.0932 *−0.0860 *
(0.0535)(0.0493)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.03850.0669
(0.0555)(0.0490)
Market Share3.286−0.800
(2.783)(2.971)
Market Concentration0.00149−0.000572
(0.00367)(0.000940)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0221 ***−0.0267
(0.00636)(0.0510)
Liquidity Risk0.4731.016
(0.658)(0.777)
Credit Risk14.41 **28.49 ***
(6.933)(6.745)
Solvency Risk0.0662 ***0.117 *
(0.0113)(0.0590)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.00750−0.00863
(0.00993)(0.0161)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0229 ***−0.0213 ***
(0.00308)(0.00616)
Scale and Productivity Benefit59.78 ***80.44 **
(13.15)(35.31)
Intensity of International Activity−0.146−0.0313
(0.278)(0.554)
Moderator
Foreignness−0.893 **0.481
(0.438)(0.725)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Foreignness−0.0172
(0.103)
Market Share × Foreignness348.0 *
(181.0)
Market Concentration × Foreignness3.75 × 10−5
(0.000173)
Capital Strength × Foreignness 0.0158
(0.0515)
Liquidity Risk × Foreignness −0.487
(0.753)
Credit Risk × Foreignness −21.94
(13.23)
Solvency Risk × Foreignness −0.0826
(0.0606)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Foreignness −0.0466
(0.0536)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Foreignness −36.01
(38.38)
Non-traditional Activity × Foreignness 0.00389
(0.00767)
Intensity of International Activity × Foreignness −0.296
(0.786)
Constant00
(0)(0)
Observations433433
Number of Banks110110
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0000.000
p-Value of AR (2) test0.9150.902
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 7. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.2).
Table 7. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.2).
(1)(2)
VariablesModel 1Model 2
Lag Net Interest Margin0.455 ***0.445 ***
(0.0709)(0.0726)
Control Variables
Bank Age−0.0009280.000601
(0.00457)(0.00496)
Bank Size−0.0913 *−0.0680
(0.0491)(0.0506)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.07570.0646
(0.0481)(0.0517)
Market Share2.2130.0823
(4.318)(3.594)
Market Concentration0.0005520.000365
(0.00281)(0.00260)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0269 ***−0.0341 ***
(0.00713)(0.0109)
Liquidity Risk0.4300.677
(0.432)(0.816)
Credit Risk17.55 ***29.52 ***
(5.800)(7.198)
Solvency Risk0.0576 ***0.0997 ***
(0.0179)(0.0259)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.00341−0.00413
(0.00889)(0.0135)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0220 ***−0.0245 ***
(0.00272)(0.00497)
Scale and Productivity Benefit61.88 ***44.89
(17.89)(30.81)
Intensity of International Activity−0.152−0.00923
(0.257)(0.511)
Moderator
Institutional Distance−0.04130.108
(0.105)(0.154)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Institutional Distance−0.0417 **
(0.0209)
Market Share × Institutional Distance120.8 **
(47.30)
Market Concentration × Institutional Distance−3.08 × 10−5
(4.66 × 10−5)
Capital Strength × Institutional Distance 0.00355
(0.00421)
Liquidity Risk × Institutional Distance −0.198
(0.228)
Credit Risk × Institutional Distance −8.166 **
(3.872)
Solvency Risk × Institutional Distance −0.0172 *
(0.00966)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Institutional Distance −0.000636
(0.0168)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Institutional Distance −1.002
(6.829)
Non-traditional Activity × Institutional Distance 0.00237
(0.00157)
Intensity of International Activity × Institutional Distance −0.0792
(0.192)
Constant00.430
(0)(4.386)
Observations433433
Number of Banks110110
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0010.000
p-Value of AR (2) test0.9820.645
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 8. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.3).
Table 8. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.3).
(1)(2)
VariablesModel 1Model 2
Lag Net Interest Margin0.508 ***0.566 ***
(0.0683)(0.0851)
Control Variables
Bank Age0.0001880.00377
(0.00319)(0.00404)
Bank Size−0.0692−0.0194
(0.0524)(0.0533)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.0743 **0.0440
(0.0305)(0.0396)
Market Share0.800−1.697
(3.459)(3.695)
Market Concentration−8.52 × 10−5−0.000413
(0.00123)(0.000776)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0239 ***−0.0317 ***
(0.00630)(0.0106)
Liquidity Risk0.3670.377
(0.494)(0.713)
Credit Risk18.56 ***30.38 ***
(5.298)(6.723)
Solvency Risk0.0460 ***0.0622 ***
(0.0172)(0.0139)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.00168−0.0133
(0.00980)(0.0170)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0222 ***−0.0267 ***
(0.00364)(0.00467)
Scale and Productivity Benefit53.74 ***30.69
(17.65)(26.42)
Intensity of International Activity0.001410.363
(0.343)(0.476)
Moderator
Economic Freedom Distance0.0360−0.0257
(0.0516)(0.0758)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0246 **
(0.0116)
Market Share × Economic Freedom Distance49.03 **
(19.38)
Market Concentration × Economic Freedom Distance−2.86 × 10−5
(2.28 × 10−5)
Capital Strength × Economic Freedom Distance 0.000871
(0.00201)
Liquidity Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0418
(0.116)
Credit Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −1.189
(1.754)
Solvency Risk × Economic Freedom Distance 0.000681
(0.00425)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0115
(0.00817)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Economic Freedom Distance 1.146
(3.948)
Non-traditional Activity × Economic Freedom Distance 0.00169 **
(0.000732)
Intensity of International Activity × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0826
(0.0550)
Constant01.339
(0)(1.567)
Observations433433
Number of Banks110110
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0000.000
p-Value of AR (2) test0.9990.646
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05.
Table 9. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.4).
Table 9. Panel GMM model estimates (H3.4).
(1)(2)
VariablesModel 1Model 2
Lag Net Interest Margin0.498 ***0.528 ***
(0.0622)(0.0663)
Control Variables
Bank Age−0.0006990.000746
(0.00419)(0.00860)
Bank Size−0.0386−0.0358
(0.0463)(0.0968)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.106 *0.0737
(0.0607)(0.0774)
Market Share0.918−1.050
(3.409)(4.732)
Market Concentration−0.0001669.28 × 10−5
(0.00294)(0.00669)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0307 ***−0.0479 ***
(0.00604)(0.0153)
Liquidity Risk−0.1390.378
(0.555)(1.150)
Credit Risk23.06 ***25.54 **
(6.172)(11.60)
Solvency Risk0.0819 ***0.109 **
(0.0151)(0.0520)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.00417−0.00819
(0.00929)(0.0194)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0238 ***−0.0245 ***
(0.00337)(0.00638)
Scale and Productivity Benefit35.98 **42.47
(14.02)(34.74)
Intensity of International Activity−0.138−0.246
(0.270)(0.691)
Moderator
Cultural Distance−0.0525−0.0127
(0.138)(0.495)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Cultural Distance−0.0702 **
(0.0282)
Market Share × Cultural Distance298.1 ***
(87.67)
Market Concentration × Cultural Distance2.84 × 10−5
(7.61 × 10−5)
Capital Strength × Cultural Distance 0.0164 *
(0.00843)
Liquidity Risk × Cultural Distance −0.109
(0.638)
Credit Risk × Cultural Distance −6.720
(11.18)
Solvency Risk × Cultural Distance −0.0325
(0.0197)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Cultural Distance −0.00307
(0.0661)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Cultural Distance −6.010
(14.24)
Non-traditional Activity × Cultural Distance 0.00493
(0.00496)
Intensity of International Activity × Cultural Distance 0.0293
(0.586)
Constant00
(0)(0)
Observations433433
Number of Banks110110
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0000.000
p-Value of AR (2) test0.7040.680
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 10. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with location-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2000–2009.
Table 10. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with location-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2000–2009.
(1)(2)(3)(4)
VariablesModel 1Model 2Model 3Model 4
Lag Net Interest Margin0.369 **0.418 ***0.3420.405 *
(0.139)(0.128)(0.281)(0.210)
Control Variables
Bank Age0.003390.004200.0009230.00553
(0.00722)(0.00708)(0.0107)(0.00745)
Bank Size−0.193−0.166 *−0.108−0.148
(0.126)(0.0912)(0.281)(0.106)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.09900.04350.02400.0317
(0.188)(0.0927)(0.427)(0.121)
Market Share0.3372.0862.8521.616
(7.231)(5.423)(14.09)(5.895)
Market Concentration0.00190 **0.00139 *0.001360.00162
(0.000736)(0.000799)(0.00196)(0.00111)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.02210.000130−0.01510.00126
(0.0446)(0.0569)(0.152)(0.0591)
Liquidity Risk−0.2290.6450.692−0.0702
(1.731)(2.422)(3.946)(2.582)
Credit Risk11.598.04810.277.348
(11.58)(12.23)(22.29)(15.44)
Solvency Risk0.04600.001210.0294−0.0199
(0.0824)(0.0745)(0.193)(0.110)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.00443−0.00262−0.0194−0.0139
(0.0424)(0.0523)(0.0533)(0.0545)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.00620−0.00815−0.0161−0.00936
(0.00931)(0.00753)(0.0151)(0.00958)
Scale and Productivity Benefit25.3351.2635.4747.42
(51.24)(43.84)(81.25)(41.53)
Intensity of International Activity0.1510.4630.1820.234
(0.582)(0.625)(0.611)(0.600)
Moderator
Foreignness1.934
(6.650)
Institutional Distance 0.760
(1.671)
Economic Freedom Distance 2.038
(3.557)
Cultural Distance 1.905
(1.720)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Foreignness−0.230
(0.323)
Market Share × Foreignness−111.2
(461.0)
Market Concentration × Foreignness −0.00101
(0.00387)
Bank Branches × Institutional Distance −0.0814
(0.0882)
Market Share × Institutional Distance 11.13
(98.43)
Market Concentration × Institutional Distance −0.000428
(0.00106)
Bank Branches × Economic Freedom Distance −0.234
(0.333)
Market Share × Economic Freedom Distance 180.4
(282.2)
Market Concentration × Economic Freedom Distance −0.00103
(0.00196)
Bank Branches × Cultural Distance −0.338
(0.385)
Market Share × Cultural Distance −176.5
(354.6)
Market Concentration × Cultural Distance −0.000636
(0.000935)
Constant0000
(0)(0)(0)(0)
Observations100100100100
Number of Banks39393939
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0620.0580.1030.112
p-Value of AR (2) test0.8310.9600.9550.953
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.0001.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 11. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with location-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2010–2015.
Table 11. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with location-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2010–2015.
(1)(2)(3)(4)
VariablesModel 1Model 2Model 3Model 4
Lag Net Interest Margin0.318 ***0.339 ***0.358 ***0.381 ***
(0.0790)(0.0953)(0.0973)(0.0706)
Control Variables
Bank Age0.0009910.001340.00253−0.00740
(0.00496)(0.00425)(0.00633)(0.00550)
Bank Size−0.0394−0.05100.138−0.00979
(0.0651)(0.0679)(0.0939)(0.0745)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.1360.1670.183 **0.201 **
(0.103)(0.101)(0.0842)(0.0784)
Market Share−4.477−6.045−16.31 **−2.327
(6.226)(6.513)(7.493)(4.637)
Market Concentration0.0005080.0004500.0002130.000644
(0.00129)(0.00111)(0.00101)(0.00151)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0197 ***−0.0232 ***−0.00816−0.0305 ***
(0.00706)(0.00805)(0.0141)(0.00740)
Liquidity Risk1.453 *1.0421.801 **−0.294
(0.855)(0.875)(0.878)(0.825)
Credit Risk6.7628.30726.06 **7.975
(9.396)(9.246)(11.13)(8.337)
Solvency Risk0.0728 ***0.0655 ***0.0684 **0.0923 ***
(0.0188)(0.0206)(0.0293)(0.0199)
Impaired Loan Ratio0.04550.0369−0.08260.0546
(0.0655)(0.0641)(0.0624)(0.0460)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0291 ***−0.0259 ***−0.0261 ***−0.0332 ***
(0.00458)(0.00442)(0.00564)(0.00408)
Scale and Productivity Benefit59.80 ***62.80 **55.08 **49.53 ***
(17.13)(23.95)(24.05)(16.66)
Intensity of International Activity0.4900.4820.2250.379
(0.320)(0.310)(0.567)(0.348)
Moderator
Foreignness−0.288
(0.601)
Institutional Distance −0.0131
(0.170)
Economic Freedom Distance 0.143 *
(0.0805)
Cultural Distance 0.108
(0.184)
Interaction Terms
Bank Branches × Foreignness −0.192
(0.150)
Market Share × Foreignness 508.4 **
(233.8)
Market Concentration × Foreignness 4.35 × 10−6
(0.000212)
Bank Branches × Institutional Distance −0.0668
(0.0439)
Market Share × Institutional Distance 145.4 *
(84.60)
Market Concentration × Institutional Distance 1.95 × 10−6
(7.32 × 10−5)
Bank Branches × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0578 **
(0.0232)
Market Share × Economic Freedom Distance 85.93 **
(43.03)
Market Concentration × Economic Freedom Distance −5.20 × 10−5
(3.62 × 10−5)
Bank Branches × Cultural Distance −0.111**
(0.0430)
Market Share × Cultural Distance 410.3 ***
(136.0)
Market Concentration × Cultural Distance −4.10 × 10−5
(0.000111)
Constant00−2.0790.264
(0)(0)(1.308)(1.985)
Observations288288288288
Number of Banks104104104104
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0160.0180.0070.015
p-Value of AR (2) test0.9530.9420.8660.937
p-Value of Hansen test0.9050.9340.5700.975
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
Table 12. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with firm-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2000–2009.
Table 12. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with firm-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2000–2009.
(1)(2)(3)(4)
VariablesModel 1Model 2Model 3Model 4
Lag Net Interest Margin0.379 **0.437 ***0.4000.222
(0.140)(0.107)(0.241)(7.530)
Control Variables
Bank Age0.001370.002940.007220.00103
(0.00809)(0.00900)(0.00883)(0.0825)
Bank Size−0.170−0.168−0.148−0.190
(0.130)(0.107)(0.128)(4.057)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.05770.1140.08540.0643
(0.0706)(0.113)(0.122)(1.816)
Market Share4.7051.5280.5164.200
(5.714)(6.127)(6.816)(113.7)
Market Concentration0.001150.0009590.001120.00176
(0.00110)(0.000980)(0.00115)(0.0343)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength−0.0463−0.05800.00314−0.0617
(0.0764)(0.109)(0.163)(2.399)
Liquidity Risk3.2542.9201.4981.280
(1.948)(2.132)(2.251)(23.13)
Credit Risk15.2417.6726.7314.39
(18.94)(19.20)(23.19)(475.2)
Solvency Risk0.04730.0651−0.01270.114
(0.148)(0.198)(0.293)(4.194)
Impaired Loan Ratio−0.0353−0.0300−0.0114−0.00654
(0.0508)(0.0574)(0.0612)(0.997)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.00660−0.00682−0.0155−0.0127
(0.00892)(0.0110)(0.0102)(0.0650)
Scale and Productivity Benefit−3.937−3.89313.3435.55
(51.44)(36.39)(44.85)(648.5)
Intensity of International Activity−0.190−0.121−0.0188−0.115
(0.441)(0.544)(0.859)(14.71)
Moderator
Foreignness2.791
(3.731)
Institutional Distance 0.989
(1.646)
Economic Freedom Distance 0.634
(4.980)
Cultural Distance −2.058
(39.99)
Interaction Terms
Capital Strength × Foreignness 0.0157
(0.136)
Liquidity Risk × Foreignness −7.709
(5.664)
Credit Risk × Foreignness −45.51
(63.57)
Solvency Risk × Foreignness 0.0664
(0.287)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Foreignness −0.216
(0.331)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Foreignness 97.39
(159.3)
Non-traditional Activity × Foreignness −0.0213
(0.0569)
Intensity of International Activity × Foreignness −0.0354
(4.542)
Capital Strength × Institutional Distance 0.0116
(0.0726)
Liquidity Risk × Institutional Distance −2.198
(2.556)
Credit Risk × Institutional Distance −16.00
(21.43)
Solvency Risk × Institutional Distance 0.00979
(0.139)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Institutional Distance −0.0877
(0.131)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Institutional Distance 22.04
(51.00)
Non-traditional Activity × Institutional Distance −0.00724
(0.0201)
Intensity of International Activity × Institutional Distance 0.0550
(1.423)
Capital Strength × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0205
(0.133)
Liquidity Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −0.964
(7.152)
Credit Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −20.61
(46.44)
Solvency Risk × Economic Freedom Distance 0.0442
(0.251)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Economic Freedom Distance −0.0610
(0.346)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Economic Freedom Distance 4.524
(50.49)
Non-traditional Activity × Economic Freedom Distance −0.00219
(0.0418)
Intensity of International Activity × Economic Freedom Distance −0.116
(0.637)
Capital Strength × Cultural Distance −0.0887
(2.498)
Liquidity Risk × Cultural Distance −1.153
(26.85)
Credit Risk × Cultural Distance 68.37
(733.1)
Solvency Risk × Cultural Distance 0.0634
(5.115)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Cultural Distance −0.377
(1.512)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Cultural Distance 315.0
(3641)
Non-traditional Activity × Cultural Distance 0.00182
(1.017)
Intensity of International Activity × Cultural Distance −12.17
(56.56)
Constant0000
(0)(0)(0)(0)
Observations100100100100
Number of Banks39393939
p-Value of AR (1) test0.1320.1150.0850.875
p-Value of AR (2) test0.7640.7250.8591.000
p-Value of Hansen test1.0001.0001.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05.
Table 13. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with firm-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2010–2015.
Table 13. Model of comparing dynamic cost of foreign liability with firm-specific advantages (H4) in period: 2010–2015.
(1)(2)(3)(4)
VariablesModel 1Model 2Model 3Model 4
L.Net Interest Margin0.260 ***0.380 ***0.362 ***0.443 ***
(0.0718)(0.110)(0.0834)(0.111)
Control Variables
Bank Age0.0131 *0.0145 *0.007580.00156
(0.00747)(0.00806)(0.00736)(0.00923)
Bank Size0.03280.06550.00527−0.0119
(0.0776)(0.0877)(0.0777)(0.0841)
Location-Based Advantages
Bank Branches0.1030.07960.1050.107
(0.0662)(0.0669)(0.0680)(0.0774)
Market Share−12.67 **−9.990−6.108−3.083
(5.301)(8.158)(10.75)(5.161)
Market Concentration0.000177−0.000786−0.000228−0.000342
(0.000866)(0.000893)(0.00102)(0.000851)
Bank-Specific Advantages
Capital Strength0.0806−0.0231−0.0365 ***−0.0511 **
(0.0590)(0.0278)(0.0133)(0.0224)
Liquidity Risk2.214 ***1.6071.5471.450
(0.684)(0.997)(1.092)(0.931)
Credit Risk25.97 ***28.33 **34.37 ***32.59 *
(8.468)(13.50)(11.74)(16.61)
Solvency Risk7.20 × 10−50.0742 *0.0851 ***0.137 **
(0.0783)(0.0422)(0.0253)(0.0560)
Impaired Loan Ratio0.006540.0128−0.0228−0.0657
(0.0920)(0.101)(0.0782)(0.0971)
Non-Traditional Activity−0.0406 ***−0.0413 ***−0.0376 ***−0.0296 ***
(0.00971)(0.00845)(0.00572)(0.00702)
Scale and Productivity Benefit54.7235.8424.0332.22
(37.76)(26.92)(25.33)(36.34)
Intensity of International Activity0.4430.129−0.0678−0.327
(0.564)(0.708)(0.906)(0.561)
Moderator
Foreignness1.615
(1.003)
Institutional Distance 0.100
(0.232)
Economic Freedom Distance −0.0692
(0.190)
Cultural Distance 0.295
(0.677)
Interaction Terms
Capital Strength × Foreignness −0.0808
(0.0607)
Liquidity Risk × Foreignness −3.013 **
(1.453)
Credit Risk × Foreignness −40.74 **
(18.54)
Solvency Risk × Foreignness 0.0102
(0.0868)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Foreignness 0.0241
(0.129)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Foreignness −22.53
(38.15)
Non-traditional Activity × Foreignness 0.0277 **
(0.0134)
Intensity of International Activity × Foreignness −0.0799
(0.824)
Capital Strength × Institutional Distance 0.00462
(0.00838)
Liquidity Risk × Institutional Distance −0.426
(0.402)
Credit Risk × Institutional Distance −10.31 *
(6.199)
Solvency Risk × Institutional Distance −0.0114
(0.0140)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Institutional Distance 0.00656
(0.0352)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Institutional Distance −3.352
(7.777)
Non-traditional Activity × Institutional Distance 0.00767 ***
(0.00286)
Intensity of International Activity × Institutional Distance 0.00551
(0.214)
Capital Strength × Economic Freedom Distance 0.00417 **
(0.00189)
Liquidity Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −0.235
(0.259)
Credit Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −3.374
(2.473)
Solvency Risk × Economic Freedom Distance −0.00199
(0.00574)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Economic Freedom Distance 0.00497
(0.0114)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Economic Freedom Distance 3.785
(4.408)
Non-traditional Activity × Economic Freedom Distance 0.00259 **
(0.00128)
Intensity of International Activity × Economic Freedom Distance 0.0653
(0.0884)
Capital Strength × Cultural Distance 0.0184
(0.0119)
Liquidity Risk × Cultural Distance −0.828
(0.940)
Credit Risk × Cultural Distance −13.45
(11.36)
Solvency Risk × Cultural Distance −0.0420 **
(0.0193)
Impaired Loan Ratio × Cultural Distance 0.0357
(0.0478)
Scale and Productivity Benefit × Cultural Distance −8.403
(12.36)
Non-traditional Activity × Cultural Distance 0.00703
(0.00616)
Intensity of International Activity × Cultural Distance 0.263
(0.417)
Constant00.76700
(0)(1.943)(0)(0)
Observations288288288288
Number of Banks104104104104
p-Value of AR (1) test0.0150.0090.0020.019
p-Value of AR (2) test0.3560.3370.6340.800
p-Value of Hansen test1.0000.9991.0001.000
Standard errors in parentheses *** p < 0.01, ** p < 0.05, * p < 0.1.
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MDPI and ACS Style

Liu, L.X.; Jiang, F.; Sathye, M.; Liu, H. Are Foreign Banks Disadvantaged Vis-À-Vis Domestic Banks in China? J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 404. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090404

AMA Style

Liu LX, Jiang F, Sathye M, Liu H. Are Foreign Banks Disadvantaged Vis-À-Vis Domestic Banks in China? Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(9):404. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090404

Chicago/Turabian Style

Liu, Li Xian, Fuming Jiang, Milind Sathye, and Hongbo Liu. 2021. "Are Foreign Banks Disadvantaged Vis-À-Vis Domestic Banks in China?" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 9: 404. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090404

APA Style

Liu, L. X., Jiang, F., Sathye, M., & Liu, H. (2021). Are Foreign Banks Disadvantaged Vis-À-Vis Domestic Banks in China? Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(9), 404. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14090404

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