Research Paper

Measuring Banking System Resilience by Using the Texas Ratio

VM

Vladimir Mirković

MI

Marina Iliev Matić

BD

Branislav Dudić

Journal Information

Journal

The European Journal of Applied Economics

Volume / Issue

Vol. 21, No. 1 (2024)

Pages

48–59

Published

01 March 2024

DOI

10.5937/EJAE21-48577

Abstract

The issue of banking sector resilience is one of the most exploited after the global financial crisis. Competent authorities and central banks worldwide conducted a series of actions to strengthen their systems and made them more resilient to extraordinary events. For that purpose, there were conducted stress tests leading to results for the improvement of the central bank's supervisory activities and practices. Also, the analysis of banking sector resilience should be complemented with other measures, which are also treated as early warning indicators. Texas ratio is one of the early warning indicators that could indicate the banking system's stability through the analysis of non-performing loans as a portion of "toxic" assets in banks. A high percentage of non-performing loans poses a serious threat to banking institutions' ability to survive, hence it is crucial to monitor them and find effective solutions. The authors of the research stress the importance of using the Texas ratio when evaluating the resilience of the banking industry. The main findings of the paper are reflected in a positive correlation between NPL and Texas ratio and recommendation for Texas ratio's widespread usage in practice.

Keywords

resiliencebanking sectornon-performing loansTexas ratioRepublic of Serbia

Citation

Vladimir Mirković, Marina Iliev Matić, Branislav Dudić (2024). Measuring Banking System Resilience by Using the Texas Ratio The European Journal of Applied Economics. 21(1) 48–59. DOI: 10.5937/EJAE21-48577