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Asset Commonality, Debt Maturity and Systemic Risk

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In this article, the authors develop a model in which asset commonality and short-term debt of banks interact to generate excessive systemic risk, and show that information contagion is more likely under clustered asset structures.
Abstract: 
We develop a model in which asset commonality and short-term debt of banks interact to generate excessive systemic risk. Banks swap assets to diversify their individual risk. Two asset structures arise. In a clustered structure, groups of banks hold common asset portfolios and default together. In an unclustered structure, defaults are more dispersed. Portfolio quality of individual banks is opaque but can be inferred by creditors from aggregate signals about bank solvency. When bank debt is short-term, creditors do not roll over in response to adverse signals and all banks are inefficiently liquidated. This information contagion is more likely under clustered asset structures. In contrast, when bank debt is long-term, welfare is the same under both asset structures.

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Citations
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Systemic Risk and Stability in Financial Networks

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a framework for studying the relationship between the financial network architecture and the likelihood of systemic failures due to contagion of counterparty risk, and show that financial contagion exhibits a form of phase transition as interbank connections increase.
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Financial Networks and Contagion

TL;DR: In this article, the authors model contagions and cascades of failures among organizations linked through a network of financial interdependencies and identify how the network propagates discontinuous changes in asset values triggered by failures.
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Econometric Measures of Connectedness and Systemic Risk in the Finance and Insurance Sectors

TL;DR: The authors proposed several econometric measures of connectedness based on principal-components analysis and Granger-causality networks, and applied them to the monthly returns of hedge funds, banks, broker/dealers, and insurance companies.
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Syndication, Interconnectedness, and Systemic Risk

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a measure of bank interconnectedness using syndicated corporate loans and found that interconnectedness is positively correlated with various bank-level systemic risk measures including SRISK, CoVaR, and DIP.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fire-sale Spillovers and Systemic Risk

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors construct a new systemic risk measure that quantifies vulnerability to fire-sale spillovers using detailed repo market data for broker-dealers and regulatory balance sheet data for U.S. bank holding companies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Rating Banks: Risk and Uncertainty in an Opaque Industry

TL;DR: This paper found that bond raters are inherently more opaque than other firms, and that they split more frequently over these financial intermediaries, and the splits are more lopsided, as theory here predicts.
Journal ArticleDOI

Financial Crises: Theory and Evidence

TL;DR: The financial crisis that started in the summer of 2007 came as a great surprise to most people as mentioned in this paper, what initially was seen as difficulties in the US subprime mortgage market, rapidly escalated and spilled over to financial markets all over the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rollover Risk and Market Freezes

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a model that can explain a sudden drop in the amount of money that can be borrowed against an asset, even in the absence of asymmetric information or fears about the value of the collateral.
Posted Content

Information Contagion and Bank Herding

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that the likelihood of information contagion induces profit-maximizing bank owners to herd with other banks, and that the increase in a bank's cost of borrowing relative to the situation of good news about other banks is greater when bank loan returns have less commonality.
Posted Content

Outside and Inside Liquidity

TL;DR: This paper propose an origination-and-contingent-distribution model of banking, in which liquidity demand by short-term investors (banks) can be met with cash reserves (inside liquidity) or sales of assets (outside liquidity) to long-term buyers (hedge funds and pension funds).
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