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Liaisons Dangereuses: Increasing Connectivity, Risk Sharing, and Systemic Risk

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TLDR
In this article, the authors characterize the evolution over time of a network of credit relations among financial agents as a system of coupled stochastic processes, and investigate the probability of individual defaults as well as the probability for systemic default as a function of the network density.
Abstract
We characterize the evolution over time of a network of credit relations among financial agents as a system of coupled stochastic processes. Each process describes the dynamics of individual financial robustness, while the coupling results from a network of liabilities among agents. The average level of risk diversification of the agents coincides with the density of links in the network. In addition to a process of diffusion of financial distress, we also consider a discrete process of default cascade, due to the re-evaluation of agents' assets. In this framework we investigate the probability of individual defaults as well as the probability of systemic default as a function of the network density. While it is usually thought that diversification of risk always leads to a more stable financial system, in our model a tension emerges between individual risk and systemic risk. As the number of counterparties in the credit network increases beyond a certain value, the default probability, both individual and systemic, starts to increase. This tension originates from the fact that agents are subject to a financial accelerator mechanism. In other words, individual financial fragility feeding back on itself may amplify the effect of an initial shock and lead to a full fledged systemic crisis. The results offer a simple possible explanation for the endogenous emergence of systemic risk in a credit network.

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Deciphering the Liquidity and Credit Crunch 2007-08

TL;DR: The authors summarizes and explains the main events of the liquidity and credit crunch in 2007-08, starting with the trends leading up to the crisis and explaining how four different amplification mechanisms magnified losses in the mortgage market into large dislocations and turmoil in financial markets.
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Systemic risk in banking ecosystems

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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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DebtRank: Too Central to Fail? Financial Networks, the FED and Systemic Risk

TL;DR: DebtRank, a novel measure of systemic impact inspired by feedback-centrality, is introduced, finding that a group of 22 institutions, which received most of the funds, form a strongly connected graph where each of the nodes becomes systemically important at the peak of the crisis.
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The network of global corporate control

TL;DR: It is found that transnational corporations form a giant bow-tie structure and that a large portion of control flows to a small tightly-knit core of financial institutions that can be seen as an economic “super-entity” that raises new important issues both for researchers and policy makers.
References
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On the pricing of corporate debt: the risk structure of interest rates

TL;DR: In this article, the American Finance Association Meeting, New York, December 1973, presented an abstract of a paper entitled "The Future of Finance: A Review of the State of the Art".
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Bank Runs, Deposit Insurance, and Liquidity

TL;DR: The authors showed that bank deposit contracts can provide allocations superior to those of exchange markets, offering an explanation of how banks subject to runs can attract deposits, and showed that there are circumstances when government provision of deposit insurance can produce superior contracts.
Posted Content

The Financial Accelerator in a Quantitative Business Cycle Framework

TL;DR: This article developed a dynamic general equilibrium model that is intended to help clarify the role of credit market frictions in business fluctuations, from both a qualitative and a quantitative standpoint, and the model is a synthesis of the leading approaches in the literature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stochastic differential equations : an introduction with applications

TL;DR: Some Mathematical Preliminaries as mentioned in this paper include the Ito Integrals, Ito Formula and the Martingale Representation Theorem, and Stochastic Differential Equations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Deciphering the Liquidity and Credit Crunch 2007-08

TL;DR: The authors summarizes and explains the main events of the liquidity and credit crunch in 2007-08, starting with the trends leading up to the crisis and explaining how four different amplification mechanisms magnified losses in the mortgage market into large dislocations and turmoil in financial markets.
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