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Financial risk

About: Financial risk is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 11899 publications have been published within this topic receiving 231404 citations. The topic is also known as: economic risk.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors proposed a methodology for forecasting the systemic impact of financial institutions in interconnected systems, and demonstrated how the approach can be used for timely systemic risk monitoring of large European banks and insurance companies.
Abstract: We propose a methodology for forecasting the systemic impact of financial institutions in interconnected systems. Utilizing a five-year sample including the 2008/9 financial crisis, we demonstrate how the approach can be used for timely systemic risk monitoring of large European banks and insurance companies. We predict firms’ systemic relevance as the marginal impact of individual downside risks on systemic distress. The so-called systemic risk betas account for a company’s position within the network of financial interdependencies in addition to its balance sheet characteristics and its exposure towards general market conditions. Relying only on publicly available daily market data, we determine time-varying systemic risk networks, and forecast systemic relevance on a quarterly basis. Our empirical findings reveal time-varying risk channels and firms’ specific roles as risk transmitters and/or risk recipients.

73 citations

BookDOI
TL;DR: The authors in this paper provide a stocktaking and forward looking assessment of the region's financial development, focusing on the main architectural issues, overall perspectives, and interconnections, and their value added of the report thus hinges on its holistic view of the development process, its broad coverage of the financial services industry, its emphasis on benchmarking, its systemic perspective, and its explicit effort to incorporate the lessons from the recent global financial crisis.
Abstract: The financial systems of the Latin America and the Caribbean region (LAC) are at a crucial juncture. After a history of recurrent instability and crisis (a trademark of the region), they now seem well poised for rapid expansion. Since the last wave of financial crises that swept through the region in the late 1990s and early 2000s, financial systems in LAC have continued to gain in soundness, depth, and diversity. The size of banking systems has increased, albeit from a low base; local currency bond markets have greatly developed, both in volumes and in reach over the yield curve; stock markets have expanded; and derivative markets particularly currency derivatives have grown and multiplied. Institutional investors have become more important relative to banks, making the financial system more complex and diversified. Importantly, much progress has been made in financial inclusion, particularly through the expansion of payments, savings, and credit services to lower income households and microenterprises. As evidence of their new soundness and resiliency, financial systems in the region, except in some Caribbean countries, weathered the recent global financial crisis remarkably well. The progress in financial development in LAC no doubt reflects substantial improvements in the enabling environment, lower macroeconomic volatility, more independent and better-anchored currencies, increased financial liberalization, lower currency mismatches and foreign debt exposures, enhanced effectiveness of regulation and supervision, and notable improvements in the underlying market infrastructures (for example, trading, payments, custody, clearing, and settlement). This regional flagship report aims at providing such a stocktaking and forward looking assessment of the region's financial development. Rather than going into detail about sector-specific issues, the report focuses on the main architectural issues, overall perspectives, and interconnections. The value added of the report thus hinges on its holistic view of the development process, its broad coverage of the financial services industry (not just banking), its emphasis on benchmarking, its systemic perspective, and its explicit effort to incorporate the lessons from the recent global financial crisis.

73 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The model shows that when financial innovation reduces the cost of diversification below a given threshold, the strength and coordination of feedback effects increase, triggering a transition from a stationary dynamics of price returns to a nonstationary one characterized by steep growths and plunges of market prices.
Abstract: By exploiting basic common practice accounting and risk-management rules, we propose a simple analytical dynamical model to investigate the effects of microprudential changes on macroprudential outcomes. Specifically, we study the consequence of the introduction of a financial innovation that allows reducing the cost of portfolio diversification in a financial system populated by financial institutions having capital requirements in the form of Value at Risk (VaR) constraint and following standard mark-to-market and risk-management rules. We provide a full analytical quantification of the multivariate feedback effects between investment prices and bank behavior induced by portfolio rebalancing in presence of asset illiquidity and show how changes in the constraints of the bank portfolio optimization endogenously drive the dynamics of the balance sheet aggregate of financial institutions and, thereby, the availability of bank liquidity to the economic system and systemic risk. The model shows that when fin...

73 citations

MonographDOI
30 Nov 1999
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a comprehensive overview of topics dealing with the assessment, analysis, and management of financial risks in banking, emphasizing risk-management principles and stresses that key players in the corporate governance process are accountable for managing the different dimensions of financial risk.
Abstract: Provides a comprehensive overview of topics dealing with the assessment, analysis, and management of financial risks in banking. The report emphasizes risk-management principles and stresses that key players in the corporate governance process are accountable for managing the different dimensions of financial risk.

73 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors propose an equilibrium framework within which to price financial securities written on non-tradable underlyings such as temperature indices, and characterize the equilibrium market price of risk in terms of a solution to a non-linear BSDE.
Abstract: We propose an equilibrium framework within which to price financial securities written on non-tradable underlyings such as temperature indices. We analyze a financial market with a finite set of agents whose preferences are described by a convex dynamic risk measure generated by the solution of a backward stochastic differential equation. The agents are exposed to financial and non-financial risk factors. They can hedge their financial risk in the stock market and trade a structured derivative whose payoff depends on both financial and external risk factors. We prove an existence and uniqueness of equilibrium result for derivative prices and characterize the equilibrium market price of risk in terms of a solution to a non-linear BSDE.

73 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023122
2022250
2021643
2020658
2019673
2018541