Dynamic Copula Analysis of the Effect of COVID-19 Pandemic on Global Banking Systemic Risk

Author(s):  
Jie Li ◽  
Ping Li
Author(s):  
Sheri Markose ◽  
Simone Giansante ◽  
Nicolas A. Eterovic ◽  
Mateusz Gatkowski

AbstractWe analyse systemic risk in the core global banking system using a new network-based spectral eigen-pair method, which treats network failure as a dynamical system stability problem. This is compared with market price-based Systemic Risk Indexes, viz. Marginal Expected Shortfall, Delta Conditional Value-at-Risk, and Conditional Capital Shortfall Measure of Systemic Risk in a cross-border setting. Unlike paradoxical market price based risk measures, which underestimate risk during periods of asset price booms, the eigen-pair method based on bilateral balance sheet data gives early-warning of instability in terms of the tipping point that is analogous to the R number in epidemic models. For this regulatory capital thresholds are used. Furthermore, network centrality measures identify systemically important and vulnerable banking systems. Market price-based SRIs are contemporaneous with the crisis and they are found to covary with risk measures like VaR and betas.


2012 ◽  
pp. 337-357
Author(s):  
Roy C. Smith ◽  
Ingo Walter ◽  
Gayle Delong
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 1-21
Author(s):  
Hyun Jin Jang ◽  
Xiao Pan ◽  
Sumin Park
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 24 (01) ◽  
pp. 1250093 ◽  
Author(s):  
XIAOBING FENG ◽  
HAIBO HU

The negative externalities from an individual bank failure to the whole system can be huge. One of the key purposes of bank regulation is to internalize the social costs of potential bank failures via capital charges. This study proposes a method to evaluate and allocate the systemic risk to different countries/regions using a Susceptible-Infected-Removable (SIR) type of epidemic spreading model and the Shapley value (SV) in game theory. The paper also explores features of a constructed bank network using real globe-wide banking data.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document