systematic risk
risk of impairment of large parts of the finacial system and widespread financial instability with negative fallout for the real economy
Research on systematic risk - 3 approaches
Conditional VaR
Systematic Capital Shortfall
Network approach (Network of interlinkages between financial institutions)
Similarities and differences between banks and insurers
Similarities
Banks and Insurers are both financial intermediaries (financial items appear on both sides of BS)
Both are large-scale investors in financial markets
Differences
Interconnectedness (Banks are institutionally connected through interbankmarket. // Insurers are not connected)
Maturity Transformation & Leverage
Banks have shortterm deposits and invest longterm
Banks are leverage instutions that permit leverage to their customers
Insurance try to match maturity
Exposure to Liquidity risk
banks are liquidity short
Insurers are liquidity rich
Role of money and payment system
Banks crreate money and operae the payment system
Insurence: no money creation or payment system
THIS IS WHY REGULATION IS DIFFERENT
SYSTEMIC REGULATION
Only applies to banks, because Insurers are systematically relevant but not systematically risky
Banks are relevent and risky
Indicators to find GSIB banks (How to find systematic banks)
size
interconnectiveness
complexity
corss.jurisdiction
substitubility (critical or not) - can it be substituted by competitors or not
What is considered in systematic regulation
capital and capital surcharge
Systematic banks need to hold extra capital that serves as a buffer
Last changeda year ago