Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1000028 | Journal of Financial Stability | 2015 | 13 Pages |
•We treat the banking system as a traded credit portfolio and gauge total systemic risk as the portfolio's tail risk.•We calculate bank's systemic risk capital based on its contribution to total risk.•We propose a model that accounts for extreme event dependence.•We quantify the level of capital shortfall when this characteristic is ignored.•We employ a mark to market valuation approach that accounts for the risk of credit downgrades.
We treat the banking system as a traded credit portfolio and calculate systemic risk capital as the amount of capital that insures the portfolio's value against unexpected losses. Using data from the largest global financial institutions, we find evidence of extreme event dependence between banks during the recent financial crisis. Subsequently, we extend the existing Gaussian approach by proposing a model that accounts for the extreme event dependence, and we quantify the level of capital shortfall when this characteristic is ignored. Furthermore, the mark to market valuation approach incorporates the economic loss of credit downgrades into the estimates.