Fat Tails and their (Un)Happy Endings; Correlation Bias and its Implications for Systemic Risk and Prudential Regulation
The correlation bias refers to the fact that claim subordination in the capital structure of the firm influences claim holders’ preferred degree of asset correlation in portfolios held by the firm. Using the copula capital structure model, it is shown that the correlation bias shifts shareholder preferences towards highly correlated assets, making financial institutions more prone to fail and increasing systemic risk given interconnectedness in the financial system. The implications for systemic risk and prudential regulation are assessed under the prism of Basel III, and potential solutions involving changes to the prudential framework and corporate governance are suggested.
Year of publication: |
2011-04-01
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Institutions: | International Monetary Fund (IMF) ; International Monetary Fund |
Subject: | Asset management | Bank supervision | Banks | Economic models | Financial institutions | Financial risk | Risk management | correlation | subordinated debt | banking | prudential regulation | probability | banking supervision | bank for international settlements | investment bank | capital regulation | statistics | factor analysis | tier 1 capital | bank panic | liability management | capital requirement | bank closure | calibration | standard deviation | banking sector | bank regulation | asset-liability management | banking system | deposit insurance | recapitalization | banking crisis | bank holding | monte carlo simulation | bank of canada | survey | probability distribution |
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