为什么银行不是太大而不能倒:来自信用违约互换市场的证据

Why banks are not too big to fail - evidence from the CDS market

Economic Policy · 2013
被引 42
人大 AABS 3

中文导读

发现银行规模不能衡量系统性风险,控制系统性风险后,银行规模对CDS利差无影响或正影响,支持“太系统而不能倒”和“太大而不能救”假说。

Abstract

This paper argues that bank size is not a satisfactory measure of systemic risk because it neglects aspects such as interconnectedness, correlation, and the economic context. In order to differentiate the effect of bank size from that of systemic importance, we control for systemic risk using the CoVaR measure introduced by Adrian and Brunnermeier (2011). We show that a bank's contribution to systemic risk has a significant negative effect on banks’ credit default swap (CDS) spreads, supporting the too-systemic-to-fail hypothesis. Once we control for systemic risk, bank size (relative to gross domestic product (GDP)) has either no or a positive effect on banks’ CDS spreads. The effect of bank size increases in the home country's debt ratio and turns positive already at moderate debt ratios. This result is consistent with the too-big-to-save hypothesis. We show further that the effect of systemic risk rises sharply at the onset of the financial crisis in August 2007, but weakens after the failure of Lehman Brothers, reflecting changing bailout expectations. Taken together, our results suggest that banks are not too big to fail, but they may be too systemic to fail and too big to save.— Andreas Barth and Isabel Schnabel

系统性风险CoVaR信用违约互换利差大而不倒系统重要性