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Joining Up Prudential and Resolution Regulation for Systemically Important Banks
In: ESRB: Occasional Paper Series 2024/25
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Joining Up Prudential and Resolution Regulation For Systemically Important Banks
In: ESRB Occasional Paper Series No. 25
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How central is central counterparty clearing?: a deep dive into a European repo market during the crisis
In: Discussion paper 2016,14
Repo markets offering central counterparty (CCP) clearing and anonymized trading were remarkably resilient during the recent crises. We use the full transaction level dataset on all repo trades on Eurex Repo, including identifiers for market participants, to provide a detailed description of the market's development and microstructure during the crises and under different monetary policy interventions. Overall, we find high excess liquidity being associated with lower private liquidity provision in this market. Cross-segment arbitrage and market making is limited but growing steadily. The reallocation of liquidity risk across banks within this market varies substantially with the general market conditions.
How Central is Central Counterparty Clearing? A Deep Dive into a European Repo Market During the Crisis
In: Bundesbank Discussion Paper No. 14/2016
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Measuring the Impact of a Bank Failure on the Real Economy: An EU-Wide Analytical Framework
In: ESRB: Working Paper Series 2021/122
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Measuring the Impact of a Bank Failure on the Real Economy. An EU-wide Analytical Framework
In: Bank of Italy Occasional Paper No. 626
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Measuring the impact of a bank failure on the real economy: An EU-wide analytical framework
The crisis management framework for banks in the European Union (EU) requires the resolution authorities to identify the existence of a public interest to resolve an ailing bank, rather than to open normal insolvency proceedings (NIPs). The Public Interest Assessment (PIA) determines whether resolution objectives, including the safeguard of financial stability, can be better preserved using resolution tools than NIPs .This paper provides a contribution to the ongoing discussion on the implementation of the PIA, by presenting an analytical framework to quantify the potential impact on the real economy stemming from a bank's failure under NIPs through the interruption of the lending activity ("credit channel"). The framework is harmonized across the jurisdictions belonging to the Banking Union and aims to improve the quantitative leg of the PIA, to be coupled with qualitative elements. In a first step, we quantify the potential credit shortfall faced by firms and households due to the abrupt closure of a bank. In a second step, the impact of the credit shortfall on real outcomes is estimated via a FAVAR model and via a micro-econometric model. Reference values are provided to assess the relevance of the estimated outcomes. The illustrative results show that such a harmonized approach can be applied across the Banking Union and to banks of heterogeneous size. In case of mid-sized banks, this common analytical framework could reduce the uncertainty regarding the extent to which the failure of the institution could have a negative impact to the real economy if the lending activity is interrupted as possibly the case under NIPs.
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