We provide an empirical assessment of the suggestion, based on Severo (2012), to use a systemic liquidity risk index (SLRI) for estimating liquidity premia that could be charged on large banks as a compensation for the implicit liquidity support obtained from public authorities (Blancher et al., 2013). To this end we compute, over the period January 2004–December 2012, a parsimonious and fully documented SLRI. We also investigate its statistical significance in explaining the level and variability of stock returns for a group of large international banks across the subprime and the Eurozone sovereign debt crises. Main findings are two: our more parsimonious SLRI is close to Severo’s but provides a stronger signal of liquidity stress and recovery episodes; we consistently fail to detect, within and across the two crises, a stable group of banks among the global systemically important ones listed by the Financial Stability Board.
A liquidity risk index as a regulatory tool for systemically important banks? An empirical assessment across two financial crises / Gianfelice, Gianfranco; Marotta, Giuseppe; Torricelli, Costanza. - In: APPLIED ECONOMICS. - ISSN 1466-4283. - STAMPA. - 47:2(2015), pp. 129-147. [10.1080/00036846.2014.967379]
A liquidity risk index as a regulatory tool for systemically important banks? An empirical assessment across two financial crises
GIANFELICE, GIANFRANCO;MAROTTA, Giuseppe;TORRICELLI, Costanza
2015
Abstract
We provide an empirical assessment of the suggestion, based on Severo (2012), to use a systemic liquidity risk index (SLRI) for estimating liquidity premia that could be charged on large banks as a compensation for the implicit liquidity support obtained from public authorities (Blancher et al., 2013). To this end we compute, over the period January 2004–December 2012, a parsimonious and fully documented SLRI. We also investigate its statistical significance in explaining the level and variability of stock returns for a group of large international banks across the subprime and the Eurozone sovereign debt crises. Main findings are two: our more parsimonious SLRI is close to Severo’s but provides a stronger signal of liquidity stress and recovery episodes; we consistently fail to detect, within and across the two crises, a stable group of banks among the global systemically important ones listed by the Financial Stability Board.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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