University of Leicester
Browse
- No file added yet -

Essays on Financial Risk Management

Download (928.04 kB)
thesis
posted on 2020-02-05, 12:42 authored by Chi T. M. Tran
This thesis comprises three essays on systemic risk using a computational approach for the first two chapters and statistical analysis for the third. Chapter 1 uses an agent-based model to determine whether the stability of a financial system can be improved by incorporating BCVA into the pricing of OTC derivative contracts. The results illustrate that the adjustments of financial institutions credit can not only improve the stability of financial counter-parties in credit events but can also reduce systemic risk in the entire network. The scale of the benefit is dependent upon the leverage of institutions and is significantly affected by connectivity and the premium of derivative contracts. Chapter 2 investigates systemic risk in an agent-based model with collateral commitments. Market prices of collateral are calculated by optimisation functions of financial institutions' efficiency. The experiments indicate that the value adjustments (xVA) is more effective at eliminating financial systemic risk than by incorporating only BCVA. However, this effect is unclear in systems of weak infrastructure. The benefit of xVA is also reduced by large exogenous shocks. Similarly, the market prices of collateral decline under high leverage or large premiums because there serves for value adjustments limit financial funding of counter-parties. Asset traders can only offer lower bid-ask prices. Chapter 3 tests the effectiveness of Basel III liquidity standards to enhance the stability of the banking sector. The analyses provide significant evidence that the long-term liquidity regulation of NSFR exacerbates bank profitability and fragility, especially for large banks. Short-term liquidity standard, also known as LCR, has a positive influence on ROAA but a negative impact on bank risk-taking. Nonetheless, these effects are economically insignificant. The Basel III regulations are therefore ineffective at improving bank strength; indeed they reduce bank performance.

History

Supervisor(s)

Daniel Ladley; Subir Bose

Date of award

2020-01-31

Author affiliation

School of Business

Awarding institution

University of Leicester

Qualification level

  • Doctoral

Qualification name

  • PhD

Language

en

Usage metrics

    University of Leicester Theses

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC