With Credit Suisse possibly on the brink, the Office of Financial Research from this week: When choosing counterparties, banks tend to pick riskier ones and do not hedge such exposures.
These exposures are correlated with systemic risk measures despite greater regulatory oversight after the crisis.
Abstract
We investigate whether banksโ counterparty choices in OTC derivative markets contribute to network fragility. We use novel confidential regulatory data and show that banks are more likely to choose densely connected non-bank counterparties and do not hedge such exposures. Banks are also more likely to connect with riskier counterparties for their most material exposures, suggesting the existence of moral hazard behavior in network formation. Finally, we show that these exposures are correlated with systemic risk measures despite greater regulatory oversight after the crisis. Overall, the results provide evidence of risk propagation in bank networks through non-bank linkages in opaque markets. JEL codes: G21, G22, D82
Keywords: Counterparty risk; financial networks; bank interconnectedness; over-thecounter markets; derivatives.