Financial Networks and Financial Stability
-
Upload
kimmo-soramaki -
Category
Documents
-
view
219 -
download
1
description
Transcript of Financial Networks and Financial Stability
Financial Networks andFinancial Stability
Kimmo Soramaki
Versions of this presentations have been held at the IMF, European Central Bank and Risk Europe 2010
2003 20042003
Growing interest in networks
“... need for new and fundamental understanding of the structure and dynamics of economic networks.”
“Meltdown modeling -Could agent-based computer models prevent another financial crisis?”
“Is network theory the best hope for regulating systemic risk?”
CFA Magazine, July 2009 Nature, August 2009 Science, July 2009
... given the fragile condition of the financial markets at the time, the prominent position of Bear Stearns in those markets, and the expected contagion that would result from the immediate failure of Bear Stearns, the best alternative available was to provide temporary emergency financing to Bear Stearns ...
Minutes of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 14 March 2008
It was the ultra-interconnectedness of the nation’s financial institutions that posed the biggest risk of all [...] every firm was now dependent on the others – and many didn’t even know it. If one fell, it could become a series of falling dominoes.
“Too Big to Fail”, Andrew Ross Sorkin 2009
“Too big to fail”
“Too interconnected to fail”+
Federal funds
Bech, M.L. and Atalay, E. (2008), “The Topology of the Federal Funds Market”. ECB Working Paper No. 986.
Iori G, G de Masi, O Precup, G Gabbi and G Caldarelli (2008): “A network analysis of the Italian overnight money market”, Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, vol. 32(1), pages 259-278
Italian money market
Overnight lending networks
Soramaki, K, M.L. Bech, J. Arnold, R.J. Glass and W.E. Beyeler (2007), “The topology of interbank payment flows”, Physica A, Vol. 379, pp 317-333, 2007.
Payment flows in Fedwire
Europe's Web of Debt(Bill Marsh / The New York Times, 1 May 2010)
NETWORK THEORY
Financial Network Analysis
Biological Network Analysis
Graph & Matrix Theory
Social Network Analysis
Network Science
Computer Science
Network theory and related fields
Main premise of network analysis: the structure of the links between nodes matters
The properties and behaviour of a node cannot be analysed on the basis its own properties and behaviour alone.
To understand the behaviour of one node, one must analyse the behaviour of nodes that may be several links apart in the network.
Bottom up approach. Generalize and describe.
Financial context: network of interconnected balance sheets
Network terminology– node/vertex – link/tie/edge/arc– directed vs undirected– weighed vs unweighted– graph + properties = network
Algorithms/measures– Centrality– Flow– Community/pattern identification– Distance, shortest paths– Connectivity, clustering– Cascades, epidemic spreading
-> Financial interlinkages, bilateral positions, exposures
-> Systemic importantance
-> Liquidity
-> Contagion
4
1
2
3
-> Bank/banking group
“Homophily”– “Birds of one feather flock together”, “herd
behaviour”– Ideas, attributes, etc tend to cluster together and
enforce each other– Examples: Some obvious (age, social status),
others less (obesity, happiness, divorces) – How about: risk appetite, portfolio decisions, etc.
“Small world phenomenon”– “Six degrees of separation” (6.6 on MSN
messenger)– The shortest path between any two nodes is very
short– Implications for contagion?
“Robust yet fragile“, “Scale-free networks”– “The removal of "small" nodes does not
alter the path structure of the remaining nodes, and thus has no impact on the overall network topology. “
Degree (log)Pr
obab
ility
(log
)
Fedwire degree distribution
Spread of obesity
Nicholas A. Christakis, James H. Fowler
New England Journal of Medicine 357 (4): 370–379 (26 July 2007)
A risk-adjusted rate could be designed to address the contribution to systemic risk. Ideally, the rate would vary according to the size of the systemic risk externality, e.g. based on a network model which would take into account all possible channels of contagion.
IMF report for the Meeting of G-20 Ministers, April 2010
Systemic importance
Equals “centrality” in network literature
“Recently, economists have argued that a bank’s importance within the financial system depends not only on its individual characteristics but also on its position within the banking network”
Morten L. Bech, James T. E. Chapman, and Rod Garratt (2008) “Which Bank Is the “Central” Bank? An Application of Markov Theory to the Canadian Large Value Transfer System”, FRBNY Staff Report 356
Centrality measures in network theory
– degree: number of links– closeness: distance to other nodes via shortest paths– betweenness: number of shortest paths going through the node– eigenvector: nodes that are linked by/to other important nodes are
more central– markov: probablity that a random process is at a node
Centrality in network theory
The relative importance of a vertex within the graph
Depends on network process:
• Trajectory: geodesic paths, paths, trails or walks
• Transmission: parallel/serial duplication or transfer
Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland, April 2010. The eruption magnitude was enhanced by interaction of meltwater from the glacier around the vent. Static electricity built up due to friction between ash particles in the dense 7 km high cloud, resulted in frequent massive discharges. (Marco Fulle - www.stromboli.net)
• Credit card companies use network/data mining/learning algorithms on customers’ payment behavior to detect card fraud
• Can regulators use similar methods to detect rogue trading, increased riskiness of bank or market disturbances?
• See if any common behavior can be detected
– payment timing by the bank (e.g. earlier than normal to create confidence), payment timing to the banks (e.g. later if the bank is considered risky)
– net outflows (across ancillary securities and payment systems)– money market activity– cash withdrawals & deposits
Early warning indicators from payment data?
Road ahead
FNA
Advances in theory
More granular and frequent data
Improved tools
Advances in theory
– able to identify the contagion channels in different parts of the financial system– explain the formation and information content of links between financial
institutions and their behaviour under normal and stress situations.– models of systemic risk could make sense of real economic interactions among
market participants
More granular and frequent data
– a key prerequisite for financial network analysis as a surveillance tool– more granular and frequent, long enough time series for a statistical analysis of
different market conditions– regulators and overseers should continue to develop ways to systematically
collect, share and analyse the data from both market sources and financial infrastructures. -> e.g. “Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act”
Improved tools
– Tools for network analysis/data mining have developed substantially over the last few years. Ongoing work: “Financial Network Analyzer”
FNA tool
• A software tool for the statistical analysis and modelling of financial systems using methods developed in Social Network Analysis (SNA), Network Science and Agent-based Modelling (ABM).
• Open source project sponsored by Norges Bank and the Bank of England.
• Includes many network creation, editing and analysis commands – as well as tools for data validation and manipulation.
• Is also a platform for the development of simulation, network and agent based models that integrate easily with existing analysis and data manipulation functionality.
• Version 1.3 will (at www.financialnetworkanalysis.com/fna) will be released this week.
Thank you!
More information:
June Risk Magazine articleJune ECB Financial Stability Review
My blog: www.financialnetworkanalysis.comContact me: [email protected]