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Oct 1, 2024 · The BRSS offers a comprehensive overview of the evolution in bank capital regulations and bank risk after the global financial crisis (Anginer et al., 2019). 1 We complement the analyses with bank-level data from around 13,800 banks for up to 126 jurisdictions to uncover evidence on how the quality of bank capital affects individual bank risk depending on bank and country characteristics.
- Deniz Anginer, Ata Can Bertay, Robert Cull, Asli Demirgüç-Kunt, Davide S. Mare, Davide S. Mare
- 2021
and supervisory power since the global financial crisis. It shows that regulatory capital increased, but some elements of capital regulations became laxer. Market discipline may have deteriorated as the financial safety nets became more generous after the crisis. Bank supervision became stricter and more complex compared with the pre–global ...
Well-developed capital markets have an important monitoring function. Market discipline is the process by which market participants monitor the risks and financial position of banks and take action to guide, limit and price risk-taking by banks. For market discipline to work effectively market participants must have the information, the means ...
Playing it safe: global systemically important banks after the crisis. Goel and Mathur discuss how the risk posed by global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) has diminished in line with the incentives set by the post-crisis regulatory framework. Post-crisis reforms aim to mitigate the systemic risks that arise from global systemically ...
- Tirupam Goel, Ulf Lewrick, Ulf Lewrick, Aakriti Mathur
- 2019
Nov 27, 2020 · Basel II, launched in 2004, was a more elaborate framework that relied heavily on rating agencies and internal risk assessment by banks themselves to determine capital buffers, but had a concessionary rate for assets backed by residential property. 10 As Basel II was being implemented, the financial crisis of 2007/2008 demonstrated the inaccuracies in rating agency assessment and the ...
- Catherine R Schenk
- 2021
financial crisis to a lesser extent compared to those in the United States. KEY WORDS: bank risk index, emerging markets, financial crisis, Z-score The financial crisis that ensued in late 2008 disrupted the global financial system in an unprecedented manner. Since commercial banks seemed to be standing at the starting point for the shock wave
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How has banking capital changed since the global financial crisis?
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The October 2014 Global Financial Stability Report (GFSR) finds that six years after the start of the crisis, the global economic recovery continues to rely heavily on accommodative monetary policies in advanced economies. Monetary accommodation remains critical in supporting the economy by encouraging economic risk taking in the form of increased real spending by households and greater ...