ID: 1207.5269

Structural distortions in the Euro interbank market: The role of 'key players' during the recent market turmoil

July 23, 2012

View on ArXiv
Caterina Liberati, Massimiliano Marzo, Paolo Zagaglia, Paola Zappa
Quantitative Finance
Trading and Market Microstru...
Statistical Finance

We study the frictions in the patterns of trades in the Euro money market. We characterize the structure of lending relations during the period of recent financial turmoil. We use network-topology method on data from overnight transactions in the Electronic Market for Interbank Deposits (e-Mid) to investigate on two main issues. First, we characterize the division of roles between borrowers and lenders in long-run relations by providing evidence on network formation at a yearly frequency. Second, we identify the 'key players' in the marketplace and study their behaviour. Key players are 'locally-central banks' within a network that lend (or borrow) large volumes to (from) several counterparties, while borrowing (or lending) small volumes from (to) a small number of institutions. Our results are twofold. We show that the aggregate trading patterns in e-Mid are characterized by largely asymmetric relations. This implies a clear division of roles between lenders and borrowers. Second, the key players do not exploit their position of network leaders by imposing opportunistic pricing policies. We find that only a fraction of the networks composed by big players are characterized by interest rates that are statistically different from the average market rate throughout the turmoil period.

Similar papers 1

Paolo Barucca, Fabrizio Lillo
Risk Management
Data Analysis, Statistics an...
Mathematical Finance

The topological properties of interbank networks have been discussed widely in the literature mainly because of their relevance for systemic risk. Here we propose to use the Stochastic Block Model to investigate and perform a model selection among several possible two block organizations of the network: these include bipartite, core-periphery, and modular structures. We apply our method to the e-MID interbank market in the period 2010-2014 and we show that in normal condition...

Structural changes in the interbank market across the financial crisis from multiple core-periphery analysis

February 14, 2018

88% Match
Sadamori Kojaku, Giulio Cimini, ... , Masuda Naoki
Risk Management
Physics and Society

Interbank markets are often characterised in terms of a core-periphery network structure, with a highly interconnected core of banks holding the market together, and a periphery of banks connected mostly to the core but not internally. This paradigm has recently been challenged for short time scales, where interbank markets seem better characterised by a bipartite structure with more core-periphery connections than inside the core. Using a novel core-periphery detection metho...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

Identifying relationship lending in the interbank market: A network approach

August 29, 2017

88% Match
Teruyoshi Kobayashi, Taro Takaguchi
Trading and Market Microstru...
General Finance

Relationship lending is broadly interpreted as a strong partnership between a lender and a borrower. Nevertheless, we still lack consensus regarding how to quantify the strength of a lending relationship, while simple statistics such as the frequency and volume of loans have been used as proxies in previous studies. Here, we propose statistical tests to identify relationship lending as a significant tie between banks. Application of the proposed method to the Italian interban...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

Interlinkages and structural changes in cross-border liabilities: a network approach

May 25, 2012

88% Match
Alessandro Spelta, Tanya Araújo
Computational Finance

We study the international interbank market through a geometrical and a topological analysis of empirical data. The geometrical analysis of the time series of cross-country liabilities shows that the systematic information of the interbank international market is contained in a space of small dimension, from which a topological characterization could be conveniently carried out. Weighted and complete networks of financial linkages across countries are developed, for which con...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

Real implications of Quantitative Easing in the euro area: a complex-network perspective

April 2, 2020

87% Match
Chiara Perillo, Stefano Battiston
General Economics
Economics

The long-lasting socio-economic impact of the global financial crisis has questioned the adequacy of traditional tools in explaining periods of financial distress, as well as the adequacy of the existing policy response. In particular, the effect of complex interconnections among financial institutions on financial stability has been widely recognized. A recent debate focused on the effects of unconventional policies aimed at achieving both price and financial stability. In p...

Find SimilarView on arXiv
Matteo Serri, Guido Caldarelli, Giulio Cimini
Risk Management
Physics and Society

Assessing the stability of economic systems is a fundamental research focus in economics, that has become increasingly interdisciplinary in the currently troubled economic situation. In particular, much attention has been devoted to the interbank lending market as an important diffusion channel for financial distress during the recent crisis. In this work we study the stability of the interbank market to exogenous shocks using an agent-based network framework. Our model encom...

Network topology of the Argentine interbank money market

September 28, 2020

87% Match
Federico Forte
Physics and Society

This paper provides the first empirical network analysis of the Argentine interbank money market. Its main topological features are examined applying graph theory, focusing on the unsecured overnight loans settled from 2003 to 2017. The network, where banks are the nodes and the operations between them represent the links, exhibits low density, a higher reciprocity than comparable random graphs, short average distances and its clustering coefficient remains above that of a ra...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

Early-warning signals of topological collapse in interbank networks

February 8, 2013

87% Match
Tiziano Squartini, Lelyveld Iman van, Diego Garlaschelli
Physics and Society
Data Analysis, Statistics an...
General Finance
Risk Management

The financial crisis clearly illustrated the importance of characterizing the level of 'systemic' risk associated with an entire credit network, rather than with single institutions. However, the interplay between financial distress and topological changes is still poorly understood. Here we analyze the quarterly interbank exposures among Dutch banks over the period 1998-2008, ending with the crisis. After controlling for the link density, many topological properties display ...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

The Network Topology of the Interbank Market

September 25, 2003

87% Match
Michael Boss, Helmut Elsinger, ... , Thurner Stefan
Condensed Matter

We provide an empirical analysis of the network structure of the Austrian interbank market based on a unique data set of the Oesterreichische Nationalbank (OeNB). We show that the contract size distribution follows a power law over more than 3 decades. By using a novel ''dissimilarity'' measure we find that the interbank network shows a community structure that exactly mirrors the regional and sectoral organization of the actual Austrian banking system. The degree distributio...

Find SimilarView on arXiv

Networked relationships in the e-MID Interbank market: A trading model with memory

March 14, 2014

87% Match
Giulia Iori, Rosario N. Mantegna, Luca Marotta, Salvatore Micciche', ... , Tumminello Michele
Statistical Finance
General Finance

Interbank markets are fundamental for bank liquidity management. In this paper, we introduce a model of interbank trading with memory. Our model reproduces features of preferential trading patterns in the e-MID market recently empirically observed through the method of statistically validated networks. The memory mechanism is used to introduce a proxy of trust in the model. The key idea is that a lender, having lent many times to a borrower in the past, is more likely to lend...

Find SimilarView on arXiv