Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
Portfolio similarity among the largest U.S. banks has increased since stress testing began in 2012. Using aggregate and detailed loan‐level data, we find that, as a result of stress testing, banks rebalance their portfolio toward similarly diversified portfolios, leading to higher concentration in the aggregate banking system and raising financial stability concerns as systemic risk contributions increase. The rebalancing is driven by a supply contraction in loans that cause larger losses under stress testing, especially by banks with high capital losses in past stress tests. This rebalancing holds conditional on assets that have identical contributions to regulatory capital requirements.