The systemic risk of European banks during the financial and sovereign debt crises

B-Tier
Journal: Journal of Banking & Finance
Year: 2016
Volume: 63
Issue: C
Pages: 107-125

Authors (4)

Black, Lamont (not in RePEc) Correa, Ricardo (Federal Reserve Board (Board o...) Huang, Xin (not in RePEc) Zhou, Hao (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.505 = (α=2.02 / 4 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

European banks became a source of risk to global financial markets during the financial crisis and attention to the European banking sector increased during the sovereign debt crisis. To measure the systemic risk of European banks, we calculate a distress insurance premium (DIP), which integrates the characteristics of bank size, probability of default, and correlation. Based on this measure, the systemic risk of European banks reached its height in late 2011 around €500 billion. We find that this was largely due to sovereign default risk. The DIP methodology is also used to measure the systemic contribution of individual banks. This approach identifies the large systemically important European banks, but Italian and Spanish banks as a group notably increased in systemic importance during the sample period. Bank-specific fundamentals like capital-asset ratios predict the one-year-ahead systemic risk contributions.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:jbfina:v:63:y:2016:i:c:p:107-125
Journal Field
Finance
Author Count
4
Added to Database
2026-01-25