Shadow Banking, Sovereign Risk and Collective Moral Hazard
25 Pages Posted: 17 May 2012 Last revised: 1 Mar 2013
Date Written: May 15, 2012
Abstract
The paper shows that the time-consistent policy of public bailout affects the private liquidity choice of banks in several ways. First, banks anticipate public support in a liquidity crisis and seek large and socially inefficient exposures to shadow banking, defined as a privately costly technology that allows banks to liquefy their balance sheet. In this way, banks reduce their liquidity need in terms of expensive sovereign debt securities and boost leverage. Second, the liquidity choice becomes risky even with respect to the sovereign debt securities portfolio allocation: banks protected by guarantees from a healthy risk-free government load with cheaper non-domestic risky sovereign debt as they expect to extract public support even in the presence of some sovereign default. Finally, the propensity to expose to shadow banking is procyclical. These insights have important implications in terms of regulation. Global reforms that curb banks' ability to extract free insurance from the public bailout would promote efficiency. Policymakers should resort to a full-blown ban on shadow banking only if the previous goal is unattainable.
Keywords: Liquidity, systemic risk, shadow banking, moral hazard, public bailout
JEL Classification: E44, D8, G18
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Gary B. Gorton and Guillermo Ordoñez
-
Responses to the Financial Crisis, Treasury Debt, and the Impact on Short-Term Money Markets
By Warren B. Hrung and Jason S. Seligman
-
By Galo Nuño and Carlos Thomas
-
The Supply and Demand for Safe Assets
By Gary B. Gorton and Guillermo Ordoñez
-
The Supply and Demand for Safe Assets
By Gary B. Gorton and Guillermo Ordoñez
-
Containing Systemic Risk: Paradigm-Based Perspectives on Regulatory Reform
By Augusto De La Torre and Alain Ize
-
Optimal Disclosure Policy and Undue Diligence
By David Andolfatto, Aleksander Berentsen, ...
-
The Evolution of Treasury Cash Management During the Financial Crisis
By Paul Santoro