110 research outputs found

    Agent-based Multi-layer Network Simulations for Financial Systemic Risk Measurement: a Proposal for Future Developments

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    The paper addresses the topic of measuring the systemic risk and of identifying Systemically Important Financial Institutions (SIFIs) with an agent-based multi-layer network simulation. The paper starts from the shortcomings of the models currently proposed in the literature and suggests directions for future researches and guidelines to realize a methodology able to accurately model the direct network contagion channel (interconnectedness of balance sheet of financial institutions, including direct losses and liquidity hoarding), also integrating the indirect contagion channel (fire sales and bank runs), in order to reach the full representation of the financial systemic risk

    Network analysis and calibration of the "leveraged network-based financial accelerator"

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    In this paper we analyze the network structure that endogenously emerges in the credit market of the agent-based model of Riccetti et al. (2011), where two kinds of financial accelerators are at work: the "leverage accelerator" and the "network-based accelerator". We focus on the properties of network topology and its interplay with the overall economic performance. Moreover, we empirically calibrate the banking network in the model by using Japanese real data

    Macro Asset Allocation with Social Impact Investments

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    Using a unique dataset of 50 listed companies that meet the majority of the OECD requirements for social impact investments, we construct a social impact finance stock index and investigate how investing in social impact firms can contribute to portfolio risk-return performance. We build portfolios with three different methodologies (naïve, Markowitz mean-variance optimization, GARCH-copula model), and we study the performance in terms of returns, Sharpe ratio, utility, and forecast premium based on a constant relative risk aversion function for investors with different levels of risk aversion. Consistent with the idea that social impact investment can improve portfolio risk-return performance, the results of our macro asset allocation analysis show the importance of a large fraction of investor portfolios’ stake committed to social impact investments

    Vine copula-based asymmetry and tail dependence modeling

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    © Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature 2018. Financial variables such as asset returns in the massive market contain various hierarchical and horizontal relationships that form complicated dependence structures. Modeling these structures is challenging due to the stylized facts of market data. Many research works in recent decades showed that copula is an effective method to describe relations among variables. Vine structures were introduced to represent the decomposition of multivariate copula functions. However, the model construction of vine structures is still a tough problem owing to the geometrical data, conditional independent assumptions and the stylized facts. In this paper, we introduce a new bottom-to-up method to construct regular vine structures and applies the model to 12 currencies over 16 years as a case study to analyze the asymmetric and fat tail features. The out-of-sample performance of our model is evaluated by Value at Risk, a widely used industrial benchmark. The experimental results show that our model and its intrinsic design significantly outperform industry baselines, and provide financially interpretable knowledge and profound insights into the dependence structures of multi-variables with complex dependencies and characteristics

    An agent based decentralized matching macroeconomic model

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    In this paper we present a macroeconomic microfounded framework with heterogeneous agents-individuals, firms, banks-which interact through a decentralized matching process presenting common features across four markets-goods, labor, credit and deposit. We study the dynamics of the model by means of computer simulation. Some macroeconomic properties emerge such as endogenous business cycles, nominal GDP growth, unemployment rate fluctuations, the Phillips curve, leverage cycles and credit constraints, bank defaults and financial instability, and the importance of government as an acyclical sector which stabilize the economy. The model highlights that even extended crises can endogenously emerge. In these cases, the system may remain trapped in a large unemployment status, without the possibility to quickly recover unless an exogenous intervention takes place

    Macroprudential Policy: A Blessing or a Curse?

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