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Shadow Banking,Risk Transfer,and Financial Stability
Authors:Christopher L. Culp  Andrea M. P. Neves
Affiliation:1. CHRISTOPHER L. CULP is a Research Fellow at the Johns Hopkins Institute of Applied Economics, an Adjunct Professor at the Swiss Finance Institute and the University of Bern, a Senior Affiliate with Compass Lexecon, and Managing Director of Risk Management Consulting Services, Inc.;2. ANDREA M. P. NEVES is President of Seven Consulting, Inc., and an Affiliate of Compass Lexecon.
Abstract:Shadow banking is the process by which banks raise funds from and transfer risks to entities outside the traditional commercial banking system. Many observers blamed the sudden expansion in 2007 of U.S. sub‐prime mortgage market disruptions into a global financial crisis on a “liquidity run” that originated in the shadow banking system and spread to commercial banks. In response, national and international regulators have called for tighter and new regulations on shadow banking products and participants. Preferring the term “market‐based finance” to the term “shadow banking,” the authors explore the primary financial instruments and participants that comprise the shadow banking system. The authors review the 2007–2009 period and explain how runs on shadow banks resulted in a liquidity crisis that spilled over to commercial banks, but also emphasize that the economic purpose of shadow banking is to enable commercial banks to raise funds from and transfer risks to non‐bank institutions. In that sense, the shadow banking system is a shock absorber for risks that arise within the commercial banking system and are transferred to a more diverse pool of non‐bank capital instead of remaining concentrated among commercial banks. The article also reviews post‐crisis regulatory initiatives aimed at shadow banking and concludes that most such regulations could result in a less stable financial system to the extent that higher regulatory costs on shadow banks like insurance companies and asset managers could discourage them from participating in shadow banking. And the net effect of this regulation, by limiting the amount of market‐based capital available for non‐bank risk transfer, may well be to increase the concentrations of risk in the banking and overall financial system.
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