National Repository of Grey Literature 4 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
How to Identify Domestic Systematicaly Important Institutions (D-SIFI)
Melichar, Matěj ; Seidler, Jakub (advisor) ; Benčík, Daniel (referee)
1 Abstract The 2007 financial crisis has highlighted the problem of so-called "too-big-to-fail" financial institutions. These institutions are so large, interconnected and complex that their failure can cause significant distress in the financial system or even trigger a systemic crisis. In order to address the systemic risk posed by these institutions it is first necessary to identify them. BCBS has proposed a methodology to assess the systemic importance of global banks. This paper presents a methodology for identification of Czech domestic systemically important banks. The method is based on balance sheet indicators of banks. The assessment is using the data for years 2008-2012 and identifies four banks as systemically important for the Czech banking sector. Keywords Systemic importance, systemically important banks, SIFI Author's e-mail matej.melichar@seznam.cz Supervisor's e-mail seidler@fsv.cuni.cz
How to Identify Domestic Systematicaly Important Institutions (D-SIFI)
Melichar, Matěj ; Seidler, Jakub (advisor) ; Benčík, Daniel (referee)
1 Abstract The 2007 financial crisis has highlighted the problem of so-called "too-big-to-fail" financial institutions. These institutions are so large, interconnected and complex that their failure can cause significant distress in the financial system or even trigger a systemic crisis. In order to address the systemic risk posed by these institutions it is first necessary to identify them. BCBS has proposed a methodology to assess the systemic importance of global banks. This paper presents a methodology for identification of Czech domestic systemically important banks. The method is based on balance sheet indicators of banks. The assessment is using the data for years 2008-2012 and identifies four banks as systemically important for the Czech banking sector. Keywords Systemic importance, systemically important banks, SIFI Author's e-mail matej.melichar@seznam.cz Supervisor's e-mail seidler@fsv.cuni.cz
Regulatory reform and systemically important banks
Svozil, Jan ; Blahová, Naděžda (advisor) ; Kaimova, Nadira (referee)
The master's thesis deals with the topic of the regulatory reform based on Basel III framework created by Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. The target of this thesis is to present tools and components of Basel III standard and focus on the identification and analysis of the key factors for classifying banks as systemically important. The issue is described from global perspective and special attention is given to European specification of regulatory rules. One part of this study is dedicated to the monitoring of the fulfillment of new regulatory rules and tools by global and European banking system. Diploma thesis includes also the chapter monitoring macroeconomic impact of regulatory reforms.
Systemically Important Banks in the Context of Financial Stability
Buchta, Martin ; Půlpánová, Stanislava (advisor) ; Hradil, Dušan (referee)
A failure of systemically important bank was up to the present time in most cases avoided through providing financial support by government because there were concerns about destroying the financial stability followed by decline in economic activity because of size, interconnectedness and limited substitutability of the failing bank. However, the implicit governmental guarantees for systemically important banks create many distortions in an economy which are desirable to eliminate. Considering restriction of moral hazard, no increase in systemic risk and preservation of social benefits of G-SIBs the parallel implementation of higher capital requirements and recovery and resolution policy seems to be the most effective measure from proposed regulatory measures for systemically important banks. The future benefits and costs of these measures will be dependent in a high degree on the form and way in which the new rules will be incorporated by governments to their national regulatory frameworks.

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