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How Big Banks Fail and What to Do about It
A01=Darrell Duffie
Accounting
Adverse selection
Asset
Asset management
Author_Darrell Duffie
Balance sheet
Bank
Bank failure
Bank for International Settlements
Bank of America
Bankruptcy
Bear Stearns
Bond (finance)
Broker-dealer
Cantor Fitzgerald
Capital requirement
Cash
Cash flow
Cash Settlement
Category=KCX
Category=KFFK
Category=KFFM
Central Counterparty Clearing
Citigroup
Collateralized debt obligation
Commercial bank
Commercial paper
Commercial Paper Funding Facility
Conservatorship
Counterparty
Credit (finance)
Credit default swap
Credit event
Credit risk
Creditor
Custodian bank
Customer
Daylight overdraft
Dealer Bank
Debt
Debt overhang
Deposit account
Deposit insurance
Derivative (finance)
Derivatives market
Discount window
Discounts and allowances
Distress Cost
Diversification (finance)
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Equity (finance)
Euroclear
European Central Bank
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Financial crisis
Financial crisis of 2007-08
Financial institution
Funding
Goldman Sachs
Haircut (finance)
Hedge fund
Insolvency
Insurance
Interest rate swap
International Swaps and Derivatives Association
Investment
Investment banking
Investor
J. P. Morgan
JPMorgan Chase
Lehman Brothers
Leverage (finance)
Liability (financial accounting)
Liquidity crisis
Margin (finance)
Market liquidity
Market participant
Market value
Master Swap Agreement
Novation
Payment
Prime brokerage
Recapitalization
Repurchase agreement
Risk management
Securitization
Security (finance)
Shareholder
Solvency
Structured investment vehicle
Systemic risk
Systemically important financial institution
Too big to fail
Underwriting
Unsecured creditor
Product details
- ISBN 9780691148854
- Weight: 255g
- Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
- Publication Date: 07 Nov 2010
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
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Dealer banks--that is, large banks that deal in securities and derivatives, such as J. P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs--are of a size and complexity that sharply distinguish them from typical commercial banks. When they fail, as we saw in the global financial crisis, they pose significant risks to our financial system and the world economy. How Big Banks Fail and What to Do about It examines how these banks collapse and how we can prevent the need to bail them out. In sharp, clinical detail, Darrell Duffie walks readers step-by-step through the mechanics of large-bank failures. He identifies where the cracks first appear when a dealer bank is weakened by severe trading losses, and demonstrates how the bank's relationships with its customers and business partners abruptly change when its solvency is threatened. As others seek to reduce their exposure to the dealer bank, the bank is forced to signal its strength by using up its slim stock of remaining liquid capital.
Duffie shows how the key mechanisms in a dealer bank's collapse--such as Lehman Brothers' failure in 2008--derive from special institutional frameworks and regulations that influence the flight of short-term secured creditors, hedge-fund clients, derivatives counterparties, and most devastatingly, the loss of clearing and settlement services. How Big Banks Fail and What to Do about It reveals why today's regulatory and institutional frameworks for mitigating large-bank failures don't address the special risks to our financial system that are posed by dealer banks, and outlines the improvements in regulations and market institutions that are needed to address these systemic risks.
Darrell Duffie is the Dean Witter Distinguished Professor of Finance at Stanford University's Graduate School of Business. He is the author of "Dynamic Asset Pricing Theory" and the coauthor of "Credit Risk: Pricing, Measurement, and Management" (both Princeton).
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