Volume 10, Issue 4 December 2014

The Role of Counterparty Risk in CHAPS Following the Collapse of Lehman Brothers

Abstract

We study the impact of the recent global financial crisis on CHAPS, the United Kingdom's large-value payments system. Core infrastructures functioned smoothly throughout the crisis and settlement banks continued to meet their payment obligations. However, payments data show that in the two months following the Lehman Brothers failure, banks did, on average, make payments at a slower pace than before the failure. We show that this slowdown is related to concerns about counterparty default risk, thereby identifying a new channel through which counterparty risk manifests itself in financial markets.

Authors

  • Evangelos Benos
  • Rodney J. Garratt
  • Peter Zimmerman

JEL codes

  • E42

Other papers in this issue

Michael Koetter and Kasper Roszbach and Giancarlo Spagnolo

Céline Gauthier and Moez Souissi and Xuezhi Liu

Sophocles N. Brissimis and Manthos D. Delis and Maria Iosifidi

Matteo Luciani and Lorenzo Ricci