Volume 7, Issue 4 December 2011

Capital Regulation and Tail Risk

Abstract

The paper studies risk mitigation associated with capital regulation, in a context where banks may choose tail risk assets. We show that this undermines the traditional result that higher capital reduces excess risk taking driven by limited liability. Moreover, higher capital may have an unintended effect of enabling banks to take more tail risk without the fear of breaching the minimal capital ratio in non-tail risky project realizations. The results are consistent with stylized facts about pre-crisis bank behavior, and suggest implications for the optimal design of capital regulation.

Authors

  • Enrico Perotti
  • Lev Ratnovski
  • Razvan Vlahu

JEL codes

  • G21
  • G28

Other papers in this issue

Douglas Gale and Rafael Repullo and Frank Smets

Enrico Perotti and Javier Suarez

Matthieu Darracq Pariès and Christoffer Kok Sørensen and Diego Rodriguez-Palenzuela

Richard J. Herring

Mathias Drehmann and Claudio Borio and Kostas Tsatsaronis