Mapping heat in the U.S. financial system

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Abstract

We provide a framework for assessing the build-up of vulnerabilities to the U.S. financial system. We collect forty-six indicators of financial and balance-sheet conditions, cutting across measures of valuation pressures, nonfinancial borrowing, and financial-sector health. We place the data in economic categories, track their evolution, and develop an algorithmic approach to monitoring vulnerabilities that can complement the more judgmental approach of most official-sector organizations. Our approach picks up rising imbalances in the U.S. financial system through the mid-2000s, presaging the financial crisis. We also highlight several statistical properties of our approach: most importantly, our summary measures of system-wide vulnerabilities lead the credit-to-GDP gap (a key gauge in Basel III and related research) by a year or more. Thus, our framework may provide useful information for setting macroprudential policy tools such as the countercyclical capital buffer.

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APA

Aikman, D., Kiley, M., Lee, S. J., Palumbo, M. G., & Warusawitharana, M. (2017). Mapping heat in the U.S. financial system. Journal of Banking and Finance, 81, 36–64. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbankfin.2017.04.013

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