Abstract
We define CoVaR as the value at risk (VaR) of financial institutions conditional on other institutions being in distress. The increase of CoVaR relative to VaR measures spillover risk among institutions. We estimate CoVaR using quantile regressions and document significant CoVaR increases among financial institutions. We identify six risk factors that allow institutions to offload tail risk and show that such hedging reduces the wedge between CoVaR and VaR. We argue that financial institutions should report CoVaR in addition to VaR, and we draw implications for risk management, regulation, and systemic risk. We define co-expected shortfall as a sum of CoVaRs.
Number
348
Series
Working Paper
Year
2008
Institution
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Keywords
Risk; Risk management; Financial institutions
Categories
New Risk Measures