In 2009, in the aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis, 140 American banks failed–and hundreds of other banks were classified as “problem institutions” by the FDIC. This has led to numerous books and articles examining the causes of systemic risk in our financial system. In this paper we step back in history, to see what we should have learned from a previous banking crisis, which occurred during the 1980s. In particular, we examine the downfall of the Penn Square Bank in 1982. The failure of the small Oklahoma bank caused enormous losses and widespread instability in the banking system. It is evident that many of the factors which led to the downfall of Penn Square in the 1980s have reappeared more recently–albeit in a slightly different guise.
How to Destabilize the Financial System: A Beginner’s Guide
How to Destabilize the Financial System: A Beginner’s Guide
Abstract
Volume
4
Issue
1
Page
81-112
Year
2010
Keywords
Banking failures, systemic risk, originate-to-distribute model, brokered deposits, credit risk insurance, regulatory forbearance, subprime lending
Categories
Actuarial Applications and Methodologies
Enterprise Risk Management
Risk Categories
Financial Risks
Financial and Statistical Methods
Risk Pricing and Risk Evaluation Models
Systematic Risk Models
Practice Areas
Risk Management
Publications
Variance