This study draws attention to the proliferation of tail risks in financial markets prior to and during the course of the recent global financial crisis. It examines the level of tail risks in selected equity, interbank lending and foreign exchange markets in selected EU Member States in relation to the United States. The extent of tail risks is assessed by applying general error distribution (GED) parameterization in GARCH volatility tests of the examined variables. The empirical tests prove that tail risks were pronounced across all of the examined European financial markets throughout the crisis. They were also significant prior to the crisis outbreak. The analyzed interbank lending markets exhibited more extreme volatility outbursts than...
This thesis makes a contribution to systemic risk literature in the European banking system. The int...
Abstract: This paper examines the determinants of European bank risk-taking during major financial c...
textabstractIs our financial system stable? Can we quantify the probability that a large shock reduc...
This study draws attention to the proliferation of extreme risks in financial markets prior to and d...
We evaluate multiple market-based measures for US and eurozone individual bank tail risk and bank sy...
This study investigates extreme tail risks in financial markets of the euro-candidate countries and ...
Tail risk, defined as extreme event risk in asset markets, is an important consideration for investo...
The following thesis contains four empirical chapters focusing on the contagion, interest rate, fore...
Using a comprehensive range of metrics, this article determines how relative market and credit risk ...
From the 2007 subprime crisis to the recent Eurozone debt crisis,the banking industry has experience...
We examine changes in bank equity risk following the formation of the Economic Monetary Union (EMU) ...
This thesis consists of four self-contained but related papers trying to uncover different aspects o...
This paper explores the relationship between sovereign risk and banking risk during the European sov...
The aim of this work is to introduce an innovative methodology for performing risk attribution withi...
This thesis is composed of three chapters that propose some novel approaches on tail risk for financ...
This thesis makes a contribution to systemic risk literature in the European banking system. The int...
Abstract: This paper examines the determinants of European bank risk-taking during major financial c...
textabstractIs our financial system stable? Can we quantify the probability that a large shock reduc...
This study draws attention to the proliferation of extreme risks in financial markets prior to and d...
We evaluate multiple market-based measures for US and eurozone individual bank tail risk and bank sy...
This study investigates extreme tail risks in financial markets of the euro-candidate countries and ...
Tail risk, defined as extreme event risk in asset markets, is an important consideration for investo...
The following thesis contains four empirical chapters focusing on the contagion, interest rate, fore...
Using a comprehensive range of metrics, this article determines how relative market and credit risk ...
From the 2007 subprime crisis to the recent Eurozone debt crisis,the banking industry has experience...
We examine changes in bank equity risk following the formation of the Economic Monetary Union (EMU) ...
This thesis consists of four self-contained but related papers trying to uncover different aspects o...
This paper explores the relationship between sovereign risk and banking risk during the European sov...
The aim of this work is to introduce an innovative methodology for performing risk attribution withi...
This thesis is composed of three chapters that propose some novel approaches on tail risk for financ...
This thesis makes a contribution to systemic risk literature in the European banking system. The int...
Abstract: This paper examines the determinants of European bank risk-taking during major financial c...
textabstractIs our financial system stable? Can we quantify the probability that a large shock reduc...