Optimal stress tests and cash-in-the-market pricing

dc.contributor.advisor Doğan, Mustafa
dc.contributor.author Gedik, Onur Melih
dc.contributor.authorID 412211014
dc.contributor.department Economics
dc.date.accessioned 2025-03-19T06:27:56Z
dc.date.available 2025-03-19T06:27:56Z
dc.date.issued 2024-07-05
dc.description Thesis (M.Sc.) -- İstanbul Technical University, Graduate School, 2024
dc.description.abstract After the global financial crisis, stress tests have become a common tool for regulators to maintain financial stability. However, the welfare implications of stress tests remain unclear. This paper examines the optimal design of stress tests using Bayesian Persuasion within a fundamental bank run framework to address how informative bank stress tests should be. Our model indicates that the optimal disclosure policy depends on the amount of cash in the market during a liquidity shortage. When there is a bank run and insufficient cash in the market to pay the fair value of a risky asset, there is cash-in-the-market pricing. If both market liquidity and market prior belief are low, then there is cash-in-the-market pricing in the entire bank run region. The regulator can improve social welfare in this region by conducting stress tests to avoid costly bank runs. Partially informative stress test design is optimal: it assigns passing grades to all the good banks but assigns failing grades to only some bad banks to ensure the credibility of the test. As prior beliefs about the market increase, the optimal stress test fails fewer bad banks. Put differently, the optimal partial information test becomes less informative as market prior beliefs strengthen. When market liquidity is high but market confidence is low, then there is cash-in-the-market pricing in the upper part of the bank run region. The regulator can also improve social welfare in this region with weakly optimal, fully informative tests. Full information stress tests are optimal in this region because not all runs are costly when market liquidity is high. Non-informative stress tests are optimal in the lower part of the bank-run region where the risky asset's price is determined at fair value. Moreover, it is demonstrated that non-informative stress tests are optimal in the no bank run region for both high and low liquidity levels.
dc.description.degree M.Sc.
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11527/26631
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher Graduate School
dc.sdg.type Goal 8: Decent Work and Economic Growth
dc.subject Optimal stress
dc.subject Optimal stres
dc.subject Stress tests
dc.subject Stres testleri
dc.subject Banks
dc.subject Bankalar
dc.title Optimal stress tests and cash-in-the-market pricing
dc.title.alternative Optimal stres testleri ve piyasada nakit fiyatlaması
dc.type Master Thesis
Dosyalar
Orijinal seri
Şimdi gösteriliyor 1 - 1 / 1
thumbnail.default.alt
Ad:
412211014.pdf
Boyut:
1.42 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Açıklama
Lisanslı seri
Şimdi gösteriliyor 1 - 1 / 1
thumbnail.default.placeholder
Ad:
license.txt
Boyut:
1.58 KB
Format:
Item-specific license agreed upon to submission
Açıklama