An Approach to Quantifying Operational Resilience Concepts

Author:

Englund Chase1

Affiliation:

1. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (U.S.)

Abstract

This paper uses public data disclosed in eight bank holding companies' "living wills", or Resolution Plans, to examine and test how operational resilience can contribute to financial system stability. The banks, each subject to the Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee (LISCC) supervisory program, interact in a complex network of Financial Market Utilities (FMUs). By employing complementary public data on operational exposures and benchmarks for operational disruption developed in existing research, we construct plausible estimates of how various disruption events would impact the financial system. This paper provides a tangible, reproducible example of how concepts discussed in recent regulatory agency guidance on operational resilience can be employed for risk analysis and scenario testing. It also demonstrates how network mapping can aid in this type of analysis. The estimates generated here indicate that disruptions stemming from tail-end operational risk events extend beyond absolute financial losses, and are likely to be large enough to pose a systemic risk to the financial system.

Publisher

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

Subject

General Medicine

Reference31 articles.

1. Systemic Risk and Stability in Financial Networks

2. Operational Models of Infrastructure Resilience

3. Argonne National Laboratory (2013). Resilience Measurement Index: An Indicator of Critical Infrastructure Resilience. Study in Partnership with the US Department of Homeland Security.

4. Bank of England (2019). Building operational resilience: Impact tolerances for important business services. Consultative paper.

5. Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (2020). Principles for operational resilience. Consultative Document.

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