Loan and nonloan flows in the Australian interbank network
Andrey Sokolov, Rachel Webster, Andrew Melatos, Tien Kieu

TL;DR
This paper analyzes Australian interbank transaction data to understand the relationship between loan and nonloan flows, revealing a strong negative correlation and flow stability patterns in the network.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis of interbank flow stability and the causal link between loan and nonloan transactions using detailed RTGS data from Australia.
Findings
Loan and nonloan imbalances are highly negatively correlated (~ -0.9).
Nonloan flows are more persistent than loan flows.
Flow values are moderately stable over consecutive days.
Abstract
High-value transactions between Australian banks are settled in the Reserve Bank Information and Transfer System (RITS) administered by the Reserve Bank of Australia. RITS operates on a real-time gross settlement (RTGS) basis and settles payments sourced from the SWIFT, the Austraclear, and the interbank transactions entered directly into RITS. In this paper, we analyse a dataset received from the Reserve Bank of Australia that includes all interbank transactions settled in RITS on an RTGS basis during five consecutive weekdays from 19 February 2007 inclusive, a week of relatively quiescent market conditions. The source, destination, and value of each transaction are known, which allows us to separate overnight loans from other transactions (nonloans) and reconstruct monetary flows between banks for every day in our sample. We conduct a novel analysis of the flow stability and examine…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBanking stability, regulation, efficiency · Complex Systems and Time Series Analysis · Economic theories and models
