Taming the Basel Leverage Cycle
Christoph Aymanns, Fabio Caccioli, J. Doyne Farmer, Vincent W.C. Tan

TL;DR
This paper models the interplay between microprudential and macroprudential risks in banking, revealing a leverage cycle with bubbles and crashes, and evaluates policies to minimize systemic risk based on model parameters.
Contribution
It introduces a dynamical model of leverage cycles, analyzes stability regions, and proposes a policy framework to optimize macroprudential regulation.
Findings
The model exhibits a leverage cycle with bubbles and crashes lasting 10-15 years.
Optimal policies vary with bank size, leverage, and noise, favoring different approaches.
Lowering leverage target adjustment speed reduces systemic risk.
Abstract
Effective risk control must make a tradeoff between the microprudential risk of exogenous shocks to individual institutions and the macroprudential risks caused by their systemic interactions. We investigate a simple dynamical model for understanding this tradeoff, consisting of a bank with a leverage target and an unleveraged fundamental investor subject to exogenous noise with clustered volatility. The parameter space has three regions: (i) a stable region, where the system always reaches a fixed point equilibrium; (ii) a locally unstable region, characterized by cycles and chaotic behavior; and (iii) a globally unstable region. A crude calibration of parameters to data puts the model in region (ii). In this region there is a slowly building price bubble, resembling a "Great Moderation", followed by a crash, with a period of approximately 10-15 years, which we dub the "Basel leverage…
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