A framework for analyzing contagion in assortative banking networks
Thomas R. Hurd, James P. Gleeson, Sergey Melnik

TL;DR
This paper presents a probabilistic framework for analyzing contagion in assortative banking networks, providing tools to predict systemic risk and the impact of network topology on contagion size.
Contribution
It introduces a novel framework that explicitly models assortative connections in banking networks and derives a cascade condition for systemic risk assessment.
Findings
Edge-assortativity significantly influences systemic risk.
The cascade condition can predict the potential for large contagion events.
Analytic formulas are validated through Monte Carlo simulations.
Abstract
We introduce a probabilistic framework that represents stylized banking networks with the aim of predicting the size of contagion events. Most previous work on random financial networks assumes independent connections between banks, whereas our framework explicitly allows for (dis)assortative edge probabilities (e.g., a tendency for small banks to link to large banks). We analyze default cascades triggered by shocking the network and find that the cascade can be understood as an explicit iterated mapping on a set of edge probabilities that converges to a fixed point. We derive a cascade condition that characterizes whether or not an infinitesimal shock to the network can grow to a finite size cascade, in analogy to the basic reproduction number in epidemic modelling. The cascade condition provides an easily computed measure of the systemic risk inherent in a given banking network…
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