Bank to Sovereign Risk Transmission: New Evidence
June 5, 2025
Summary
This note examines the transmission of credit risk of banks to the sovereign using the collapse of the Silicon Valley Bank in March 2023—an event that reverberated globally across banking sectors—as an exogenous shock to identify the effect. The findings suggest a strong transmission of credit risk from the banking sector to the sovereign in the United States, as well as in other major economies, in the face of adverse shocks to the banking sector. This impact is more pronounced in economies with higher public debt (relative to GDP), greater exposure of the banking sector to domestic sovereign debt, and less well-capitalized banking systems. These results suggest that investors view banking sector stress as particularly economically costly for such countries.
Subject: Bank credit, Central banks, Commercial banks, Credit default swap, Credit risk, Financial institutions, Financial regulation and supervision, Money, Public debt
Keywords: Bank credit, banks' CD, Commercial banks, Credit default swap, Credit risk, credit risk in the US, Global, Global financial crisis, Government debt, Macrofinancial stability, Regulatory reforms, Silicon Valley Bank, Sovereign, sovereign credit risk, sovereign-bank Nexus, SVB collapse
Pages:
28
Volume:
2025
DOI:
Issue:
003
Series:
Global Financial Stability Notes No 2025/003
Stock No:
GFSNEA2025003
ISBN:
9798229012195
ISSN:
2791-3112





