RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Principal Components as a Measure of Systemic Risk JF The Journal of Portfolio Management FD Institutional Investor Journals SP 112 OP 126 DO 10.3905/jpm.2011.37.4.112 VO 37 IS 4 A1 Mark Kritzman A1 Yuanzhen Li A1 Sébastien Page A1 Roberto Rigobon YR 2011 UL https://pm-research.com/content/37/4/112.abstract AB The U. S. government’s failure to provide adequate oversight and prudent regulation of the financial markets, together with excessive risk taking by some financial institutions, pushed the world financial system to the brink of systemic failure in 2008. As a consequence of this near catastrophe, both regulators and investors have become keenly interested in developing tools for monitoring systemic risk. But this is easier said than done. Securitization, private transacting, complexity, and “flexible accounting” prevent us from directly observing the many explicit linkages of financial institutions. As an alternative, the authors introduce a measure of implied systemic risk, the absorption ratio, which equals the fraction of the total variance of a set of asset returns explained or “absorbed” by a fixed number of eigenvectors. The absorption ratio captures the extent to which markets are unified or tightly coupled. When markets are tightly coupled, they are more fragile in the sense that negative shocks propagate more quickly and broadly than when markets are loosely linked.TOPICS: Analysis of individual factors/risk premia, volatility measures, statistical methods